Prenatal Partners for Life
Prenatal Partners for Life
www.PRENATALPARTNERSforLIFE.org This support can be provided in person, over the phone, by email or in written correspondence.
06/18/2026
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CxohvHtpA/
In 1997, John C. McGinley's agent gave him what sounded like career advice. Don't talk about your son. Don't bring attention to it. People won't hire you.
His son, Max, had just been born with Down syndrome.
The message was simple.
Keep it quiet.
Protect your career.
John's response was even simpler.
He fired the agent.
Then he spent the next several decades doing the exact opposite.
At the time, many families of children with disabilities were still encouraged to stay out of the spotlight. Public conversations were limited. Misconceptions were everywhere. Some people viewed visibility as a risk.
John viewed it as a responsibility.
He brought Max with him.
To premieres.
To interviews.
To public events.
Wherever possible, his son was part of the story.
Not hidden behind it.
What began as a father's instinct gradually became advocacy. As the years passed, McGinley became one of the most recognizable public voices supporting people with Down syndrome. He spoke at events, met with lawmakers, and worked to expand opportunities for employment and independence.
But one moment stayed with him.
A reporter once asked whether he wished his son were "normal."
The question stopped him cold.
Then came his answer.
Max was normal.
The question wasn't.
That response resonated because it exposed an assumption many people never stopped to examine. The issue was never who Max was.
The issue was how society chose to see him.
Years passed.
Max grew up.
Today, he works, lives independently, and has built a life many people once assumed would be impossible. Not because someone lowered expectations for him.
Because people refused to.
The irony is that the advice John received was intended to protect his future.
Instead, rejecting it became one of the most important decisions of his life.
He often says Max didn't limit his world.
He expanded it.
And perhaps that's why this story continues to resonate.
Some parents teach their children how to navigate the world.
Sometimes children teach their parents how to change it.
And John C. McGinley made sure the world was paying attention.
06/04/2026
Mom of Twins With Down Syndrome Was Told Six Times to Have an Abortion, But She Refused https://buff.ly/gWSF0pF
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