For a week or so now, I've been feeling frustrated and upset by a lot of what I see out there in the world of the internet about autism. I haven't been able to quite put my finger on what has been bothering me until now.
This article somehow cleared my mental clutter a bit and allowed me to put voice (internally and hopefully now to you!) to what I've been troubled by. It's been a combination of themes that have upset me. These themes, on their own, are well-meant and progressive, but they combined to send a message about severe autism, low-functioning autism, non-or-low verbal autism, whatever you want to call it (and having to be careful what you call it is another issue). The message they send is "People with severe autism are not valuable or worth helping just the way they are"
One thing that is said a lot about Janey's type of autism is "Assume competence". There's a lot I like about that idea, but I realize now there's also a lot about it that can lead to the message above being sent. Janey isn't a valuable person because of something we have to assume, something that might or might not exist in her. She's not valuable because she might understand more than she lets on, she might be reading without me knowing it, she might be a musical genius in disguise, she might have a higher IQ than she can show by testing. She's valuable EXACTLY HOW SHE IS AND APPEARS. She is valuable even if she never, ever progresses beyond where she is right now. She's valuable without having to assume anything.
Another trend I see here and there lately is that of never saying anything that isn't positive about parenting autistic kids. There's sometimes an implication included that if you don't speak only of the wonder and joy of raising your child with autism, you are lacking as a parent, you don't love them, or, at the very least, you are leaving a trail that they might someday read and feel upset about. Well, I'm here to say that anyone who never has found anything negative about parenting ANY child is at the very least kind of clueless, and at the very most kind of, well, lying. I love all three of my kids with an intensity that almost scares me. But there were moments in parenting all three of them that were horrible. There were scary moments, frustrating moments, moments I felt angry, moments I felt in despair. In setting aside kids with autism as somehow being different than that, somehow being incapable of provoking any feelings but pride and wonder and joy---that seems to me to be again saying they are only valuable as some kind of fairy tale innocent, some kind of otherworldly being. Janey is valuable for who she is, exactly how she really is. I don't have to be careful with every word not to break a bubble of illusion around her, because I love the real Janey.
In so many areas, the thoughts and beliefs of a culture change like a slow-swinging pendulum. In the past, a child like Janey would be seen as a tragedy, someone to "put away" as to not ruin the lives of the parents and siblings. I am so thankful that is not the thinking now. But we have swung to the other end of the line, where Janey and children like her are full of amazing potential and a glowing beacon of perfection in a fallen world. That leaves parents like us, parents terrified about the future, living a life that is hugely full of stress, getting by from day to day, left feeling like we are somehow at fault, somehow seen as not accepting or loving our children enough. In my eyes, being honest about children like Janey, the good, the bad, the wonderful, the terrifyingly tough---to me anyway, that is love. That is love of a real child, not a symbol or a potential or a myth. I love Janey. I love my low-functioning, severely autistic child. I love her, the actual her, the truth of her. And I know there are many, many other parents like me, and many, many other children like Janey. I am going to try to keep being brave enough and honest enough to honor Janey by telling the story she can't---the story of a little girl, who, like every child in the world, deserves love exactly how she is.
Search This Blog
Showing posts with label the past. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the past. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Tuesday, October 13, 2015
800th Post!

I thought, for fun, my own fun anyway, I'd look at each 100th post---the 100th post, the 200ths, etc., and see what they were about. So here goes!
Post 100---"Crying Day"
Okay, that's not a cheerful one to start with. It's about a common theme---Janey's crying. She was 5 and a half then, and I was discouraged, and dissing the Holland story.
Post 200---"Toys"
Another theme I hit on fairly often---how it's hard to find toys for Janey, and what kind of toys she does like. I think I obsess over this a little, as I did here when she had just turned 7. I like toys. I love toys, maybe, and sometimes the hardest things to feel at peace about with autism or I think any special need in a child are the things you looked forward to sharing with them that are never going to happen. Janey's not going to beg me for an American Girl doll, or the latest Shopkins, or anything like that, and I don't think even now I'm quite resigned to that.
Post 300---"Why is the Crying So Hard?"
Another crying post! This time, I was trying to figure out why crying in particular is something I get so upset by, and just can't ever ignore. Janey was seven and a half here.
Post 400---"Another Day, Another Book"
A little different! I love to read, and I do a lot of book reviewing, and that other life snuck into the blog here, in the form of an autism memoir. I don't read as many of them as I'd think I would---I think I need a break from autism when I read, most of the time. But when I do read a book about autism, I usually write a blog post about it.
Post 500---"Good Night, Daddy!"
A cheerful one, for a change, about Janey telling Tony good night totally on her own. She was eight and a half. Whenever something like that happened, you can tell on the blog that although I'm trying not to get my hopes up, I'm still hoping it's the start of a big new change. I guess it's good not to give up that hope, but now I do try to enjoy those little moments on their own, without projecting what they might mean for the future.
Post 600---"Letting Go of Janey's Hand"
Written when Janey was nine, this one is about the baby steps I was taking toward letting Janey walk without holding my hand all the time. Unlike the talking breakthroughs, this one has lasted. Janey really doesn't bolt any more, and I feel pretty safe letting her walk without holding her hand, even on the sidewalk of our busy street. It's nice to read back about when I started doing that!
Post 700---"What it's like to visit a psychiatric hospital"
Well, that's not an uplifting one. I wrote it last December, when Janey was 10 and was an inpatient at Bradley Hospital in Rhode Island. I wrote this one partly just for myself, to remember what the visits were like, and partly because I was so unprepared for the whole hospitalization time. I hoped (and hope) none of you ever have to go through that, or go through it again if you have before, but if sometime in the future you did (and it happens more than I ever realized), I wanted others to have a little bit of an idea what it was like.
And here we are at post 800, sort of a clip show post! It's been a long, strange last 8 years, the eight years since Janey was diagnosed at age 3. I can see me writing post 1800 some day in the future. Autism is lifelong, and I will write about Janey until I am no longer able to. I hope that is a long time from now.
Labels:
autism,
books,
Bradley Hospital,
crying,
holding hands,
Holland story,
links,
talking,
the past,
this blog,
toys
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
If you didn't know autism existed, what would it look like?
Yesterday morning, Janey and I stopped at the Rite Aid on the way to school. Janey needed Cheez-Its, her preferred school snack, so we did a quick before school shop. The cashier was a teenager who was friendly but seemed, to be frank, a little clueless. Janey was in her silent mode---very quiet, very slow-moving, like she was walking through sand or something. The cashier very much wanted to connect with her. We were getting a heavily discounted chocolate bunny, so she asked Janey "Is that bunny for you?" Janey of course did not answer at all. The cashier said "Oh, she's tired! She looks very tired. Aren't you tired?" Normally at this point I'd explain Janey was autistic, but I was tired, even if Janey wasn't really, so I just said nothing. The cashier wasn't one to give up, though. She asked Janey "How old are you? Where do you go to school?" Janey---well, you know---stony silence. The cashier said "Oh, she's shy! She's very shy!" I just smiled and tried to get done with paying. Then the cashier said "Can you say goodbye to me, sweetie?" Janey did talk then, but not to say goodbye. She said in a run-together way, as she talks when she's in the slow mode "openthebunnyyesorno", meaning "Can you open the chocolate bunny right now, YES or NO?" I said "We'll open it in the car" The cashier said "Oh, does she get speech therapy? I used to get that too! It's okay, sweetie, you can talk to me!" Janey---no answer. Finally, as we were walking out, the cashier said "You'll be happier when you get to school and see your friends, won't you? Have a good day!"
I didn't mind the whole interchange. It was friendly and much better than staring, or ignoring. But it got me thinking. It's a big question in autism----if there ISN'T an autistic epidemic, where were all the autistic kids in the past? I'm not weighing in on the epidemic or not question---I don't know enough to say. But I do know that if you don't know what autism is, which in the past, many people did not, you'd approach it like the cashier. You'd assign it to a category you do understand---tired, shy, in need of speech therapy---and then if those didn't work, most likely, in the past, you'd call it retardation. To use today's correct term, you'd call it intellectual disability.
We have a whole day now called Autism Awareness Day. And it's working---most people are aware of autism. 30 or 40 years ago, most people weren't. But I do think there were plenty of autistic kids then, and kids with Aspergers, and kids with everything in between. I remember some of them, now, looking back. My parents do too. Mostly we remember kids with high functioning autism, because kids like Janey probably weren't too visible. They were in institutions, or they were kept home, because they weren't welcome in schools. Even in the small town I grew up in, I was only vaguely aware of a few children that went to the special school in Rockland (strangely enough, called the Henderson School, the same name as Janey's school, although not named for the same person) They were not much part of the community.
Autism doesn't always show itself clearly. The Janey the cashier saw yesterday very well could have been a shy child, a tired child. It's something to keep in mind when trying to figure out this whole autism mystery.
I didn't mind the whole interchange. It was friendly and much better than staring, or ignoring. But it got me thinking. It's a big question in autism----if there ISN'T an autistic epidemic, where were all the autistic kids in the past? I'm not weighing in on the epidemic or not question---I don't know enough to say. But I do know that if you don't know what autism is, which in the past, many people did not, you'd approach it like the cashier. You'd assign it to a category you do understand---tired, shy, in need of speech therapy---and then if those didn't work, most likely, in the past, you'd call it retardation. To use today's correct term, you'd call it intellectual disability.
We have a whole day now called Autism Awareness Day. And it's working---most people are aware of autism. 30 or 40 years ago, most people weren't. But I do think there were plenty of autistic kids then, and kids with Aspergers, and kids with everything in between. I remember some of them, now, looking back. My parents do too. Mostly we remember kids with high functioning autism, because kids like Janey probably weren't too visible. They were in institutions, or they were kept home, because they weren't welcome in schools. Even in the small town I grew up in, I was only vaguely aware of a few children that went to the special school in Rockland (strangely enough, called the Henderson School, the same name as Janey's school, although not named for the same person) They were not much part of the community.
Autism doesn't always show itself clearly. The Janey the cashier saw yesterday very well could have been a shy child, a tired child. It's something to keep in mind when trying to figure out this whole autism mystery.
Labels:
autism,
epidemic,
out in public,
Rite-Aid,
shy,
speech,
stores,
strangers staring,
the past,
World Autism Awareness Day
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Hitting A Wall
Yesterday, I hit a mental wall. I took Janey to school, came home, did the usual bit---housework, on-line work, packing things, etc. It got back to be about 2 in the afternoon, and I started thinking about picking up Janey at school. It was rainy/snowy and messy out. I was bone tired. Most of all, I was thinking about the day before, with the CVS screaming incident and Janey going quite frankly insane in the car. And I felt a feeling that I've felt a few times before with being her mother. I was hitting the wall. I could not picture going out to drive in the slush and dark, picking her up and not knowing if it was going to be another ride through Hades. I felt like I just literally could barely move. I sat there, feeling shaky and dizzy. And then I called Tony, because I am a very lucky wife. I told him how I felt, and thankfully, his work is a little flexible, although always intense. He said he could come home an hour early to get the car and go get Janey, if the next day he could go into work 2 hours early, and I said fine. Then I collapsed into bed, and just lay there, trying to work up the energy to keep the day going.
I am a low energy person at the best of times, due at least partly to a thyroid that went on strike at least 30 years ago and despite me taking increasingly larger doses of replacement, has left for what looks to be a permanent vacation. That is coupled with being Janey's mother, which is many, many ways is like being the mother of a perpetual toddler. I am closer to 50 than 40. Most days, I push through it, because that's what all mothers do. You don't really have a choice. And it's your responsibility. I chose to have Janey, and she is my child to take care of. But some days, I hit that wall. I wonder if I can do it. It's a useless wonder. I am going to do it, whether I can or not.
But I think about what used to happen, in the past. In the bad old days, which I in no way want to go back to. But then, it was not considered possible to raise a child like Janey at home, at least by the vast majority of people. Kids like Janey lived in institutions, and they lived horrible, horrible lives, most of the time. I would do anything, including give up my own life, to have Janey not live a life like that. I am eternally glad we live today and not then. But I do think, like many things, the pendulum has swung in the totally opposite direction. Now, so so many parents are routinely doing what was previously considered not possible. They are caring for disabled children at home, and in many cases, they are getting almost no help doing so. I am lucky to have Janey in school and afterschool for many hours a day, and then to have a 6 week summer program. But I know far from everyone has that. And even with that, I am exhausted. Tony is exhausted. The boys are exhausted. We can never take our eyes off Janey. Never. We never know what day is going to feature her suddenly going through some kind of crisis, which will turn our world upside-down. We live in fear she will hurt herself by doing something she doesn't know not to do, like running into traffic or eating something she shouldn't eat. And we are all tired. Society decided that the way children like Janey were treated in the past was wrong, but they didn't settle on any other way to help families raise them.
I don't feel Janey is anyone's responsibility but our own, but I do think if there was a real understanding of how hard life can be with children like Janey (and it's even harder with many children, for sure), the majority of people would want to spend the relatively small amount of our nation's overall budget it would take to provide more direct help to families. Not the patchwork of programs that somehow can be accessed if you know just who to call and what to say and are blessed with being hugely persistent and not deterred by people trying their best to keep you from using them, which is what most out there is like now, but programs that parents could use without guilt, without jumping through hoops, without begging. And mental health care absolutely needs to be as available as physical health care. No parent should have to beg to have someone help them handle their child when they are in crisis.
For now, I feel better, thanks to Tony's help, thanks to school, thanks to Janey for having a few better days. But I'll hit that wall again, and again, and again. There's no getting around that, and it's scary.
I am a low energy person at the best of times, due at least partly to a thyroid that went on strike at least 30 years ago and despite me taking increasingly larger doses of replacement, has left for what looks to be a permanent vacation. That is coupled with being Janey's mother, which is many, many ways is like being the mother of a perpetual toddler. I am closer to 50 than 40. Most days, I push through it, because that's what all mothers do. You don't really have a choice. And it's your responsibility. I chose to have Janey, and she is my child to take care of. But some days, I hit that wall. I wonder if I can do it. It's a useless wonder. I am going to do it, whether I can or not.
But I think about what used to happen, in the past. In the bad old days, which I in no way want to go back to. But then, it was not considered possible to raise a child like Janey at home, at least by the vast majority of people. Kids like Janey lived in institutions, and they lived horrible, horrible lives, most of the time. I would do anything, including give up my own life, to have Janey not live a life like that. I am eternally glad we live today and not then. But I do think, like many things, the pendulum has swung in the totally opposite direction. Now, so so many parents are routinely doing what was previously considered not possible. They are caring for disabled children at home, and in many cases, they are getting almost no help doing so. I am lucky to have Janey in school and afterschool for many hours a day, and then to have a 6 week summer program. But I know far from everyone has that. And even with that, I am exhausted. Tony is exhausted. The boys are exhausted. We can never take our eyes off Janey. Never. We never know what day is going to feature her suddenly going through some kind of crisis, which will turn our world upside-down. We live in fear she will hurt herself by doing something she doesn't know not to do, like running into traffic or eating something she shouldn't eat. And we are all tired. Society decided that the way children like Janey were treated in the past was wrong, but they didn't settle on any other way to help families raise them.
I don't feel Janey is anyone's responsibility but our own, but I do think if there was a real understanding of how hard life can be with children like Janey (and it's even harder with many children, for sure), the majority of people would want to spend the relatively small amount of our nation's overall budget it would take to provide more direct help to families. Not the patchwork of programs that somehow can be accessed if you know just who to call and what to say and are blessed with being hugely persistent and not deterred by people trying their best to keep you from using them, which is what most out there is like now, but programs that parents could use without guilt, without jumping through hoops, without begging. And mental health care absolutely needs to be as available as physical health care. No parent should have to beg to have someone help them handle their child when they are in crisis.
For now, I feel better, thanks to Tony's help, thanks to school, thanks to Janey for having a few better days. But I'll hit that wall again, and again, and again. There's no getting around that, and it's scary.
Labels:
autism,
help,
marriage,
mental health,
overwhelmed,
respite,
siblings,
the past,
thyroid,
tired
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)