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Uncategorized

Hard

Losing someone is hard. Losing them young to illness is really hard. Young people don’t get sick and die do they? Of course not. My heart wants this to be true but my head battles. Rattles around the name of all of those dearly departed and gone too soon.

Watching someone you love be sick is hard. Probably not as hard as being sick yourself, or losing someone you love. People you love and help support can’t be sick and you can’t be helpless, can you? Of course not. My heart wants this to be true but my head battles. Rattles around the list of things that I can’t do anything about while my love is in pain, tired, struggling through the next round.

Hearing of someone dying of what your loved one has is hard. He couldn’t have died of the same thing around the same age as my love, could he? Of course not. My heart wants this to be true but my head battles. Rattles around the facts of his life – his age, race, nationality, diagnosis, stage, progression – looking for similarities and differences in statistics that I can hold on to.

My head tries hard to reason my heart out of feeling all the feels. Sorrow. Heartbreak. Fear. Gratitude. Fear. Grief. Fear. Hope. Fear. He is gone too soon. We have scans next month.

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Uncategorized

Not Them Dresses

I was sitting on my front porch when the mail woman pulled up. We exchanged pleasantries and she left the package she carried  on the front steps. When I opened it, it was full of clothes. I pulled one individually packaged item out after another. Pants, shirts, overalls. Items I did not recall ordering. I opened all the packaging, certain I’d never perused the items before. These were not items I’d placed in a shopping cart and mistakenly ordered. I knew this, because these items weren’t work appropriate. Being practical, for years, I’ve only bought myself things that could do double duty. Yoga gear that could be street wear, cookout clothes that could go to work by adding a blazer and changing the shoes. One shirt said “Being A Mom Makes My Life Complete”. Nope, I didn’t order this stuff.

I doubled checked the address. It was correct. Then I checked the sizes. They were all large. My mother is bodycon averse. But she wouldn’t, would she? I looked at every item carefully. They were all modest, and all easy loungewear, just a little big for me. I really didn’t think it was her.

I called my mom. “Mom, did you send me clothes?” “Oh they just got there? I ordered them  a few weeks ago when I was sitting in my infusion and you sounded like you were having a rough day so I thought they would make you feel better and help you relax.” What?

My surprise can only make sense if you know that my mother has never, and I mean never bought me an item of clothing that I couldn’t wear to work. Ever. Our biggest fight in life was over some dresses she bought me that were better suited for a boardroom or office than high school, and she didn’t appreciate me saying so. This moment was so pivotal in my life that my bff and I still refer to it as “them dresses” 30 years later. My mom whose hustle singled handedly fueled the upward class mobility of our family in one generation. The one who I have never known to fully rest. The one who even at 71 has so much shit on her plate that I watch with both awe and pity. The one who told me to sleep when I’m dead. The one who probably gave multitasking its name. The one who LITERALLY brought home the bacon and fried that shit in a pan, then ran back out to show a house. That one. BOUGHT ME LOUNGEWEAR.

I picked up similar habits, and quickly saw that I couldn’t live that way, and felt inferior and unworthy because of it, FOR YEARS! I judged myself so harshly against her constant movement and energy. I think she used to judge me too. I was sleepy and lazy to her booked and busy. Only once I had kids, did she see how my commitment to presence and my focus on my boys took just as much energy. Now she celebrates that part of me. Only once I had kids did I see how hard her choices were and how much more strong and amazing she was to have been doing all of that with a husband and three of her own kids and her extended family in her back.

And with one purchase, unbeknownst to her, she healed a piece of my soul. The part of me that could never make sense of the world she inhabited that celebrated the constant going and doing. The part of me that has been fighting to just BE. I didn’t need my mommy to tell me it was ok, but damn it feels good that she did.

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Uncategorized

Take It Down

Tonight the confederate monument was removed from the square in The City of Decatur.

We decided to drive by and watch. We all wore masks and the boys and I wore our new Let Us Breath tees.

As I stood there watching this massive phallic symbol of hatred and failure come down, I thought about my first year at The University of Georgia. Freshman year was a rude awakening. I moved from Southwest Atlanta to Athens, Georgia. In Southwest Atlanta, there were all types of black people. In Athens, most of the black adults I saw were janitorial staff. I went from having all black to teachers every year, to three black professors in four years. I went from being surrounded by people who looked like me, to having classes with hundreds of kids, none of whom looked like me.

Driving down the main drag in Athens in 1994, you’d find multiple cars with extra large confederate flags. They were flown from some of the houses on fraternity row. They were every where. Confederate flags weren’t a part of my education prior to Athens. They weren’t flown with any frequency during my childhood even though it was basically the state flag. I don’t recall seeing one outside of books though I’m sure my parents did.

Once a random frat boy struck up a conversation with me during a study group for one of my larger classes. It was polite chit chat until I noticed a the confederate flag on something in his possession. I can’t remember what. I asked him why he carried it. He told me story about heritage. About his great grand whomever who fought in the war of northern aggression. About how they were fighting for states’ rights and not to keep slavery. I asked him where he learned what he thought he knew. His family had a rich oral history and vaguely mentioned some books that documented the tales.

I recalled my words to him as I watched the crew lift the 34 foot high shaft and lower it to the truck that would cart it away. What I said in 1994 is still as true 26 years later. When you look at that flag you see your history, and I see mine too. I see a history of hatred and bigotry, glorified by white people who lost their cause. I told him that if he wanted to represent himself that way to every black person who met him, he should keep waving that flag. And despite his intentions, I would never see him any differently than I see that flag. As long as these monuments to honor the confederacy stand, I will never believe those defending them or calling for them to remain in place, are anything other than hateful bigot losers.

As much as I want many other things to happen for black lives in this country, I couldn’t help but feel hopeful tonight. Hopeful that maybe people would care more about who they are right now than constantly harkening back to a mythical past. Hopeful that finally, how we are being treated right now would be more important than a flag or a statue. We have a long way to go. This is a start.

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Justice Uncategorized

On Policing

My first negative interaction with police occurred when I was 15 years old. I remember it was a Christmas break. My brother was home from his freshman year in college and my cousin and I went with him and a friend to a Jerome Rowe party. It was somewhere downtown, I don’t remember where I was. I was still in the party that was about to end. People were making their way to the exit. As I walked down the steps I saw my brother being walked to a police van in handcuffs. I ran up. “Why are you arresting my brother?” “Because I told him to move on and he didn’t.” “It isn’t illegal to stand on the street and he was waiting for me.” “I don’t care and if you keep asking me questions I’m going to arrest you too.” My brother had his keys in his handcuffed hands and threw them to me. He said some choice words before the van doors were closed.

I drove my brother’s old fleetwood cadillac home. I stayed on the surface streets because I didn’t have a fucking license. I dropped his friend at home on the way. I made it home at close to 2am and woke my parents. My parents got up in the middle of the night to go get him. We made it home. They found my brother and brought him home. The charges were dropped immediately. I didn’t sleep that night. I haven’t thought of that story in years. But that story lives in my body. It lives in the suspicion I’ve had for all police since that moment.

I’ve had positive interaction with police since then. Mostly positive I’ll admit. But I have eyes and ears. I’m not blind. I see. I see the statistics – I see the how often police in this country kill people, black people in particular. I see the people who are over policed and arrested most. I see who remains silent when families are mourning and asking for justice. My suspicion is justified.

I have not taught my sons to hate police. I’ve taught them that most police are good, but there are bad people with badge. Honestly, I think the low barrier to entry, the weapon, and the power that comes with a badge is too enticing for certain personalities to resist. There are certain kinds of people who will be attracted to that for all the wrong reasons. Reimagining policing would start to weed some of that out. If you eliminate the shielding and protection of bad officers and focus on protecting and serving instead of catching bad guys, I believe the result would be different. If you focus on the mental health of officers (and the high amount of former military folks who become officers) you’d have a different result.

I have taught my sons to mind their hands when interacting with police. Don’t resist. I’ve told them it is ok to go to jail. Can you imagine telling your kid that? We can get you out of jail. We can deal with whatever charges are levied against you. I don’t want to scoop your body off of the street.

My oldest son is on the Autism Spectrum. He wears head phones everywhere. He doesn’t hear you if you aren’t making eye contact. If you surprise him, he very often swings fists in response. He is difficult to calm down when overstimulated. He tends to respond to the vibe of a situation before he can have a conversation. He moves instinctually. Watching the video of Jay Pharoah walking down the street after a jog while police approached him from behind with guns drawn scared the shit out of me. I immediately imagined my son in that situation. How can entrust the safety of one of the most precious parts of my life to people who see him as a threat before they know him? How can I entrust my safety to any of them if they won’t sniff out their own rotten eggs?

We try not to drive through rural areas at night. A few weeks ago we were thinking about driving to Texas. I didn’t really want to fly in the midst of a pandemic. As I thought through the logistics of the road trip, I realized I’d planned it to avoid driving through any rural areas at night. I thought about whether the SUV we’d rent would be tented. Police seem easier around families. I thought about where we might have to take bathroom and food breaks along the way. Driving across the Southeast. I was concerned about germs, the virus, and the people we’d encounter. What type of police are in these little towns? We decided to fly.

I would like to take a road trip without concern for my safety because of the color of my skin, specifically from police. I would love the privilege of worrying about garden variety things like whether we can grab food at a Wholefoods along the way instead of stopping for fast food. How nice the hotel is and if they have pool side bar service. For now I will catch my flight.

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Editor's Picks Word of the Week

Anger

Anger 

Noun – an intense emotional state induced by displeasure.

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I am not an angry person. I’m silly. I’m irreverent. I have a dirty sense of humor. I like to call it bawdy. I’ve been called decisive. Direct. I can be both insensitive  and sensitive depending on who I’m talking to and what the subject is. But I’m not usually angry.

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Recently I’ve been angrier than usual. It could be cancer related, covid related. Hell if I know. I’ve just been less patience with and more angered by intentional ignorance. Intolerance. Lack of empathy. These things are really pissing me off right now. So when I ranted yesterday about how stupid it is to keep othering people when we are all in this shitty soup together, I just accepted that I’d hit my limit. And fb got an earful. Well fine.

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Today I’m calmer. Today I know that the anger I felt overwhelmed by yesterday is two things. First, it’s justifiable and acceptable. I get to be mad sometimes. I don’t have to smile away all the idiotic things I’m seeing. Secondly, and probably most importantly, my anger informs where my passions lie. I’m not mad about things that aren’t important to me. I’m pretty level headed about things that infuriate everyone else, so I can trust my pissivity (new word alert) to accurately point an arrow toward an area where I should focus.

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I’m serious about helping ppl live their best lives. I’m committed to helping others find peace and joy and be better versions of themselves. This is the main reason I became a lawyer and eventually a yoga teacher. I know that what I am seeing in our country and in our world don’t lead us to where we want to be. Othering ppl isn’t really the way to happiness. Neither is hypocrisy, ignorance, or fear. Ultimately anger won’t do it either. Love will. My anger reminded me of that.

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I don’t take back anything I said in anger (this time). I’d actually push forward. I feel strongly about equality and justice. I hate that so many of us are so fearful, that we see slashing public assistance, over policing communities, or pushing a stalled economy during a pandemic as viable solutions to make our lives more convenient. We bully each other. We shit on other humans as if they aren’t made of the same flesh and blood. We treat everyone and every thing that doesn’t fit into our best little box as disposable. We disdain any belief that calls ours into question. That makes me angry.

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Here is what I know. My anger is warranted in the face of lies and hypocrisy. Truth is truth. I can’t combat your beliefs with my beliefs. I can’t fight ignorance with anger. I fight with truth. Over and over. Blue in the face right as rain truth. Period. My anger is not a weapon to be wielded on people who believe differently from me. That would make me just like them. No my anger is a signpost to my work. It’s like a gps for where I can put some fervent energy towards something I believe in. So that’s what I’m going to do.

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Life Spectrum

I Want My Child To Be OK

I want my child to be ok.

I thought about this when he was first diagnosed with a condition that had no cure. If “curing” him is not possible, let’s shoot for quality of life.

I’m not certain, but I see this as a turning point for most parents. Do you want to fix your kid or do you accept what is and give him his best life? I chose the latter and it has made life better for my family.

I have at least one encounter every year that feels like slap in the face. It is the nature of parenting a child on the autism spectrum. It doesn’t feel good to be told what your child isn’t doing or to have their struggles in black and white, knowing that no intervention will completely alleviate those struggles. That is hard to swallow. I’ve met parents who are unwilling to accept it. If they make it to a diagnosis, they have unrealistic expectations of everyone, including their kid. Or if they don’t have a diagnosis they focus on obtaining one because their kid isn’t a perfect student. This obsession with exceptionality leads to a negative head space. It isn’t healthy and ultimately makes everything more difficult.

My advice is to accepting what is. Be ok with where you are right now and not constantly focused on getting somewhere else or wishing things were different. Of course I want him to develop all the skills he can. Yes. But he is a whole wonderful person as he is. He is a blessing. We will do the most to help him, but we will not ruin everything today trying to get to tomorrow. We will enjoy this moment. That means not ruling his schedule with an iron fist. That means allowing for days and weeks when school isn’t as intense as it could be. That means being ok with deviation from his IEP occasionally. It means vegging out on video games for a couple of hours sometimes. It means that people aren’t perfect and there has to be room for others to get things wrong sometimes. I’m wrong all the time. Why should anyone else be any different?

I am his advocate. I do not treat my advocacy like a war.

The way we approach his interventions is not adversarial. We are not looking to fight. We also aren’t asking for the world because we recognize that what we can do without will likely help another kid. We start every conversation with the assumption that everyone wants what is best for our kid.

I have no problem escalating an issue, I have no problem communicating my disagreement or challenging authority. I can stand up for my child any time it is necessary. We do what we must. But I do not believe in asking teachers or administrators to cure my child. To fix him. I do not ask expect them to be perfect. When I manage my expectations, I’m rarely disappointed. When I accept my child as he is, the urgency to dot every I and cross every T lessens, and our quality of life is better for it.

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Spectrum

Where Is My Breath?

I read an email today. One of my son’s teachers said “I don’t think he belongs in accelerated math”. I read it over and over. I felt as if I’d been stabbed in the chest. The words echoed in my head. You don’t belong. You don’t belong. You don’t belong.

I’ve spent years erasing the tape in my head that says I am not enough. The old conditioned beliefs creep up on me from time to time. Being present while parenting challenges the old beliefs all the time. I know the emotions when I see them. They are directly tied to my own insecurities. My loss of breath was not about my son. I took a breath. And another. My eyes stung. My heart ached. I took another breath. And then the initial emotion passed.

I’ve learned to look deeper within when moments like this happen. Reacting to the teacher or to Benji when I’m in these places is not productive. I usually receive a mirror image response to the vibe I put off. That isn’t helpful and it usually isn’t true. Being angry isn’t helpful. Responding to this teacher at this point in the year isn’t helpful. Why did that line in an email make me feel this way?

It took me about 5 minutes to see it clearly. I want my son to achieve as much as he can. He has already done more than many expected of him. He is very smart. That isn’t the issue. His bigger issue is his ability to organize himself and his thoughts, follow along in class without zoning out, and remember all the details of his assignments. Remember to show up for tutoring or finish a retest. He works slower than most because he is so easily distracted. Completing his work without prompting is an issue. I know what his challenges are. I know he is jumping hurdles every time he shows up. Reading that email felt like an indictment. A decree that he isn’t good enough . By extension, I am not good enough. I felt 12 again.

I’ve experienced this moment more than once directly related to my special needs child. He is different, honestly much harder to parent. I know for a fact he is harder to teach. The fact that people see him and make judgment calls about who he is and what he can do, it just bothers me. I don’t like it. When I moved through the emotion, I decided. Is it possible that he doesn’t belong in accelerated math? Yes, it is possible. Is this statement true? I asked him what he thought. He said he’d prefer to take a more challenging class and struggle rather than take an easier class and be bored. Ok. Do any of the other professionals on his team agree with this statement? I’m waiting on an answer to that question. Am I willing to provide additional support to help him be successful? Absolutely.

By the time I got through the deep dive into my feelings, I realized I don’t have to carry this as an affront to me or a failure on my part. We are all still good enough. He is enough, whether he takes advanced math or the basics. He is fine. We are fine. This teacher is not evil. She is entitled to her opinion. We are entitled to ours. This is not the end of the world. We are still fine. Just Breathe.

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Editor's Picks Spectrum

Origin Story – Spectrum Edition

I write about my kids all the time. I’m very open about my parenting and how it is impacted by our oldest’s special needs. I share our origin story all the time in person. It is Autism Awareness Month now and I feel the need to write it down and I hope that you will share it with anyone with a child that is possibly on the spectrum or dealing with a developmental delay.

Benji was our first child. He was born in 2003. Ron and I had limited experience with children, only a few nieces and nephews around us. We liked kids but neither of us had spent any substantive time around them. So when we received this gift, this smiling beautiful baby boy, we were so excited. We were nervous too. The rule was “Don’t Break Him.”

Benji was a happy boy with juicy cheeks and thighs. We affectionately called him Buddha because of his big round tummy. He was such a sweet bright boy. At 5 months, Benji was mimicking me when I’d sing to him, trying to make sounds just like me. I was amazed at this. It was really remarkable to hear a baby do that. Who knew? He started crawling a few months later and found his feet just after his first birthday. By then, he’d stopped mimicking my singing. He’d stopped attempting to speak at all. Over the next few months we noticed that he was not using any words. We had a neighbor whose son was 8 weeks younger than Benji, and he was beginning to talk. Benji was eerily silent. He was incredibly active, exhaustingly so once he started to walk. He’d run back and forth in our house, almost as if he was on a rail. If we went to the playground, he’d make his way to the highest surface possible. He’d stare blankly at nothing, almost like he was feeling the wind on his face. It was odd behavior for a toddler, but I like the feel of the wind on my face, so I thought nothing of it. But it became clear that you couldn’t take your eyes off him for a second, or he’d climb something. Anything. Our house was two stories with a catwalk. I probably lost hours of my life behind him running back and forth on that catwalk, trying to find a way to climb the railing.

My bff kept him while I worked when he was an infant. I was under the illusion that I was going to just keep working, as I had been. The thought of staying home with him did not cross my mind. I did however, start my own business, and worked from home quite a bit. Initially I thought I could watch him and work, but it was impossible. I was drowning because he never sat still. At the time, no television shows would pacify him. There was no way to distract him into play time. He wouldn’t tolerate a play pen. So my college friend and professional nanny took over for me, and we settled into a routine that worked for our household and my business. The schedule worked well, but we noticed he still was not speaking. We decided to let him go to Montessori for a couple of hours a few days a week, hoping he’d pick up more language by being around other kids his age.

Benji was about 15 months when I mentioned casually to his doctor that I was struggling. Benji wasn’t speaking. He had no words. He would not make eye contact. He didn’t want to be held, but he couldn’t be left on his feet for more than a second before starting to run back and forth, wherever we were. He was already walking on his toes, constantly perched with his heels in the air as if he couldn’t bear to have them touch the earth. I couldn’t do laundry or cook unless someone else was in the house with him. Then we found the Backyardigans. Something about the music in that show mesmerized him, allowing me to get work done in 30 minute spurts. But the biggest issue that I mentioned to my doctor that day? He would not let me hold him. He would hug me when he saw me, and immediately run off. He didn’t seem to want me especially. I couldn’t calm him. She asked about his toys. Did he have any favorites? No. Was he attached to any dolls or toys? No. Does he play with toys? Well, he plays with trains. He lines them up in a row. Does he play with anything else? He will play with almost anything that he can line up in a row. I want you to see a developmental pediatrician she said.

The same week of that pediatric appointment, the director of the Montessori he attended asked to meet with me. She’d noticed Benji in class. He didn’t seem bothered by the other kids, but wasn’t interacting with them either. He spent most of his time in the class playing in the corner alone. He particularly liked the cotton ball station. He enjoyed lining up the cotton balls like trains. Outside he seemed happy, but he always climbed the slide over and over. He didn’t play with other kids. He didn’t try any of the other toys or equipment. Just the slide, over and over. The day of that meeting was the first day I heard the word Autism. The Montessori director was a wonderful woman, married to a pediatrician, who asked her husband for an assessment and performed it on Benji during class. She shared the results with us and said we should check with his doctor.

The next few weeks were a blur. I read everything I could about autism. There wasn’t much. We saw the developmental peds doc. She said he presented with every typical symptom of autism. Katie Couric did a story on the Today Show about autism and the early symptoms. She described our son. We spoke with longtime friends whose child was diagnosed a few years earlier. They offered a lifeline to us because we not only had no idea what to do, but neither did anyone else. Not really. There were organizations that dealt with developmental delays, but Benji was diagnosed before he was two, which was not normal at the time. We tried private orgs that said he had to be more severe for them to treat him, and state organizations that presented a plan that sounded like I was putting Benji in their hands completely. I didn’t trust that. We met with Babies Can’t Wait. I know they provide great help for some, but I had a hard time getting past the intake process. We ended up putting him in the Walden School at Emory Autism Center on the suggestion of our friends. He was the youngest student they’d ever had.

The diagnosis led to a lot of changes. The business I started would eventually close. With Benji going to a really expensive private school, we couldn’t afford a nanny any more. I was pregnant with Ace. Most of Benji’s therapy occurred at school which was great. But therapy is not cheap, nor is it a quick fix. We moved closer to Emory. Benji would scream for the entire ride home if you didn’t drive a certain route, and using the same route every day from Decatur to Fairburn is almost impossible in Atlanta traffic. So we moved closer. We did whatever we needed to do to make sure Benji received the care he needed. This put a strain on our marriage and our finances. We struggled mightily.

In the 14 years since we heard the world Autism, so much has changed. We are recovering from the financial setbacks. Our marriage and family unit are stronger than ever. Battle tested. Benji is doing really well thanks to many amazing hands over the years. We experienced some serious challenges, but we also encountered some angels in disguise. Raising Benji has taught us so much. One of the largest lessons I’ve learned is there is no one way to be successful. When faced with this diagnosis and not many examples of adults living with it, I decided we wanted Benji to live his best life. It may not look like what I dreamed for him. We didn’t know what would be possible. But Ron and I both decided not to frustrate ourselves or Benji with holding him to a standard that we weren’t sure he could meet. We wanted him to be happy. Whatever that looked like. So that allowed us to take each day as it came, and meet him where he was. I believe this made a big difference in his progress. We let him tell us what he was capable of, and we went from there.

The other huge lesson that I learned is to assume goodwill, always. Along this journey we saw many doctors, nurses, health professionals, teachers, therapists, administrators. Some of them, like all people, were better at their jobs than others. Some were kinder and some were better with kids. Some sucked and needed to go home and start over. Some were probably in the wrong field. We decided to take none of this personally. They were human. We advocated for our child, we asked for things and received pushback. We pressed and were guided to alternatives. It has been a give a take all these years. But we’ve had tremendous professionals working to help our kid get better. I could have been offended, often. There were meetings I left in tears and times when I was ready to mama bear someone across the table from me. But a good friend taught me early, and its worked so far, to be grateful for his progress and believe that everyone in the room wants what is best for him until they prove different. This method has made adversarial meetings friendly, and has helped us receive the very best of some mediocre situations.

If I shared any advice to parents, other than my two biggest lessons, it would be to get your kid all the help they need. Don’t be afraid of your kid getting labeled. Don’t listen to people telling you nothing is wrong. Don’t ignore delays in development that could linger and cause problems down the road. Don’t wear a blindfold. Don’t just pray for it to get better. Act. Don’t listen to people who are negative. Don’t underestimate what is possible for your kid. Don’t buy everything on the market that says it can help. Advocate for your kid. Ask questions. Don’t leave their fate in the hands of educators that are overwhelmed by the needs of the population they serve. Be the squeaky wheel. Love your kid for exactly who they are. Be kind, your child is watching.

Categories
Spectrum

These Are The Breaks

Our school system takes a break every 6 weeks. It took some time getting used to these breaks because more traditional school systems do breaks a little differently with longer summers and holiday breaks. We’ve come to enjoy these more regular breaks through out the year.

I imagine these breaks are difficult for parents who have to work and find affordable child care for their littles when school is out at times when no other schools are out. You’d be surprised how hard this is. Our city recreation system does a pretty good job of offering camps to cover these times. They aren’t free, but they are affordable and there is assistance when needed so that is great. Ideally we’d travel during every break, but we aren’t balling like that right now.

While I appreciate the downtime in the boys constant schedule, I must admit that breaks with THING 1 (without traveling) suck. He wants to do absolutely nothing on these breaks. He has defined a break as a suspension of all activity, from sports to basic hygiene. He is resistant to doing anything. He doesn’t want to go to therapy or piano practice. He wants to play video games and watch youtube videos about developing video games. I

I’d totally accommodate his desires if I knew it wouldn’t be absolute hell getting him back on schedule. A total shutdown sounds great until I remember that my kid is on the spectrum. It takes him exactly one day to undo a habit that took years to develop. The lack of structure and routine is overwhelming for him. Pulling him out of the video game vortex is an agonizing interaction, as is getting him back on track enough to go to school Monday. Getting his sleep schedule back together takes weeks. While we’d all love nothing more than to go off the rails for a week, we just don’t have the luxury of that option. It’s too hard!

I will say, I’m pretty sure “typical” kids go through similar withdrawals. I believe what is so special about Spectrum kids is their ability to feel right on the surface, everything that most of us experience deep down. We lie to ourselves about it. We have bad attitudes and smart mouths in response to things that are unrelated to whatever we are pissed about. With THING 1, you can’t mistake what you did to piss him off. He is happy to let you know.

It is Friday of a weeklong break and I had to drag him out of the house for track. He mumbled about it the entire way. I’m sure my poor husband is on the receiving end of some rearview mirror eye rolls and under the breath comments about how horrible it all is. When track practice is over, he will behave as if he is dying of pollen inhalation and he will blame us with his eyes and judge us with snarky comments. We will stare at each other, and shake our heads. We know it is coming and we know he can’t help it.

He wants to go to track. It sounds like he doesn’t, right? But he does. He wants to get better and compete successfully. He wants to see his friends. But all of this is contrary to his prior definition of Break. Suggesting that he redefine it for himself has gone over like a lead balloon. Pointing out how much fun he has is irrelevant. Reminding him that he actually enjoys this activity is a moot point. Because a break means cessation of all activity. So what do we do? We keep the schedule going, because no one can actually break from everything. And he should learn that now. We push him out the door and ignore the eye rolls and mumblings. We talk as if we don’t notice his reactions. Then we pick him up from whatever activity and we move on. We do it every day of every 6th week, and for 8 weeks of summer. We just do it.

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Editor's Picks Life

Me vs Everybody

I’ve been married at this point longer than I was single. Most of my adult life. I’ve been a mother for most of my adult life. I’ve spent more years on this earth with responsibility for others than I did just taking care of myself.

I view my last statement as an issue of epidemic proportions. I am saying that I learned how to care for a child, a husband, and a household, before I learned to care for myself. At least I’ve had much more practice at it. I’ve become proficient at taking care of others. I’m still working on the self care.

I had a couple of factors early on to push me toward focusing on self care. From 2004 -2006, my world turned upside down and hasn’t completely righted itself if I’m being honest. First, my beloved aunt died. My oldest son was diagnosed with Autism shortly after that. I was pregnant at the time. After my second child was born, I was diagnosed with postpartum cardiomyopathy. I was 28 years old. I was exhausted all the time, and felt like I could never catch a break. I literally could not catch my breath.

It was a rough couple of years for me. I was self aware enough to know that something about how I was living my life was not working for me. But the physical constraints my diagnosis initially caused were what really made my decisions easier. I needed to rest. I didn’t have a choice. It led me to leave my job and close my law practice. I began to find dealing with the triviality of my business made me tired and grumpy. I only had so many hours in the day, and I had a new baby and a toddler who needed my focus. I realized in that moment, I cannot do it all. It is impossible.

It took me years to see that I have to stop and rest, not just to have energy for my husband and kids. I have to rest to have energy for myself. To be the best and happiest version of myself. Being ok with pursuing my own happiness was the hardest mental shift I had to make. The death of my aunt put a large focus in my head on the brevity of life. It is short. We don’t control when it ends. So for the time that we are here, what do I want my life to look like?

It took years to get to a place where I am very clear about what that looks like. It was easier to see what it doesn’t look like. It does not look like working from 7-7 and coming home too exhausted to play before bed time. It does not look like home cooked meals every night and lunches packed with crafts and handwritten notes. It does not look like a 10 room house that we pay for but only use 3 of the rooms. It doesn’t look like my kids participating in every activity available to them or going to all the parties. It does not look like answering every call and hitting every family event. Not never seeing my husband. Not joining all the professional organizations. Not accomplishing all the things. Not being everything for every body. Not needing a vacation from my life.

I know my best life involves enjoying my kids. Growing closer to my husband. Breathing. Moving my body. Eating good food. Traveling. Surrounding myself with people who bring joy. Having peace of mind.