• Skip to main content
Freeing Teresa

Freeing Teresa

A True Story about My Sister and Me — by Franke James

  • News
  • Audiobook
    • Listen Now
    • Meet the Cast
  • Interviews
  • Awards
  • Reviews
  • Authors
    • Videos
    • Stories
  • Buy Book

Franke James

Q&A with Franke James

September 12, 2024 by Franke James

Franke James with her sister Teresa at the Inclusion BC 2024 conference, Nanaimo, BC
Franke James with her sister Teresa at the Inclusion BC 2024 conference, Nanaimo, BC

“Last month, I had the pleasure of reading Freeing Teresa by Franke James – a moving, emotional and powerful read about doing what’s right, no matter how difficult it may be. I’m so thrilled to be sharing a recent Q & A with Franke where she talks about Teresa, her books, and the hurdles she had to overcome to get this book published.” ~ Emily Quinn, A Quintillion Words

Emily Quinn’s interview with Franke James


In your own words, how would you describe Teresa? What is your favourite memory of her over the years?

FRANKE: There are so many! Here are just two memories. When Teresa was a toddler, I would tag along with my Mom and watch Teresa take personal training lessons. By age five, she was climbing the gym ropes. That was an eye-opening lesson for me that Teresa could accomplish amazing things with patience and perseverance. 

Teresa climbing the gym ropes, 1969. Photo by Teresa’s mother
Teresa climbing the gym ropes, 1969. Photo by Teresa’s mother

As an adult, one watershed moment was when Teresa did her Change.org video. Previously, as a person with Down syndrome, she was not given any respect to direct her own life. In the 2014 video, Teresa marches along confidently, saying that she is “a female with Down syndrome” and wants the government to “say sorry” for taking away her right to decide, and putting her in a nursing home. It made me proud to see Teresa speaking up for herself. Since then, I’ve had many glowing moments as I’ve watched her blossom as an artist, author, and self-advocate. Finally, she is free to be herself.

Teresa's Change.org petition video which launched on March 21, 2014
Teresa’s Change.org Petition Video, March 21, 2014.
Filmed in Victoria, B.C. by Billiam James

When did the idea of writing Freeing Teresa come to you? Were you experiencing a certain hurdle? Or did you always know you wanted to write about it one day?

FRANKE: Over a decade ago, I imagined that one day, I would write about what was happening to Teresa, my youngest sister. In 2013, all of my other siblings were intent on putting her into a nursing home. I was horrified and objected. However, one sister justified the group’s decision by saying that the government care agency had assessed Teresa, and taken away her right to choose where she lived. Another sister said Teresa was on the verge of Alzheimer’s. They all claimed she needed 24/7 care. I didn’t believe a word of it. Instead, I believed in Teresa. I saw her as being the same as she always was and enjoying life. 

Franke and Teresa in the Terry Fox event, 2011. Photo by Billiam James
Franke and Teresa in the Terry Fox event, 2011. Photo by Billiam James

Did you find it difficult writing about your family, specifically some of your siblings? Is there anything you regret?

FRANKE: I regret that we lost our family. It’s a terrible blow, but sadly that was the price for standing up to the group and freeing Teresa. It was challenging to tell this story, but the hurdles forced us to find creative solutions. Since my family still doesn’t want to talk about this misadventure, I’ve given my siblings pseudonyms and whited out their images in photos. Also, Teresa is using a Pen name. These techniques have given me the freedom to tell this story and also gave a distinctive look to the book.

Bill and Franke host a summer dinner party for two of her sisters and their spouses in 2013.  Photo by Franke James
Bill and Franke host a summer dinner party for two of her sisters and their spouses in 2013. Photo by Franke James 

People have come up to me after my book talks, and confided that they know a young person who has been put in a nursing home. This growing awareness is so important. The statistics show that Teresa is the tip of the iceberg. She is just one of many to have experienced forced care. It is happening to people with disabilities around the world. Nursing homes have become the new Institutions. 

Franke James led a panel called, “The Quiet Reinstitutionalization: Young People with Disabilities in Long-term Care.” Inclusion BC 2024 conference
Franke James led a panel called, “The Quiet Reinstitutionalization: Young People with Disabilities in Long-term Care.” Inclusion BC 2024 conference

Did you give your siblings advance warning of this book?

FRANKE: Yes, I gave them over ten years warning! Ample time for them to apologize to Teresa. But there’s been no apology yet. Of course, they also told me they’d never read my book. In 2013, on the same day we rescued Teresa, I told my sister, Siobhan, “If you block us on this, we will be taking this public. We’re going to go to all the different advocacy organizations. And we are going to make a really big deal of this. Because this is not right.”

Unfortunately they did block me, which I’ll talk about in the next book. Four days after we rescued Teresa, armed policemen came to my door to take Teresa back to the nursing home. Holey Moley, it was a very scary time. Fortunately, with legal help and documentation, we were able to assert Teresa’s right to stay with us.

How long did it take you to write Freeing Teresa, including writing, editing, any research and sourcing photographs?

FRANKE: A long time! In the actual moment, I made a record of the events that were swirling around me. (I learned this from my work on www.officepolitics.com.) I wanted to make sense of what was happening. But, as it turned out, all my emails, journals, photos, videos, and audio recordings, have become essential material for my book.

In 2020, when Covid hit, I started to write Freeing Teresa in earnest. Luckily, my husband, Billiam James, came on-board as the co-author, and we worked together to get the book written and published. Every week we’d sit on a park bench overlooking Lost Lagoon, in Stanley Park, and read a chapter to each other. It was fun and improved each chapter immensely. We published the print book in October 2023.


What is your favourite book? Is there a specific author or person who inspired you?

FRANKE: If I can only pick one book, I would say it has to be ENTWINED by Joyce Scott, published in 2016. Remarkably, Joyce rescued her twin sister, Judith, from an institution where she’d lived for 35 years. Their story was very inspirational to me, coming three years after Teresa came to live with me and my husband. Joyce’s book Entwined has some parallels to Freeing Teresa in that we’re both authors who have written memoirs about our sister’s with Down syndrome. Both of our sisters were trapped in the “care system” and we helped them get out. And both our sisters turned to art to express themselves. Judith Scott became a famous fibre artist and her art now hangs in the MoMA. It is a fascinating heart-warming story!


If you could tell a past version of yourself some advice for the future, what would it be?

FRANKE: Well, it could be something my mother tried to teach me when I was a cocky teenager, but I didn’t fully appreciate at the time. I used it in a dedication to my Dear Office-Politics book. I think she was very wise.

“Read between the lines.
Never take people at face value.
Listen to what people say, but watch what they do.

Put yourself in the other person’s shoes.
Never feel sorry for yourself.”


Tell us about your previous books and what you’re currently working on.

FRANKE: Since 2009, I’ve published three other books. They are all very different—and yet they were essential training for Freeing Teresa. Bothered by My Green Conscience taught me how to fight City Hall and win. Dear Office-Politics taught me to practice making ethical decisions—so I wouldn’t get run over by an ethical dilemma. And Banned on the Hill taught me many things, but how to use F.O.I. tools to dig for evidence was so helpful in Teresa’s case.

Our latest exciting news is that we have just published the audiobook for Freeing Teresa! It features a full cast of over a dozen actors, including Jackie Blackmore, Dayleigh Nelson, and Lauren Potter (of GLEE fame). Two of the actors have intellectual disabilities, which means we have “authentic representation” — something that is very important to me. It was a very ambitious dream to do the audiobook — and a full-cast one at that! Now the audiobook elevates my memoir to a whole new level. The full-cast of actors brings our true story to life in dramatic and exciting ways. I’m so happy we had the courage to do it.

Advertisement for Screen International Magazine, September 2024 with video image of Franke James during the rescue on Nov 30, 2013 and Teresa sitting the nursing home bed, blowing a whistle
Advertisement for Screen International Magazine, September 2024
Is there any advice you would give to a person with Down syndrome or anyone who cares for them?

FRANKE: Dream big! Assume that you can do anything you set your mind to! That’s good advice for the person with Down syndrome and also for the people who support them. If we have positive expectations for people with Down syndrome, we’ll give them abundant opportunities throughout their lives. And amazingly, these positive assumptions can become reality, like they have for Teresa Heartchild who was named a Champion for Change by B.C.’s Human Rights Commissioner.

Teresa's Video asserting that people should assume that she can do something
Franke’s post: https://freeingteresa.com/assume-that-i-can/
About the author

The spark for Franke James’ newest book, “Freeing Teresa,” was lit ten years ago. In 2013, Franke and her husband, Billiam James, helped her younger sister get out of a Toronto nursing home, regain her decision-making rights, and get a public apology from the Ontario Minister of Health.

Earlier that same year, Franke had published Banned on the Hill, which led to her winning the BC Civil Liberties Award for Excellence in the Arts in 2014. Her related poster campaign, “Do Not Talk About Climate Change,” appeared in three Canadian cities and Washington, DC. In 2015, Franke was awarded PEN Canada’s Ken Filkow Prize for “tenacity in uncovering an abuse of power and commitment to fostering a national conversation in the face of censorship.” Franke lives in Vancouver, BC, with her husband and her sister, Teresa.

Filed Under: Interviews, News Tagged With: #downsyndrome, #freeingteresa, #memoir, #teresaheartchild, franke-james, siblings

Redraw Your Path interviews Franke James

September 9, 2024 by Franke James


Exciting announcement! I had the opportunity to share my story on Redraw Your Path, a podcast hosted by Lynn Debilzen! We talk about how dreaming big helped inspire and transform us all!

Dream Big About What Could Be | Franke James

We covered a lot of territory in the interview. From my being an artist and activist to becoming a disability rights advocate for my sister. We talked about how defending Teresa caused me to redraw my path in a BIG way. And we talked about overcoming obstacles and finding the strength to withstand group pressure.

And we also chatted about the reality that ethical decisions can sometimes come between ourselves and family relationships.

I’m sure you’ve redrawn your OWN path many times over the years. Let me know how you’ve done it and what resonated with you on hearing about my experiences!

#redrawyourpath #freeingteresa

Tune in to Redraw your Path

Find it on YouTube or Spotify!

I invite you to listen to my episode. You’ll learn more about my personal story and the turns I’ve taken on my unique path. You’ll also hear some of my messiness: the fear, and reframing will give you a real glimpse into each turn. 

Franke James on Life, Awards, Books and Speaking Up!


‌“Nobody really knows what life will throw at them. And how they’ll change as a result,” says Franke James. She is an activist, an artist and an author. She’s fought City Hall to build a green driveway (and won). Been blacklisted by the Canadian Government for her climate change art—and turned the government’s silencing into international news. Her latest book, Freeing Teresa, is about choosing her sister’s freedom over her family. Franke helped her younger sister get out of a nursing home. Then all hell broke loose. They had to stand together—against their siblings, the medical system, and the police—to defend the right to be free.

Franke and her husband, Billiam James, helped Teresa regain her decision-making rights and get a public apology from the Ontario Minister of Health. Midwest Book Review said, “The result is more than a memoir: it’s a testimony to how ‘tickets to freedom’ are gained through fighting and love.”

The memoir has received ten international awards from the Human Relations Indie Book Awards, the NABE Pinnacle Book Awards, and the Firebird Book Awards, including the Judges’ Pick prize.

In 2015, Franke won PEN Canada’s Ken Filkow Prize for her “tenacity in uncovering an abuse of power” and BCCLA’s Liberty Award for Excellence in the Arts in 2014.

For Franke, the diverse issues in her books Freeing Teresa, Banned on the Hill, Bothered by My Green Conscience, and Dear Office-Politics are all connected by the need to speak up and take action. She lives in Vancouver, BC, with her husband and her sister, Teresa.

#redrawyourpath #freeingteresa

Filed Under: Interviews

Winner of Four Firebird Book Awards (and Judges’ Pick) on Speak Up Talk Radio!

July 27, 2024 by Franke James

“Freeing Teresa is all about the need to speak up, so I’m thrilled to have my true story win four Firebird Book Awards plus the Judge’s Pick,” said Franke James. Patricia Rullo is the brains behind the Firebird Awards. The awards programme has recognized many ground-breaking literary works and also benefits a charitable cause, homeless shelters in the USA.”

Firebird Award Certificate given to FREEING TERESA for the Judges Pick, 2nd quarter 2024; 1st place, Social/Political Change; 1st place, Special Needs; 2nd place, Leadership; 2nd place, Inspiration

“Teresa’s story is important because, as an adult with Down syndrome, she represents just one of many people with disabilities,” said Franke James, “While the old institutions have been closed, today there are thousands of young people with disabilities who are forced to live in nursing homes. Why is that? This is a key civil rights issue for all people with disabilities—the right to decide where you live.”

FIREBIRD BOOK AWARDS HONOURED ‘FREEING TERESA:

Judges Pick, 2nd quarter 2024
1st place, Social/Political Change,
1st place, Special Needs (Disability Rights)
2nd place, Leadership
2nd place, Inspiration

Congrats Teresa Heartchild and Billiam James!

Update, August 29, 2024

Pat,

Thanks for your Firebird Awards! As the winning author of the Judges’ Pick Award (in Q2), the sponsor interviewed me today! Hooray! I had a great conversation with Dr. Audrey Tang [@draudreyt]. She covered a lot of territory, and we had such a warm chat about my book Freeing Teresa, the need for social change and fighting discrimination. Such a great opportunity! Thank you! (The show will air at the end of September.)

Franke


From the press release: Authors and publishers worldwide submitted their work to the International Firebird Book Awards. The panel of judges includes 27 individuals with diverse backgrounds and experiences. Two judges from a select panel read and scored each entry. All judges commit to a set of standardized criteria that evaluate the quality of the writing and the production aspects. The judges only award the coveted Firebird to entries with the highest scores.

Firebird Award Certificate given to FREEING TERESA for the Judges Pick, 2nd quarter 2024; 1st place, Social/Political Change; 1st place, Special Needs; 2nd place, Leadership; 2nd place, Inspiration

#bookawardwinner #awardwinningbooks #firebirdbookawards #firebirdbookaward #speakuptalkradio #downsyndrome #DisabilityRights #leadership #inclusion #memoir #siblings #caregiver

Filed Under: Awards, News Tagged With: #bookawards, #downsyndrome, #firebird, #freeingteresa, #memoir, #teresaheartchild, siblings

“Freeing Teresa” takes flight in Brockville

July 25, 2024 by Franke James

Franke James at Lost Lagoon in Vancouver raises her arms like she is about to take-off. She is wearing the same long, pastel dress as at the BDACI AGM and the type saying, "Welcome to the Annual General Meeting 2024" is superimposed over her. Photo by Billiam James

The stage was set. The mood was celebratory.

Many colourfully-dressed folks were mingling and chatting as they served themselves food and refreshments. There was a friendly buzz in the air. (It didn’t feel like any AGM’s I’d ever been to!) A semicircle of elegant black-striped tables, with hot pink flowers in white vases, surrounded the stage in a church hall in Brockville, Ontario. And to my surprise, at each place setting lay a copy of Freeing Teresa, with its distinctive orange cover.

Freeing Teresa vertical orange book cover and beside it the orange book lying flat on the tables at BDACI's AGM

The chance to speak at BDACI’s AGM had come up unexpectedly. The Executive Director, Kimberley Gavan, heard us (Teresa, Bill, and me) speak on a webinar for Community Living Ontario—and she quickly reached out, asking us to share the story about Teresa’s fight for inclusion.

Franke James presentation to Community Living Ontario shows Teresa's Assume That I Can

Their vision was right in sync with ours!

Family members of people with an intellectual disability founded Brockville and District Association for Community Involvement (BDACI) in 1956! Its overarching purpose was to “inspire new possibilities for people by supporting their learning of new skills, employment, housing, forming and development of relationships, and also by spreading a message of community and inclusion.”

Yeah! It was so aligned with my thinking and values that I quickly accepted the invitation to speak at BDACI’s AGM!

But the universe laughed: “Not so fast!”

Three weeks before the big event, I tripped. And hit the ground hard. (I didn’t know that a fall could hurt so much.) An ambulance took me to the hospital. X-rays confirmed that I had dislocated my shoulder. The doctors did an emergency adjustment and put things back in place. I was greatly relieved that I had not broken any bones. But also dismayed that the healing process is painful and takes months.

So I called BDACI with the bad news! Reluctantly, I told them that I couldn’t make their AGM in person. They were understanding. The journey from Vancouver, BC, to Brockville, Ontario, is a long one—over forty-five hundred kilometres.

Change plans. Reverse direction!

Nevertheless, inside I was quietly kicking myself. I was disappointed. I knew I was missing a great opportunity to share our story—one that I’d dreamt of for over ten years. Surely I could make the trip, somehow! My shoulder was still painful but missing the event made me feel worse.

With only a week to spare, I decided that my banged-up shoulder wasn’t going to stop me. I would shoulder on (pun intended). I emailed BDACI that I would be there to speak in person. They were thrilled. With the help of a pink cane and some air-flight disability services, I could make the trip. (The timing was too rushed for Teresa and Bill, so I went solo.)

Phot of Teresa running in 2011 at the Terry Fox event in Toronto

I was ready to fly!

The big moment arrived. A BDACI staffer kindly lent me their arm to climb the stairs onto the stage. And then I looked out at the audience, and I was glad that I’d made the trip. This felt like a community celebrating their long friendships and deep bonds. There were people with intellectual disabilities, their parents, their siblings, and many support workers.

As I told Teresa’s roller coaster story, I could feel the audience’s reaction, which rose and fell hearing the struggle Teresa went through. Everyone lit up when Teresa got her freedom back. And then, audibly gasped when the police came with a Missing Person order to take her back to the nursing home.

Towards the end of my story, I found myself getting teary. This was a moving experience for me. My voice quavered as I told the audience of our big decision to leave our home and buy one-way tickets to the other side of the country.

Teresa and World Down Syndrome Day

When we landed in British Columbia on March 1, 2014, one of Teresa’s first actions as a self-advocate was to launch a petition on March 21st, 2014—a very significant day as it marks the international World Down Syndrome Day. In the petition video, Teresa asked the government to say sorry for putting her in a nursing home! She walked along with a confident stride, saying that she’s a female, and she’s got Down syndrome and she doesn’t want to be in a nursing home. The video is beautiful. Thankfully 25,000 people thought so too, and signed the petition. There was a huge outpouring of support for Teresa and her plight. But that wasn’t enough for the Ontario government. It took another two years (and a major campaign) before Teresa got a government apology.

I showed our new trailer for the Freeing Teresa audiobook.


As I looked out at the crowd, I knew that many of them have faced (or will face) the same difficult dilemma my family faced: “Where will my loved one with an intellectual disability live?”

And I knew that sparking that conversation was why I was there.

I managed to get off the stage without crying.

Then the crowd stood up and started clapping! And clapping. Wow! It was a standing ovation. Their applause buoyed my spirits. I was so glad I was there in person. I felt grateful to everyone present for listening and giving me a chance to share our story.

“Truly inspiring! Franke James’ presentation left a profound impact. Her presentation was a reminder of the power of storytelling and its ability to ignite change and uplift spirits.” Kimberley Gavan, Executive Director, BDACI

Filed Under: Interviews

Winner of the 2024 Human Relations Indie Book Awards!

July 11, 2024 by Franke James

“Freeing Teresa describes a beautiful bond between sisters impacted by the challenges of understanding disability rights through adulthood.” 
Susan Peterson, Founder, Human Relations Indie Book Awards


Gold Award: Disability Rights (Special Needs)
Gold Award: Family Challenges
Silver Award: Inspirational 
Silver Award: Leadership


DISABILITY RIGHTS (SPECIAL NEEDS): GOLD WINNER

Human Relations Indie Book Awards

Franke James, the author of Freeing Teresa stands beside her sister Teresa Heartchild who has Down syndrome and is a contributor to Franke's book. Teresa is wearing pink glasses, a tie-dye shirt, a backwards ball cap and smiling. Franke is smiling and holding up the framed 2024 Gold award for Special Needs from the Human Relations Indie Book Awards. Franke is wearing a painterly pastel dress, matching scarf and straw hat. Photo by Billiam James.

GOLD, Disability Rights (Special Needs): Freeing Teresa: A True Story about My Sister and Me

Teresa Heartchild said, “I won GOLD in 2024! Freeing Teresa is all about me!”

Teresa Heartchild has shown remarkable resilience and courage in the face of adversity. She wanted to make her own decisions about where to live but lost that right with the tick of a box. Sadly, due to other people’s low expectations for her future, Teresa was put in a nursing home. Teresa had to fight to get her rights back.

Freeing Teresa and its sequel, Escape to Lotusland, tell Teresa’s remarkable journey. In 2016, the Ontario government apologized to Teresa. She published two art and poetry books in 2016 and 2018 and was named a Champion for Change for all people with disabilities in 2019.

FAMILY CHALLENGES: GOLD WINNER

Human Relations Indie Book Awards

Franke is smiling and holding up the framed 2024 Gold award for Family Challenges from the Human Relations Indie Book Awards. Franke is wearing a painterly pastel dress, matching scarf and straw hat. Photo by Billiam James.

GOLD, Family Challenges: Freeing Teresa: A True Story about My Sister and Me

“Winning the GOLD Award in Family Challenges is deeply meaningful to me. When the Freeing Teresa events started a decade ago, they ripped our family apart. My late parents had given me an unshakeable belief in Teresa’s right to be included, and that fueled my passion to help her. All my other siblings, except Teresa herself, wanted her in a long-term care institution. Despite my offers to have her live with me, Teresa was put in a nursing home a few days later. My Dad (then 91), my husband and me helped Teresa to get discharged. And she won her freedom back. She has brought love and joy into our lives and has become a BC Champion for Change for all people with disabilities. These awards recognize our roller coaster journey of heartbreak and triumph.”

INSPIRATIONAL: SILVER WINNER

Human Relations Indie Book Awards

Billiam James is smiling and holding the framed 2024 Silver award for Inspirational from the Human Relations Indie Book Awards. Billiam is wearing a black sports jacket and black t-shirt. Photo by Franke James.

SILVER, Inspirational: Freeing Teresa: A True Story about My Sister and Me

“Teresa inspired us to fight for her right to a full life,” said Billiam James. “And remarkably, Teresa transformed our lives and opened many new doors.”

LEADERSHIP: SILVER WINNER

Human Relations Indie Book Awards

Franke is smiling and holding the framed 2024 Silver award for Leadership from the Human Relations Indie Book Awards. Franke is wearing a painterly pastel dress, matching scarf and straw hat. Photo by Billiam James.

SILVER, Leadership: Freeing Teresa: A True Story about My Sister and Me

“We have many laws which should protect the vulnerable, yet don’t. We need everyone to speak up about these injustices.

“Freeing Teresa has been the hardest thing I’ve done in my life,” said Franke James, “I was lucky to have my partner, Bill, who believed as strongly as I did that helping Teresa was the right thing to do and would ultimately prove true.”

‘Freeing Teresa: A True Story about My Sister and Me’ by Franke James, Billiam James and Contributor Teresa Heartchild.

Available on Amazon, from bookstores, and in public libraries.

Filed Under: Awards, News Tagged With: #bookawards, #disabilityrights, #downsyndrome, #familychallenges, #freeingteresa, #humanrelations, #inspiration, #leadership, #memoir, #teresaheartchild, franke-james

“It’s My Decision”

May 18, 2024 by Franke James

Teresa Heartchild at age 13 in a still from the documentary Exploding the Myth aired in 1979 shows Teresa writing in her notebook. She is white and has long brown hair and glasses. She has Down syndrome. Images and text used with permission from Community Living Ontario
Teresa Heartchild in the TV documentary, Exploding the Myth in 1979

Webinar: Protecting the Rights of People with Intellectual Disabilities

The story behind Teresa’s and my involvement in Community Living Ontario’s webinar goes back forty-five years to 1979 when the documentary Exploding the Myth aired across Canada—with Teresa in it. The film was produced by Community Living Ontario, which is hosting this webinar now!

TV listing ad for “Exploding the Myth” features thirteen-year-old Teresa wearing glasses and holding an exercise ball in her arms. Teresa looks at the camera with an expression of curiosity and wonder. Her lips are parted as though she’s about to speak. The ad text said, “Exploding the Myth. Thirteen-year-old Teresa [redacted surname] plays an important role in Exploding the Myth, a documentary special which explores the attitudes of a significant portion of the general public toward those who are mentally handicapped. Images and text used with permission from Community Living Ontario.

Exploding the Myth’s goal was to debunk false myths and expose pervasive negative social attitudes that limited the inclusion of people with intellectual disabilities. Teresa starred in the documentary to show how inclusion worked.

Teresa proved that the myths were false

“Myth: The intellectually disabled should be segregated in institutions. It’s best for them.” (Teresa lived at home.)
“Myth: Children with intellectual disabilities should not mix with normal children.” (Teresa went to the same girls’ school I went to.)
“Myth: People with intellectual disabilities are strictly limited in what they can do.” (Teresa was breaking barriers and starring as a role model for social inclusion.)

Teresa Heartchild at 13, doing her Swedish Ball routine in the documentary Exploding the Myth. She is wearing a white sweater and black pants. Images and text used with permission from Community Living Ontario
Exploding the Myth: Teresa, at 13, performs a Swedish ball gym routine.

Teresa’s happy lifestyle flew in the face of all the myths. She was living a normal life for a girl her age—which was a revolutionary act for people with intellectual disabilities. However, the myths still lingered and caused harm. There were 4,000 names on the waiting list in Ontario!

My parents were part of the deinstitutionalization wave in the 1960s

My parents were interviewed about their decision to raise Teresa at home. As Teresa bounced the exercise ball on camera, we hear my father’s voice—a time capsule from the past: “When Teresa was born, we had quite a number of questions . . . And we didn’t like the answers.” They said they would give her all the love and opportunities that their other six kids (including me) enjoyed.

Why our May 23, 2024 webinar is essential now!

Today, Teresa shows the importance of inclusion, but with a scary twist. In 2013, after living in the community for 49 years, Teresa was put into a nursing home against her will. Teresa didn’t want to live there and had to fight for her right to live in the community—a civil right that most people take for granted. (My memoir, Freeing Teresa: A True Story about My Sister and Me, goes into detail.) We’ll be explaining how we helped Teresa get out of forced care and regain her decision-making rights.

Stephanie Dickson, from PooranLaw, will talk about protecting the rights of people with intellectual disabilities—and how to increase their sense of control over their own lives. She will explain the drawbacks of guardianship and alternatives to it. The panel will discuss the dangers of capacity assessments and a person’s right to say, “No, thank you.” We’ll discuss these big questions: Why is “Nothing about us without us” critically important? How can we best support people during life transitions? How can we encourage people with intellectual disabilities to express their own choices? What do they want in their life?

How to protect rights and increase control for people with intellectual disabilities: a webinar by Community Living Ontario.

Join us and Community Living Ontario. Register for the Zoom webinar here: https://bit.ly/ProtectingRightsandIncreasingContro

Community Living Ontario Event poster for webinar: Protecting Rights and Increasing Control. Featured are the three webinar speakers: Stephanie Dickson, Partner, PooranLaw, Franke James and Teresa Heartchild, Authors of Freeing Teresa: A True Story about My Sister and Me. Descriptions: Stephanie Dickson is a white woman with long, blonde hair. She is wearing a black blazer. Teresa Heartchild is a white woman with Down syndrome, pink glasses and brown hair. She is wearing a blue cap on backwards. Franke James is a white woman with mid-length blonde hair. She is wearing a black hat and black blazer.

Date & Time: May 23, 2024, 09:00 AM  Pacific Time, 12 noon Eastern

Speakers:

  • Stephanie Dickson (Partner, PooranLaw)
  • Franke James and Teresa Heartchild (Authors of Freeing Teresa: A True Story about My Sister and Me)
  • Nicole Flynn (President, Council of CLO)

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: #downsyndrome, #freeingteresa, #memoir, #teresaheartchild, civil rights, franke-james

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Go to Next Page »

News | audiobook | Interviews | Reviews | Authors | Contact
@frankejames is on Instagram, Mastodon, and Linktree
Freeing Teresa | Copyright © 2025 · Franke James