Wildflowers for Jade: social skills
Showing posts with label social skills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social skills. Show all posts

Monday, June 11, 2012

Delusions of grandeur and paved roads

When Jaden was discharged from all of his therapies a few months ago, I had some delusions. I have to face it now. There is probably in every mother of a child with Autism a buried fantasy of *when it all goes away* - the war we fight for our children's future - the point when we can breathe a sigh of relief that he/she can talk/walk/read/write/take care of their own needs/has stopped violently raging and won't end up in jail/fill in the many blanks here, and we can skip through life blissfully like, well like a typical family. Where the mountains end and there is a road under our feet. Paved at that. 

OK. For a second I thought I was there. On that road. Before that moment I wasn't even aware that this is what I've been waiting, or at least hoping for. Like I said, buried. Under all that day to day junk that blocks our visions of tomorrow. 

When we learned that Jaden had special needs I threw myself into a year and a half of research that would rival a PHD hopeful. 10-12 hour days were not uncommon. The day I realized my son has Autism I stopped sleeping, almost completely. When my research led to a well-formulated plan, and when I was able to let the experts at The Brown Center take over the heavy work, I had reached critical burnout. The research efforts dwindled to a trickle. I knew what I needed to know. Not everything, but what I needed for Jaden. I still observed their every move through the monitors and participated in the classroom occasionally, and went to their parent training. I did the stuff at home that I needed to. My goals were immediate; Learn to talk, learn to understand speech. Hold a pencil and learn to draw and write. Hold a utensil and self-feed. EAT. Walk without falling over his feet (ok this is still an issue.) Self-care age appropriately. In other words, get him to the level of his typical peers developmentally. 

It was like I was trudging along the line of our goals with my head down until suddenly I was told I'd arrived. What? Arrived where? "Jaden tested in the 'normal' range for everything." He's done. Hallelujah! 

That's when I became delusional. I was looking at "developmentally appropriate" and thinking hell, we're on that paved road now. 

     underwater photography
I'm going to make a confession. I was wanting to leave the "A" word behind. I didn't want to think about it anymore. Being forced into this world was like learning to drown. Eventually I had forgotten all about that "other world" I used to live in before I was forced kicking and screaming to this realm. But now - now I can leave, right? We can go home and pretend the last few years never happened. Oh yeah, I wanted that. To all my fellow Autism parents; I wanted to leave you. 

My delusion was short-lived. Oh I knew he still "had Autism." (Not to get into the great debate, but) I don't really think Autism is something you can, or maybe even should, cure. The brain can be trained to learn new ways to cope with life, but it will never be the same as being born typical. It's just different. Even then, I entertained the notion that I could be wrong. "He's doing so well, isn't he?" 

My dear self: developmentally appropriate does not mean not Autistic. 

We have a lot of recovery. We still have Autism. It insisted on being near his classmates in camp then kept him isolated from connecting with them. It tried to escape the house several times, climbing on chairs and studying the extra door locks in an attempt to circumvent them. It melted down at the mention of door alarms (because that's now next.) It screamed at me, hit me, and bit and tore at my clothes with it's teeth in the convenience store. It raged at me for days on and off between sweet and loving. It wrapped it's arms around my neck then shoved it's thumb into my windpipe in anger. I looked at him and said "I don't get it. You're SO SMART. Why can't you understand how inappropriate this is? Why can't you see that it will get you the opposite of what you're screaming for?" Why doesn't he understand why he can't wander off through the neighborhood or anywhere he wants to by himself? Why can't he remember to use his words? Why isn't he trying to negotiate with me, like my little sister used to with my dad? Why can't he see that I'm a sucker for him and know if he played his very good cards right his life would be - easy? 

Because he has Autism. It's not over, it's just different. I prepared, I worked, and now we've gone on to phase two. I was told that we would go on to meet new challenges but I didn't hear it. He can use a pencil and have a conversation with me now, damn it. So we have the older, brilliant Autistic child who has been rediagnosed with Aspergers, and I haven't even really researched this part yet.   

Paved roads are overrated anyway, right?





Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Typical people, it’s time to start pulling your weight


Years of therapy - speech therapy, occupational therapy, behavior therapy, and social skills. My 5 year old has worked his butt off to learn how to understand and relate to the typical world. What a smile means, what a frown means, what sarcasm is and why people don’t say what they mean and mean what they say. Don’t hug, don’t touch, don’t stand too close because it makes the typicals uncomfortable. We still haven’t got that down. Typical kids jump away like they’ve never had affection at home. Sometimes I feel sorry for them.

He. Tries. SO. Hard. He doesn’t get it right. The kids are mean. He wants to give up. He echoes lines from his superhero cartoons “That kid is NOT my bro.” He sobs in my lap for a half hour because I won’t let him quit soccer this time.

And I think, it’s not fair really. He was born behind the curve in understanding an illogical world. Meanwhile those for whom learning comes easy breeze through with a scorn and a laugh, some flippant remarks, adults who think we all “take it too seriously” when every day that we go out in public is a war. A war to keep my child from sinking into self-hatred and killing himself. Too dramatic again? Uh oh, better run back to your pintrest and desperate housewives, because today I’m keeping it real.

See, words and attitudes do hurt, even for a child who might not have the finest grasp on words. What he understands less is why he’s an automatic outcast. He takes it out on himself, not knowing how he’s messing it up, but knowing that he is.

My five year old said he hates himself and wants to kill himself. Several times.

At first I reacted by saying I hate Autism. But I don’t. I hate typical. Typical, self-important, entitled yahoos to whom life hands apples and they make quips about what to do when you get lemons.

The week I was dealing with a suicidal five year old, rejection on the playground, new soccer kids in new soccer team who scorn and push and play better, meltdowns in public and sobfests in my arms; that same week I am confronted by an internet post that mocked parents who have screaming kids in target. Bring on the inevitable tidal wave of public opinion and vicious posts about bad parents and rotten kids. I wasn’t mad, yet. I know people are ignorant (though it’s 2012 and the information age, for God’s sake.) I'm always more hurt for Jaden than offended for me, because people think of him that way. Kids do pick up on those attitudes, yes even kids with disabilities. I insert a small PSA about special needs kids and thinking before you bitch, and get the slap down because life is rainbows and I should learn to laugh about it more. “We all have problems.” Yep, I can remember the time I had to choose which coffee to make in the morning and trying to make it home from work in time to watch my favorite show. God, life was rough.

I do laugh at myself, my problems, my issues and my screw-ups. I make jokes about it all the time. Humor and finding the joy in my life, or at least the sarcasm, is part of what holds me together. My husband left me? I have jokes for that. Don’t have a job because I’m caring for my son? Sure, poor humor is rich. You put down my son (or incite others to do the same)? I will tear your fucking eyes out. Fair enough? Some things. Aren’t. Funny.

Jaden is about to complete his 3rd year of therapy. All that to relate to the typical world, and because that’s what he wants to do, not because I give a damn about him looking like a “real boy.” And he’s doing amazing, just absolutely amazing and I’m proud of him and the hard work he’s done. He’s doing great until he’s around typical kids who see different a mile away no matter how much therapy it’s had.

How much time have you invested in your kids, or even yourself, to be able to relate to children/people/families with special needs? If a child with special needs is behind already, and your honor roll kids are so smart, why is it so hard for them to learn how to meet a child with Autism half way instead of making that kid do all the work to get up to their standards? Instead of handing out donations at the supermarket and thinking you did something special, why don’t you spend some time teaching your kids what special really is, why different doesn’t mean bad, and how to be a friend?  We’ve invested 3 years and counting. You can match that with at least a few days.

A child having a meltdown at the supermarket doesn’t offend me, by the way, but a mean-spirited child sure does. I blame the parents.