The ‘Pinocchio boy’ has surgery at the age of three
Amy Poole was excited for the arrival of her second kid until she went to the doctor for a normal check-up and the doctor spotted something unusual about the baby’s face.
They observed the baby’s appendix was growing out of strange wood and resting around his nose at the 20-week scan. The lump generated by the departure of the brain when it does not shut properly in a neutral tube during pregnancy is known as “encephalocele.”
Despite being informed about the circumstance, Amy had no idea how her baby would look when it was born.
Amy was taken aback the minute she had him in her arms, because her image was shocking and unsettling. Amy, on the other hand, did all a mother knows and should do: she loved her child exactly as he was.
“When they gave it to me postpartum at University Hospital in Wales in 2014, I was so stunned I could hardly speak.”
Because, regrettably, we live in a very superficial world, full of cruel individuals who frequently harm the feelings of the little one named Ollie, the compassion and acceptance of his family would not be enough to compensate for the baby’s poor fate.
Ollie, on the other hand, is ideal for Amy. “He is my little Pinocchio, and I am proud of him,” she told the reporters, adding that others who know him think his son is ugly, and that someone once told him that “his son should not have been born.”
All of these remarks have damaged the feelings of this lovely family, who do nothing but love and teach their child that he is special and wonderful in his own way.
Ollie is a fierce warrior who has already undergone multiple successful procedures to avoid diseases like meningitis, as well as a wonderful soul. Everyone who gets to know him falls in love with him because of his remarkable charisma.
Annabelle, his older sister, adores him and spends a lot of time with him. “Ollie and Annabelle get along very well, they are always playing. Annabelle is a little jealous of Ollie since he gets most of the attention .”
Ollie and Amy, who are now three years old, want people to understand that having a physical disability does not make you different from others, so they’ve published the following message on social media:
“I don’t want other kids to get the terrible comments we’ve had to hear. I think the best way to fight against it is by educating people. I would have been much more grateful if people had asked me what was wrong with Ollie, and not just rejected him for being ugly and pointed fingers at him.”