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Showing posts with label group home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label group home. Show all posts

Saturday, April 2, 2022

Autism Awareness/Acceptance/Action Day

 The name of this day, April 2nd, has changed and changed over the years I've been living the autism parenting life.  I thought I'd write a little about each name's meaning to me.

Awareness

Well, as I've said other years, I don't think it would be possible for me to be much more aware of autism than I already am, at least Janey's form of it.  The name of her form of autism is another thing that has changed over the years---low functioning autism, then severe autism, now it seems, Stage 3 autism.  Whatever you want to call it, those of us who love a child with it are aware of it.  For some years there, it seemed that we were being somewhat silenced by the greater autism community when it came to talking about it.  I can understand some of that.  Those with a less severe form of autism wanted to emphasize the positive, and I like that in a lot of ways.  There is so much positive about Janey, and others like her.  But there is also much in her life that is hard for her, very hard.  And much about raising her that is hard for us as parents.

So, if you didn't know Janey, how could I describe her that would make you aware of her?  Well, she is 17.  She's a beautiful, fascinating teenager.  She makes us laugh most every day, and surprises us and fills us with pride and happiness most every day.  Unlike what the media would often have you believe about girls with autism, though, she doesn't "mask".  If you met her, you would probably know within a minute that she was autistic.  Her speech is limited.  A full sentence is unusual for her.  Even more unusual is talking that is anything other than either a request or demand, or a scripted repeat of something she's heard.  She is not conversational, ever.  Her sleep is our biggest challenge these days, as about two nights a week, she simply doesn't sleep at all.  She is not fully, consistently toilet trained.  She doesn't read or write.  She doesn't really know her letters or numbers or colors, at least in any useful way.  She is very musical---we suspect she has perfect pitch, and we are pretty sure she can remember every song she's ever heard.  She will eat anything---she loves vegetables.  She spends much of her free time watching the same videos and movies over and over and over.  She is our joy.

There's a saying you hear a lot, "if you know one person with autism, you know one person with autism".  There is really no typical person with autism, any more than there is one typical person without autism.  But from meeting so many other amazing mothers and fathers of girls like Janey, we do see similar interests and traits popping up.  Strangely, we also often see similar appearances.  It makes me wonder if there is some genetic connection that ties together girls on the more severe end of the spectrum.  It's one of the reasons I think it's so important to be able to talk honestly about our girls---to figure mysteries like that out.

Acceptance 

In saying acceptance, I assume we are talking about acceptance by the wider world, not parents of kids like Janey.  As parents, acceptance seems like a pretty silly word for what we feel.  Of course we accept Janey.  We adore her.  She's our daughter.  But the bigger world?  I was thinking about that last night, at least our corner of the wider world accepting our particular child with autism.

I was surprised, as my mind wandered, to remember vividly some of the worst moments of non-acceptance, surprised because on the whole, I think Janey is pretty well accepted.  She is known at the places she's taken most, and is like a celebrity at some of them, like the grocery store or the 7/11.  At each of the three schools she's attended, we've been told she is probably the best known student at the school, with everyone enjoying their interactions with her.  It is more common for us to get a smile or a kind comment from strangers than to get anything less positive.

But even the few bad moments---they still sting.  There was the time a woman in a grocery store muttered a swear and a slur about her.  There was the man on a commuter rail who yelled out "Can't you put a stop to that?" when she cheerfully repeating a script.  There was the horrible first visit to her psychiatrist, who shared an office with an internist, whose secretaries told us we couldn't be in "their" waiting room because she was screaming and "she's disturbing the patients", despite the fact we were there, in desperation, to see someone about her having been screaming for days on end.  There was Children's Hospital, where quite literally she was not allowed out of her room for her six day stay.  There was, although I do understand and accept the reasons, the wonderful inclusion school she attended until grade 3, and the day I was told they could no longer handle her, although their mission was to educate children with all disabilities along with typical peers.  And there are the many, many places and programs and experiences we simply don't even try to join---camps and splash parks and restaurants and most stores and concerts and libraries and so much else, places that her behavior would not be accepted.

And so there's still a long way to go with acceptance.  I feel guilty, often, that I don't push more for acceptance.  In an ideal world, Janey would be accepted anywhere public, any time, like anyone else.  I sometimes think about how it would be if some race or nationality or religion or gender or so on was not accepted at all the places Janey would not be accepted at---if schools or camps or restaurants or concerts said they would not accept a person because of something that was a part of them they couldn't change.  We'd be outraged.  But I'm not usually outraged.  Maybe I do need to really internalize acceptance or externalize it---to push for a world of true acceptance.  It's not a battle I have the energy for, much of the time, and that is not something I like about myself.

Action

Action---where even to start?  I could write a book, probably 3 or 4 books, about actions that would help make Janey's life better.  But of the three---awareness, acceptance, action---action is by far the least actually done.  I could attend a support group most every day of year for parents like myself.  I could introduce Janey to the world and cultivate acceptance, and I can write here about her and work on both awareness and acceptance.  But action?  That's a lot harder.  That takes money and work, not just a change of mindset, and honestly, I don't think much has changed over my years in the autism world, nothing much has improved in terms of actual action.

What do I want done?  Number one---respite.  There is no respite.  There never has been, not in a form we will use.  We will not leave Janey with anyone one on one that we don't know well enough to trust completely.  We just can't.  What we need for respite is a program with trained workers, with backup if someone needs it, with regulations in place.  Programs like that exist in most every other country, but not here.  Most countries have a system of overnight or weekend respite parents like us can use for at least several weekends a year.  Not here.  We have no respite.  Every day, every night, every moment Janey is not in school, we are on duty.  Always. 

We have been very lucky with Janey's schooling.  We've had unbelievably good teachers right down the line, with almost no exceptions.  We have had wonderful therapists and paras, too.  But autism schooling in the US is a patchwork.  Not everyone is as lucky as us.  And even for us, there is troubling turnover and busses that just don't show up, and funding that is always in risk of going away, and of course the nightmare of the pandemic, with basically a full year without any schooling at all, since Zoom meeting style teaching simply didn't work for Janey.  Our country needs a plan to educate all people with autism, one that will give them the best possible chance to reach their fullest potential.

And we are now heading fast toward Janey's adult years.  From what I read, it's going to be a challenge even to find a day program for her.  If we wanted to have her move to a group home---well, that's a pipe dream.  Waiting lists, from what I hear, run in the decades.  And from those I've heard about that used group homes, the lack of good pay and respect for the staff has led to some horrible situations where people are hired that should never have been.  The tales of abuse of people like Janey---no.  Unless our country takes steps to provide safe and actually available group housing, Janey will always live at home.  Thank goodness she has brothers, because no matter how much we would like to, Tony and I won't live forever.  Kids with autism don't stay kids.  Our country needs to face that, and to put actual funds and labor into giving the adult autism population life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness the rest of us supposedly have.

Whatever name this day has, I've come to be glad there is a day for autism.  At a very basic level, I'm glad because it's a day for my daughter.  I love you, Janey!  I wish the whole world was aware of how wonderful you are.  I wish the whole world accepted you fully.  And I wish the whole world would take action to give you the best future possible.

Friday, July 22, 2016

Things I can't think about...but I do anyway

If I want to sleep at night, to ever let Janey out of my sight, to not spend my days in worry beyond worry, there are certain things I just can't think about.  And most of the time, I am able to do that.  But not always.  Sometimes, those things are in the news, or something happens that stirs up the thoughts, and wham...I am thinking.  Boy, am I thinking.
If only the brain had an off switch...

You all probably have read about the policeman in Florida who shot a caregiver of an autistic man, and explained he was actually aiming for the man with autism, and missed. (link here)  There's a lot to process there, but my mind went to the many times Janey's lost it in public.  I can picture her trying to hit or bite a caregiver, or Tony or me or her brothers, and what it might look like if a law enforcement officer came across the scene at the height of it.  I think she's a little protected just by being female, because right or wrong females seem to be seen as less of a threat, but still...my thoughts are not ones that are easy to think.

My friend Michelle and I have joked a lot that we have to live forever.  And the joke is partly a way to not face the reality that we won't, and that some day, our children will not be in our care.  Both our autistic daughters have two siblings.  For those siblings, the knowledge that they will likely someday play at least some role in Janey's or Lindsey's lives---I won't speak for them, but I am quite sure that knowledge plays a role, if even subconsciously, in their life planning.  But the alternative, a group home---well, that is something I try not to think about.  I am sure there are good, even great, group homes out there.  I know there are.  But there are others that are not as good.  This article (link here) about group homes in Massachusetts was not an easy read.

Janey's current psychiatrist told Tony and me in very clear, certain tones that Janey is at extremely high risk for abuse.  I feel like throwing up every time that thought comes into my mind.  He said girls who are non-verbal have a rate of abuse that is so high that it's almost a certainty.  Well, what do you do with knowledge like that?  I have to feel glad, here, that Janey lets people know when she doesn't like what is being done.  I want her to keep that voice.  The other day, for some reason the word "tap" came up in a conversation Janey was listening to.  Immediately, she said "tap" and tapped her head.  I know that is something taught in ABA.  I know the reasons for that kind of teaching, but I'll be honest---it was a bit troubling to see.  Do we really want our kids to respond instantly when told to do something?  

I am lucky.  I feel as close to total confidence as I can feel in Janey's schools. She is safe at home.  She is loved and cared for.  I wish I could simply close out the worries, the fears, the thoughts.  But I can't.  I don't think any of us who love a child with autism can.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Dreams of Janey at 30

When I was around 10, I was fascinated with the idea of being 30.  It seemed like it would be a magical age, when all the college and early adulthood would be paying off and I'd be living my real life.  I even wrote a letter to myself at 30, asking what was up with me---was I married?  Did I have kids?  Where did I live?  Was I happy?  Now of course at the ripe old age of 46, 30 sounds pretty young and far away, but I was thinking about that obsession the other day, and got thinking about what life will be like for Janey when she is 30.  My daydreaming took me to several futures for her.

First was the outright anything goes dreaming, where reality does not interfere.  In that kind of dream, Janey somehow wakes up "cured" of autism, completely "normal".  She catches up in school and goes ahead of everyone.  She goes to some exclusive college, gets a high level degree, meets some handsome, rich and kind man, gets married and has beautiful grandchildren for me, who I babysit while she works part-time at a very high paying job.  She buys me a house with an indoor pool.  The world beats a door to our path to figure out how Janey overcame her autism, and we co-write a bestseller about that.  It's a fairytale life.

Then I jolt myself back to reality and think about what kind of actually rooted in real life future I'd dream about for Janey at 30.  In that future, Janey lives with Tony and me.  We are healthy enough to care for her well.  She goes to a high quality day program, where she has interesting experiences and maybe does some kind of sheltered work.  She has her own hobbies and interests, which she pursues in the evenings and weekends.  Several times a year, she goes to a respite home, so Tony and I can vacation or just rest.  She sees this as a vacation too, and it's the same place that someday, when Tony and I can no longer care for her, she will live.  She is happy, as happy as anyone else is, and maybe a little more so, because she has less responsibilities and things to worry about than the rest of us.

And of course, sometimes I start to have the future visions that are nightmares.  Tony and I are gone, or too sick to care for Janey.  She is living in a horrible situation, where she is not well cared for.  She has regressed, doesn't talk, cries all day.  She is too heavily medicated.  She spends her days watching videos over and over and over on a TV that doesn't even come in well.  I close down those visions quickly.  They are too hard to think about.

I tell myself not to borrow trouble.  Janey is only 8.  It's a long time until she'll be an adult.  But time goes quickly.  William is 18 now, and I have no idea how that happened.  Before you have kids, you think people overstate how fast times goes by, but once you have them, you realize they understate it.  It couldn't be more than a few years ago I first saw my tiny preemie William.  But here he is, a senior applying to colleges.  And I know that time will do that trick again, and Janey will be an adult.  And barring the kind of miracle my first dream illustrates, we won't be sending her off with our best wishes.  We'll be caring for her, and depending on a society that might or might not be prepared to provide help to Janey and the many others like her, the autistic people that are no longer cute little kids.  It's yet to be seen if that will be a dream or nightmare.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

The Future

My husband turns 50 tomorrow, and next month we will have been married 20 years. It's making me think about the future. At this point in life, a lot of couples might be getting ready for the next phase of life---an empty nest, thinking ahead to someday retiring. Of all the things that having child with significant special needs changes, I think perhaps the most profound is the view of the future. There is no future I can picture without a child in it. Janey won't be a child physically or chronologically, but it's very likely she will be a child mentally forever, and we will be responsible for her as we would be for a child.

I was daydreaming the other day about when Tony retires, how we could take long trips around the country, and I was a little startled to realize Janey was in those daydreams as a natural part, and it wasn't a negative part. I pictured her joy at trying hotel pools, or listening to music in the car, or seeing new places. I edited out her screaming for hours, or making it so Tony and I were never alone, or that kind of thing, but daydreams are always edited a bit. I was happy that my mind could glimpse a good future with Janey in it.

But of course, that's not always the case. I think about things like group homes. I am sure there are wonderful group homes, but I am terrified at the thought. I am scared to death of Janey being abused, or yelled at, or not taken care of well. I've heard that every parents needs to let go at a point, but I can't see letting go of her. I can see it with the boys, because they can take care of themselves, and let us know if something's wrong, but I can't see it with Janey. I try to tell myself---I never worry about those scary things when she's at school. Truly, never. That's a matter of trust and love---I trust the school, and I know the people there love Janey. Maybe I would find a group home like that. But I know how lucky, how lottery-winning lucky, I am that she's in the school she is. I don't know if I'd get that lucky again.

And so, for now, my future will always have Janey at home. And that is usually something I can picture without panic. When you have children, there are no guarantees. No-one ever says "Take good care of them for 18 years, and then you'll get a break". You are playing the lottery with kids just like with so much else. And for the most part, we've been very lucky. There are so many things worse, unspeakably worse, than having a child who will probably never leave home. And heck---she's only 7. I can put the whole thing out of my head for a lot longer, which is something I've gotten fairly good at. So for now, we'll just celebrate the milestones as they hit.