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Saturday, April 13, 2024

Janey and the Eclipse

 Seeing a total eclipse of the sun has been something I've wanted to do ever since I was aware such things existed.  So last week's eclipse, which was total in parts of my home state of Maine, was a must-see for me.  Luckily, we have dear family friends that also wanted to see the eclipse, and we all (fifteen people total, from their extended family and the five of us!) headed to Presque Isle, Maine for the big event.

In the weeks leading up to the trip, I was nervous about how Janey would do.  She likes car travel, but lately, not long trips as much, and this trip was going to be about seven hours each way if we didn't stop at all, and you know we are going to be stopping!  With Janey's moods, if we had hit the wrong mood cycle for the trip, it could have been close to a disaster.  But, as with many things on this special trip, we hit it just right.  I am pleased to say Janey could not possibly have been much better for the whole trip!

We rented a minivan, and left very early Sunday morning.  The five of us (Janey's brothers in their 20s, William and Freddy, and Tony and me) are all early risers.  We were out of the driveway by 5:30am, which was a good decision.  The traffic had been a worry, but it was light, and it stayed light the whole ride up.  We drove up slowly, stopping often for bathroom breaks and food and coffee.  Janey slept some, but mostly spent the ride as she spends much of her time at home, watching videos on her tablet or (non-calling) phone.  We hot-spotted her off our phones, and aside from a few spots when we hit the uninhabited woods of Maine north of Bangor, we had good coverage.  It can get tiring to hear the shows Janey likes over and over and over---the theme song from Vamperina is etched in my mind---but it's worth it to keep her happy and cheerful.  We packed lots of food she likes, and we stopped for her fast food favorites---Burger King hash browns and later some Wendy's nuggets and fries.  And of course coffee---something we all drink.

Very early start!


We got to the hotel about 3 pm, and there met up with our friends who got there shortly afterward.  I wondered how Janey would react to seeing her favorite adult friend Maryellen in a place so far from where both of us live, but she didn't seem surprised or confused.  I'd told her in advance she'd see Maryellen, of course, but I think even if I hadn't, she would have just accepted it.  Life must sometimes seem like that to her on an everyday basis---odd things happen she isn't sure of the reasons for and she has just learned that's how life is.

Janey loves hotels, which she calls "hotel houses", as a general rule, and she did very well at this one too.  They feature endless hot showers and the fun of choosing a bed from the two in the room, and usually a breakfast buffet.  They are a change of scenery that isn't too radical a change for her, I think.  Unlike a lot of people with autism, Janey is pretty good with changes, as long as she has familiar people around her and can have the comfort of her  videos and music.  

And the actual eclipse?  One thing I wondered about a lot is whether Janey would notice how strange it all was---to have night suddenly appear during the day.  I told her about it, explained it as best I could, but I don't know what she understood.  And as with seeing her friend far from home, Janey didn't seem terribly surprised by the eclipse.  She was happy out in the big field we watched it in---but I think that was because she had goldfish crackers and her videos and lots of family and friends around who seemed to her to be oddly exuberant over what I think she saw as a pretty regular afternoon.  We did have her look through eclipse glasses as the sun started to get covered, and asked her if she saw how the sun was getting covered, and she gave a mechanical "Yes" and pushed the glasses away.  

Janey and Tony during totality
For the rest of us---WOW.  If you ever have a chance to see a total solar eclipse---grab the chance.  To say the eclipse was life-changing is not overstating it.  It was truly the most amazing thing I will ever see, I think.  The boys and Tony felt the same way.  The weather was absolutely perfect---completely clear---and the corona shining around a dark sun in a suddenly dark and chilly day with a sunset that extended all around the horizon---it was something it's impossible to describe, something that affects every sense, something that makes you feel the majesty of this universe more than you are ever expecting to feel.  

Amazing


It struck me that this experience illustrates something that I've come to understand about Janey's life.  She is living a life that is parallel to ours but in some ways very different than ours.  Of course I don't know what she is thinking, but I think she lives a much more present tense life.  She didn't anticipate the eclipse as I did (in my case for nearly 50 years, from the time as a child I read there would be an eclipse visible in Maine in the far away year of 2024).  She didn't worry about the ride up.  She didn't think about how it would be dark for only 3 minutes.  I am not saying something all sentimental like "We should all learn from that!"  I am glad I can look forward to things, can appreciate how brief and amazing such moments as totality are.  I'm glad I can understand what causes an eclipse, can treasure spending it with family and friends, can look back on it with wonder.  But I can also accept Janey's way of experiencing life is all she has known, and that she doesn't feel a loss by not experiencing it as I do.


By the ride home, the rest of us were probably getting just a touch cranky, but Janey was upbeat.  By the time we hit Boston traffic, when I was wishing as I often do that I was back in Maine, Janey was the only one still in a pretty good mood.  Just before we pulled into our driveway, we all gave her a round of applause for being such an amazingly good traveler.  Thank you, Janey, for being a special part of a trip none of us will ever forget

Janey enjoying the pre-eclipse

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Autism Awareness Day---the adults with autism version

 I've had this blog since Janey was three and first diagnosed.  Now she is 19---hard to believe.  That's a lot of World Autism Awareness Days under our belts.  I was thinking today how my awareness wishes for the general public have changed since she became an adult.  

First of all, there's just that---she's an adult.  There seems to be thought out there that autism is something for children.  I am not sure what people think happens to those children with autism---upon turning 18, they are suddenly no longer autistic?  They just somehow disappear?  No---they are still around, still autistic, still in need of services and help.  

I remember thinking when Janey was getting close to an adult that I wanted to be sure to keep writing about her, to help in my small way to raise awareness of autistic adults.  But as you might have noticed, I write far less than I used to.  That is tied into something else I'd like to make people aware of.  As the years go by, there is less new news.  I might be negative and say there is less hope---but that's not really it.  There is less urgency, somehow, to DO something, to FIX something.  That is an awareness that doesn't need a special day for us to arrive at.  If there is something Janey isn't doing at this point, it's unlikely she will be doing it in the future.  And that's okay.  

My father asked me something the other day that made me think.  He said "You must sometimes have some sadness and regret over things that Janey will never do".  And I realized---I don't.  I don't think a lot about what Janey won't be able to do.  What comes into my head often is the phrase "That's not her path".  It's like how I don't regret that I can't fly, or that I'm not an astronaut, or a world class figure skater.  I was never going to be or do those things.  I don't regret what was not my path, and I don't really feel regret for Janey that she's not going to do things that were never her path---live on her own, get a job, get a high school diploma, go to college.  She has her own path.  That's something I'd like to make people aware of---that everyone has their own path, their own way through life, and we don't all need to have the same milestones along the way.

Lately, much of our life is bureaucracy, the endless series of obstacles to overcome and hoops to jump through to get Janey what she needs as an adult.  THERE'S something I wish people were more aware of---how hard it is to get even the smallest amount of help for people like Janey, except for school.  For example, we are working on registering her for services when she's 22.  She is 19 now, so it might seem early to start, but believe me---it's not.  First, we had to do an endless form and send in a huge amount of paperwork to prove there was a need for her to get adult services.  Then, we got requests to send even more---more reports, more proof of her autism, more IEPs, things like that.  THEN we got assigned a worker, and we took Janey to meet her.  The next day, I did many hours worth of phone interviews about Janey's development and current level of functioning.  You might think all that would be enough.  But of course not.  The worker told us we need a letter from her psychiatrist outlining all the reasons that Janey meets the definition of autism---despite her being diagnosed as such at least 3 times in the paperwork we already sent.  We are working on getting that letter, but getting no response from her psychiatrist at all.  Once we get that letter, if we ever do, finally she is formally put in to MAYBE get services---all this is just part of the application.  Once she is approved (and I would certainly hope she will get approved, but who knows?), we get assigned ANOTHER worker and we start trying to figure out if there are actually any programs out there for her (which it is very possible there won't be, from what I hear),

My boys both went to college, and got good financial aid, and I swear that was about 10 times easier to apply for than all this is.  You could spend 5 minutes with Janey and know she needs lifelong services.  Tony and I are fairly good at paperwork, and we are about out of our minds at this point.  What in the world would someone who might not read well or speak English well do to get this kind of help for their child?  WHY is it so hard?

And this is just ONE of the tasks of adulthood.  We also had to apply for Social Security for Janey, which wasn't quite as complicated but took over a year to be approved, and we had to get guardianship for her, which was another nightmare of complexity and is something we have to repeat EVERY YEAR.    I don't think it has to be this hard.  I think there's an impression out there, and in fact people have said to me that they think people with autism "get all kinds of help and services", like you get the diagnosis and suddenly help and money and respite and programs are all provided in abundance.  I'd like people to be aware that most certainly is not the case.

However, of everything I wish people could be aware of, the biggest is this---Janey is an amazing person.  She is our joy.  She loves so many things---good food, good music, good (in her eyes anyway) videos and movies.  She has a smile that is so wonderful it's impossible to describe if you haven't seen it.  She's funny and beautiful and in her own way, very smart.  You might look at the bare facts about her---a recorded IQ of 30, very little useful speech, not fully toilet trained, unable to read or write---and picture a tragedy.  The tragedy to me is that anyone would think that.  She is everything to us, and she deserves a full and interesting life as much as anyone does.  

I wish sometimes everyone who is responsible for any kind of public policy that affects the disabled could meet Janey.  And meet all the other amazing people out there that I've met because of Janey---I wish they could see for themselves the actual people they are making decisions for.  Maybe I'm a cockeyed optimist, but I think if they could, they would do all they could to make the world a place where Janey and all the others like her could not just survive, but thrive.