Wednesday, October 29, 2014

I just wanted to go outside.

Fall is coming. Okay, technically it's already here. But colder days are coming. I wanted to go outside on this unseasonably warm day. Which meant HE didn't.

I was determined.

And eventually I won.

For all of about ten minutes, maybe. But I like to celebrate all of life's victories. Even the ten minute ones.

What didn't work:

"I want to go outside."

"Come on, let's go outside."

"Outside time!"

"It's a beautiful day. We are going outside."

"Hurry, let's go see the mail truck."

"We need to go outside and get some vitamin d."

"I'll take your toys outside now."

"You haven't felt well, let's sit outside in the fresh air."


What did work:

"Let's go outside and recharge our tummies in the sun like Wall-E."

Watching "the sun paint the grass."

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Storytime

Our local library has a "sensory storytime" for children on the spectrum or with other special needs. We went once last year but at the time we were still struggling with the whole 'get in/get out of the car' process. So we hadn't been back. We've pretty much mastered that now so I signed us up again.

Well... Sensory storytime was a bust.

The room was double booked so storytime was out in the kids area. And there were a LOT of kiddos there. 

Okay like ten, but that's 10x more than he can usually handle. And then add in the parents. And it was a different librarian. And there were drawers of shared Thomas and lego toys. Yeah.

He really did okay though until the bubbles. Bubble. MACHINE. That was just all kinds of exciting. So there he was, flapping his hands and doing what we call his "scarecrow dance." Super scrumptiously happy.

Then ear hitting/face slapping panic when it was over.

We didn't even get to check out the book he'd picked out. He was done.

Oh well.

We tried.

#AutismAwareness
#WhenSimpleThingsAreHard

<3

Pic of me carrying my 5 year old one block back to our car. Post-storytime.Yeah.

Friday, October 24, 2014

Eclipsed

My Boy's language development has hit a bump.

He was making progress with his 'wh' questions in language therapy. Really awesome. He had finally figured out that a question is a prompt for an answer.

No, he doesn't differentiate between who/where/when/how unless the subject or object implies a certain response. But the Back-and-forth of questions is a big deal for us. Very big. For a little boy who acknowledges his name 20% of the time to take questions as a prompt for conversation... is just... wow. I guess unless you've lived it you can't quite understand.

It's had us all in giggles.

Then suddenly last week we noticed something was wrong.

For all of last year and part of the summer he worked on prepositions. On. Under. Over. Behind. Paper prepositions came easiest. Pictures. Cutouts. Drawings. They came first and rooted the strongest.

Then we made our way up the ladder. Paper laying down may imply different prepositions than paper on the wall. "Under'' moves, you see.

Then there are prepositions with objects. Putting the tiny Lego Michaelangelo behind the 3-D Lego house is a whole new perspective. Did you know it was this complex? It can be. For a child with language disorders these nuances that other children just naturally absorb... don't always absorb.

And then there's the belly whopper of prepositions. 4-D relational. The toy is behind him. Behind. HIM.

That was tough. Behind him wasn't a general area. It was a mystic place in the sky. One that evaded him as soon as he turned around until he was just turning in circles. Where was this curious place we hid his toy? He would be so confused.

It was funny when he was 1. It was hilarious at 18 months. Not so much at 4. When you know it's a problem.

But this summer before he turned 5 he started getting it. Finally. We could direct him verbally to an object he was looking for and he could find it!!! Pride in a child's accomplishment may be a bit different for a Spectrum Mom, but it's still pride in a child's accomplishment. Hard. Earned.

And so we moved on to 'wh' questions. The bane of so many spectrum families. And he just started sailing through them.

Cue angels singing.

And that's when we noticed. He lost the prepositions. He totally had them. He HAD them. A year and a half of work and he HAD them. And then they were gone. Not completely but so much so that I could feel myself physically shrinking under the worry. Some of his expressive prepositions are there still. The simple ones. Sometimes now he will understand receptively when he is asked to perform the expressive 'put this on' something.  The rest? Gone.

It's okay to feel that Wonder Bread knot in your throat choking you now. I know I did.

And since I'm always afraid of being that skiddish/paranoid Mom I asked Grandma if she noticed. She had. And was worried, too.

So yesterday I was hitting up the SLP's with questions. Getting tips. Reeling in my connections. Panicking. Trying to break down possibilities. The causes. Track the next steps. Worried. Panicked. Scared. Overwhelmed. Sad. Panicked. Did I mention panic? It's a great one when anything resembling regression or loss of skills pops up. Just. Great.

And then I had to go to school, because that's what I do. And I'm sitting there in class trying to listen, trying to pay attention. Trying not to be distracted by anything and everything. Because it only takes one little chip off a porcelain cup before it starts crumbling. And my attention is fragile.

When it was time for the eclipse, I was grateful for the break from class and I ran outside to look. I blinked. I looked. My eyes watered. I blinked and looked again. Until I could see it. There was this tiny little bit of rock (aka the moon) blocking out a part of the sun.

And here's where I'm about to get profound thoughts.

Where I stand there realizing that the moon can only block part of the sun because it's closer to us. Because that big, freaking ball of fire in the sky could swallow the moon WHOLE if it was actually next to it and we wouldn't even see it go.

And I thought about the sun. How I don't run outside to look at it and marvel at it and stare at it until my eyes water and my head aches. Ever.

Yet there I stood. Staring at the eclipse.

Because, from my view, a huge chunk of the sun was obliterated by the moon.

And I realized that's what we have right now. With my boy.

An eclipse.

A small, tiny thing in our lives was taking the glory that IS our lives away from me. The glory of him. The brightness of all the amazing things he has done and accomplished. The awesomeness of his determination. The strength of his will. Him. My sunshine.

Preposition loss eclipses 'wh' questions. Eclipses him. My son.

And my profound little mind decided that our eclipse was just a thing to look at. To notice. To address. To work on, yes. But not to be more than that. Not to panic over. Not to see instead of him.

I could either focus on it or focus on the sun.

So here's to sunshine.

G'nite <3
Ecliiiipse.
Not that you can tell from the pic. But I could tell. Because I looked at it. 20 minutes before it was safe . Because I'm a rebel.

#Eclipse.

T.G.I.F

So.
My Boy did some new things.

He:
1. Got Legos wet yesterday at OT without screaming. He didn't enjoy it, but he did it. He loves water. Loves. But wet Legos are poisonous. K? K.

2. He did not put on socks after getting his hands wet at OT. No, I don't know. It his thing, k? K.

3. He sat down and played/shared with a male child he's only seen a few times at OT. He lasted about 5 minutes. It typically takes us months of regular contact to get to this point. Dunno whuz up there.

4. He got himself a drink this morning. No biggie except 2 months ago he couldn't even tell us (or seem to know) when he was thirsty. Now he's getting it himself? Huh?




The kicker is though that this morning we are on orange alert. He's seriously about to pop an anxiety rocket. Like his body/emotions can't keep up with the new things his brain is doing.

He's pacing. He's verbally stimming. He's screaming in spurts.

Let's call this a psychic mommy warning;

Do not approach. 
Do not make eye contact. 
Do not speak unless spoken to. 
Stand ready.

Meltdoowwwwwnnnzz a comin.


Pic of my Boy yesterday in OT with a Lego Boat. In the water. His OT sent it to me. Because she couldn't believe it.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Letter Matchup

Today we are matching letters. Our one-at-a-time lettering (here) wasn't doing much. He would know a letter for a week and then after starting the next letter he would promptly forget the first one. I was kind of thinking maybe he didn't see the connections. Maybe? Maybe he focused on the trees so much he didn't see the forest.

We don't do phonics because of his disordered speech. The sounds don't match the letters so that's all kinds of confusing. He can't sing the alphabet all the way through yet, but he can fill in a missing letter if you stop every so often. 

We tried sandpaper letters. He does like them and he sometimes will put the letters in order for his name, but he struggles with what they are. No way we could do the whole alphabet that way right now.

We tried typing words into YouTube which he LOVED (here). Playdough letters (here). Animal shaped letters. Body shaped letters. Letter songs. But all they just turned into games. I don't think he completely understands that letters make up the words. He will ask what a word says sometimes, but he isn't interested in how they're made. He wants to read but doesn't understand what reading is. And that is the kicker. Otherwise I'd just be content with showing him the letters and give him another year. But he picks up a book and wants to know what it says.

Sigh.

So we've tried all these handy ideas, and all of them above and beyond the pre-k curriculum I've bought and the idea boards I've snatched off Pinterest. Beyond what his teachers tried to do last year.

So we are trying this method: Visual Alphabet. 

I bought 2 packs of Appletters and lined up the alphabet, then had my Boy match the extras.

He did it. Which means we went through a lot of peppermints. A. Lot. Cuz we are still at the one-to-one reinforcement stage.

And it's totally worth it.

Because one day he will read and write. No matter what the Negative Nellies say.



There's a million ways to do this, and we've only tried a dozen so far...


Suggestions????



Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Learning to walk away.


So this just happened.

Okay, it happened about 2 weeks ago but I just scanned and filed it.

Labeling emotions. Is. So. Hard.

But my Boy's SLP caught him on a pliable day and worked on it with him. And okay so by ''pliable'' I mean he punched a 3 year old girl in the throat because she made eye contact at the exact moment she stepped into his pre-determined personal space/war zone.

So it was fresh on his mind.

And we got some nice labeling and ownership out of the deal. Which. Never. Happens. So we are counting this as a monumental win. Cheers.





"When I see new people it" makes me angry.

When I am angry "I want to hit."



You know ... if no one ever looked at him, made eye contact or came near him life might be easier.

Except me. I can look at him. I made the happy list. Because I'm awesome.

 


"Buying lots of toys" makes me happy.

"When I see my mom it" makes me happy.


So... me and toys. LOTS of toys. I'm good with that.


<3 Spectrum Mom



P.S. "Better choice is to walk away'' would be the adult/therapist input during this particular conversation. #IPromiseYouThat 

Friday, October 17, 2014

Isolation

I'm going to start this one with a post script. Because I can. So here ya go...

P.S. After I wrote this I decided to save it as a draft and not publish it. Not because it's a rambling public display of ADHD thought processes, which it totally is, but because it was such a downer coming right on the heels of the meltdown junk I shared.  I didn't want another bummer clogging up the blog. Life's more fun than that as a rule, but sometimes life just doesn't seem fun. Sometimes the heavy weighs a little more, the hurts tug a little more at your heart.

This was written on a hurting day.

And then today... well... today was so awesome that I'm able to put this out there in a way I couldn't when I wrote it. Today, instead of hate and frustration we had happy and funny and friendly. We escaped, for one beautiful Indian Summer day, the pressures of our burdens and just ... existed.

No, he didn't like leaving the neighbor's house. But we were AT our neighbor's house. He played with their children. Two ridiculously sweet and adorable and fun little girls. Took turns too, which is a whole other level of where-the-hell-did-that-come-from.

He ran and climbed and smiled and giggled and watched and participated. He tried to swing, wasn't quite sure what to do. he tried to play tag, wasn't sure about the whole you-me-you thing. It was ... awkward... but it was great. It only took... I don't know how long... two years? Have they lived here that long? It was only a few months ago he was growling at these same girls when they came into our back yard, trying to chase them away. Today was a culmination of work and timed interactions and a kind of panicked road block attitude I always had when he interacted with them; let him play for just a few minutes, kept it short, then re-directed quickly before he realized what happened.

There was hardly any roadblocking today. Today everything was awesome.


And then we came home and played in the dirt in our pjs. We ate pizza. We swang for hours, just regulating. Being quiet. Being together.

So when you read the rest of this post and think 'dang that sucks' just remember that even when I wrote it I knew that everything comes in phases. Nothing is the same forever. Some things get worse over time. Some things get better. There's good and there's bad. 

And sometimes, on rare and beautiful days like today, there's awesome.



As he gets older, most things about our life get easier.

We understand each other better.  We can anticipate each other more often. We communicate better. We enjoy each other even beyond the mother-son relationship: we are friends.

But as he gets older some things get harder. The biggest one right now, the one that causes the most heartache and is the reason behind family drama, is social.

Social-emotional.


He was SUCH a friendly baby. No, he didn't want anyone else holding him, but MAN could that kid charm you. He could giggle and run in circles. He could flirt. He could bring you into his world. At the store he could play the cashier and wrap the greeter around his finger.

And so, so, so much of that has gone away. As his difficulties have solidified, they have also permeated more of his personality. They have overshadowed the free spirit he was born with. The spirit I promised never to break is right there in the danger zone: cracked and fragile. It's the hardest part about our journey. I want the smiles back. I want the flirts. I want the side gazes that let me know that even though he would not give all of himself to the friendly adult requests for child affection, he would give a big enough chunk to leave us all laughing.

And I miss it. I miss the way he would charm people and reel them in.

I miss it terribly.

Because he is getting more and more selective about people as time goes by.

I don't know why.

My guess is that he is blaming those around him for his discomfort. That the sensory and emotional overload that is wrecking havoc on his little body needs a persona for him to fight; and that persona can take the form of anyone in the vicinity. But that's just a who-knows-Momma-is-just-trying-to-rationalize theory. I don't really know for sure.

I do know that our circle is shrinking.

I'm the only one who doesn't get the regular ''I hate you'' treatment from him. Not many people are good with a 5-year-old telling them he hates them. He hates them looking at him. He hates them touching his things. He hates them being in his space. Hate.

He sticks out that little proto-declarative index (yay for small victories) and says "I hate you."

Not many people get that he doesn't actually hate them, he hates the way he feels when his bubble is being poked. It's his word when he's angry or frustrated.  When he's stressed. When he's overwhelmed. When he can't get away. When he just wants it his way and doesn't understand why you aren't giving it to him NOW. Sometimes it's just because he was thinking one thing and you didn't know it. Freaking theory of mind crap.

And then there's the fact that he wants to be around people. He asks for it every day. He wants to see kids. See his ''teachers''. See family. Go to stores. To go to parties. He asks to go back to the pumpkin patch. A lot.

But when he's there his anxious-overwhelmed-little self can't deal. Sometimes he tries to tell me.

I love home.

I want to be at my home.

..but then it builds so fast I can't keep up...

I hate it here.

... and our favorite...

I hate that (person/people/place/thing/etc).

Because the idea of all these wonderful things is .... wonderful. The reality of them is more... real. More difficult. More noisy. More frightening. More frustrating. More confusing. More. And he wants to escape.

Disordered fight/flight response.

Even our family is getting tired of it.  And that's the hardest part for me today. Because it's one thing for strangers to be put off by it. Awkward. Embarrassing.

It's another when friends are. Sad. Lonely.

But when it's family? Heartbreaking.

Neither of us want the isolation that's coming. But it circles closer and closer as our world shrinks.

I certainly 'get' what's happening, don't misunderstand. I 'get' that it's rough on people. That they don't want to be around the negativity. That their kids simply can't understand hearing another child act certain ways they can't approve of or empathize with. Doing things they don't want their child to emulate. That they also want the happy little toddler with the dimples back. They want to be able to say "Hi!" and get a hug and play around with him when they drop by or when we go to visit or when we have a play date. They wanna hang out and have this great, light-hearted time. They want to say goodbye without a fight or a scene or a fit. That they want to stay for longer than his 10 minute welcome threshold.

But our life doesn't work like that right now. Our life is structure and sameness and therapy and lots and lots and lots of really hard work because behaving in a socially acceptable way takes lots and lots and lots of really hard work and therapy and sameness and structure. And even then it only comes in bubbles.



We just completed one of the subtests of a retrospective comparison test.
DAYC-2 (Developmental Assessment of Young Children)

90 days ago on the social/emotional component he registered at age 9 months.
Now he registers at 21 months.

Of age.

That's HUGE progress. Huge. In this one area to make that kind of progress in that kind of time is phenomenal.

His therapists are happy for us... But other people in our life look at him and see a 5-year old boy and expect to get ... a 5-year old boy. A typical 5-year old boy. They don't see the advances and the breakthroughs that were so hard-earned. Because they're invisible.

Autism. The invisible disability. It. Absolutely. Is.

I want to jump up and down with excitement and tell people that today he showed me a Lego project he built from his imagination. OMG. And that he made eye contact with his OT today without prompting. WOW. And that he actively generated a pretend play social story that was perfect down to the tiniest detail. What in the world?!

I'm reveling in his progress.

And then someone comes along and says his behavior is unacceptable.

That he should be behaving better.

That he should be ... more. More than he is.

And maybe he should. Probably, by some mystical scale that I don't have and can't possibly measure with, he should. But all the shoulds don't help us.

He's doing his best. I'm doing my damndest. We have absolutely no idea what we are doing but we're giving it our all. And we're doing it together.

And in my mind, that makes for a beautiful life.

I'm not giving up, either. We'll have more play dates. We'll keep trying the hard things. I'll keep trying to understand him. I'll keep learning what is worth the trouble and what isn't a deal. And I'm going to keep going no matter how tired I am and how crazy my hair looks or how long I've lived in these same gray yoga pants because he is still going. And he is still trying. Whether anyone else understands or not, I'm proud. I'm proud of him. I'm proud of me. I'm proud of us.

Hopefully everyone else catches up.

Love,
Spectrum Mom

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Melted



UPDATE: Please note that we do NOT EVER use restraints. Nor do we leave my child in a ''safe, padded area to work it out himself." The photos and methods used are the least aggressive possible and have been approved by a team of specialists. He is only ever held by a therapist or parent and only in a manner that prevents self-harm and no other restraining methods are used, nor is he EVER left alone. The goal of this method is to reduce self-injury and encourage self-regulation improvement while neither isolating nor punishing.


I saw a video of an autistic child that was titled ''Meltdown.'' Said child was sitting on the floor, leaning against a couch and crying. Wiping his own tears.

I don't want to belittle what that child was feeling. I don’t know how else the chid behaved or what the trigger was. I don't want to be ''that'' Mom who thinks she knows all.

But I do wanna talk about it.

I watched the video in its entirety. From crying through to re-direction ...the child cried. Sniffed. Wiped his own tears. Looked around. Cried some more. Then was bribed away from the meltdown to a new activity.

Now, we’ve had these moments because … well… yeah... but we don’t even discuss them as a rule. And if you think this is what < I > mean by ''meltdown'' then we are on different pages, you and I. I would never post a video of my boy in full on meltdown. I wouldn't do it. There are a plethera of reasons not the least of which is that people would begin crossing themselves when we walk by. I’m sure there’s education to be had this way, education about autism and meltdowns and learning what is or is not part of life with an autistic child, but my self-serving online venting is not the place, nor do I want to share a visual of my boy that way. It’s too hard.

I do want to shed some light on this though because after my last post about My Boy's meltdown at the grocery store a friend asked me how I know he isn't just being naughty. How I know it’s the autism. What's the difference?

I'm going to start with this: He CAN be naughty. He can be bratty, selfish, obnoxious, defiant. And there ARE times when it appears to be simply the result of his being a 5 –year-old only child who is also a wee bit spoiled. Yeah. Spoiled. K? K.

And there are times when it seems that he is simply obstinate. Strong-willed. Defiant. Opinionated. Because he undoubtedly is: he’s mine. K? K.

He can also be sweet, funny, silly, playful and obedient. The result of his being a 5-year-old only child who is loved and cared for. K? K.

And then there is the fact that he has autism.

And well, the kicker is that we can't always separate the 'autism' from the 'typical' in him because, for lack of a better analogy, it’s not psoriasis. You can’t say ‘’this patch is psoriasis/this patch is typical skin.”  They aren’t distinct and separate quite that way. And no matter what his diagnoses (and there are tons), he's a 5-year-old boy. So outside of language issues and comprehension issues and social issues and, and, and... he's five. And he's a boy. And he's unique. He’s an individual. He’s a person. And there are a myriad of thoughts and ideas and reasons in him just as there are in any other person. 

He’s not one thing; he is many.

And separating a diagnosis from his personality is often close to impossible because it's like asking me to separate all the books I've ever read and experiences I’ve ever had from my thoughts as an individual. They are a part of who I am. Even the thoughts that are negative and that I am working to improve are a part of who I am. And I can’t say ‘’I have this thought only because I read ______ book” because one of the truths of being human is that we don’t know if I would have had that thought eventually anyway, or if I only had it because I read something that triggered it. It’s possible. But we don’t really know. I can’t unexperience my past and say “this is the essence of me minus _____”. And as much as we try, we can't unautism him and say "this is him minus autism.”

Is that clear as mud? MMMkay.

So here is what I do know. With autism there are certain behaviors that are common that are not as common in neurotypical children. Like lining up toys. Or smearing poop on the walls. Or having rigid behaviors. Or disordered language. Behaviors or ‘symptoms’ if you will, of autism. Behaviors that vary amongst the spectrum but that are still associated with autism. Behaviors that you can address with therapy and intervention and medication.

Behaviors like meltdowns.

So… what am I calling a meltdown?

Well, it’s not a fit over a lollipop at the checkout (although that can lead to one). It’s not kicking me in the shin because I took away the pretty knife he was inspecting (although that can lead to one) and it’s not throwing himself on the floor and pounding it with his fists because I interrupted his playtime (although that can certainly lead to one). Those are what I would call ‘NT’ behaviors. Things a 2 or 3-year old would do when they are learning boundaries and believe they are the rulers of the universe. Only my son is 5. So he does these things (still) not unlike a 2-year old, in spite of the fact that on a non-verbal IQ level, he is 5 (More attempt at separating ‘this’ part of him from ‘that’ part. Yes, technically there is a difference between verbal and non-verbal IQ).

And here’s where ‘’is it brattiness or autism’’ gets tricky; what can start out as something we would otherwise call brattiness (aka 2 year old behavior in a 5 year old) can turn into a meltdown.

One of the defining characteristics of autism is the absence of, or reduced ability in the area of, emotional regulation.

I can’t say ‘’they’’ all do such-n-such but I can tell you about my boy; he can NOT regulate his emotions.

So it gets too cold in your house you either *turn off the a/c or *turn on the heat. It’s the same with emotions. We’ve all known adults who don’t know how to ‘’turn it off’’. Road rage. Abusers. They get angry and it just builds at an uncontrollable speed until it explodes. That’s what happens with my boy. But instead of it all being outward (like road rage) it’s primarily inward. I might get caught in the storm, but he turns in on himself like some kind of imploding bomb.

As he gets more and more upset he transitions from crying to screaming to a kind of guttural bellow that gives me fantasies of holy water-water guns; like instant ‘get thee gone’ in a pocket.

Because it’s scary.

And it’s hard to watch.

He gets so upset that no, you can’t distract him. You can’t re-direct him. You can’t stick a lollipop in his mouth or toy in his hand and pop the bubble. So the whole ‘’giving in’’ debate about fits in public does.not.apply. This isn’t just a debate about strong will, although he has that too (yay). It’s about being out of control. At its worst he hurts himself. He can knock himself out on the floor. He scratches at his face. He thrashes. Sometimes he cries for me but even as I try to hold him he’s so gone that he is thrashing and screaming in my arms. I can’t comfort him. I can’t make it better. I can tell him to stop but it’s an empty and ultimately heartless response because he CAN’T stop. He is so overwhelmed by the emotions as they build that they tear him apart.

He … melts…


 There are millions of theories about tantrums.

Spanking. Time-out. Time-in. Ignore. Talk it out. Distract.

In our experience, none of them work on meltdowns.

None.

All I can do is be there and wait. Hold him to keep him from hurting himself. Keep calm when he can’t.

At some point (vomiting or coughing maybe, but more usually exhaustion) he will stop. He gets so exhausted that he will fall asleep still screaming or sobbing. This leads to night terrors. He will be caught in a fit and unable to wake himself. It’s inevitable after a meltdown. How can his subconscious rest when he falls asleep utterly distraught? It can’t.

So what triggers a meltdown?

Ahhhhh jeez.

Sometimes it’s the lovely word ‘’no.’’ My fallback word that, in spite of all my ‘positive re-direction’ training, I still use.

No, you cannot have a bag of artificial corn, BHT and red food dye. No, you cannot touch that woman’s bottom. No, you cannot lick that wall. No, you cannot punch that 4-year old just because he is breathing in your ‘space.’

But let me assure you it isn’t just the word ‘’no’’ itself. It’s the re-direction. It’s the inability to have ‘it’ now. It’s the inability to anticipate what will happen next if option _x_ does not happen. It’s a change from the plan in his mind that I am not always even aware exists.

So some of that might be personality. Some of it might be autism. Some of it might be receptive language disorder or expressive language disorder or it might be the direction of the wind blowing. Whatever it is sucks. It’s a little boy overwhelmed and a Momma doing her darndest (my Mom reads these posts) to help her boy manage life.

And let’s pause right here at the eve of a helpful oh-I-know-how-to-deal-with-your-kid outpouring: don’t recommend The Strong Willed Child to me. Again.

Have it.

Read it.

Tried it.

Nope.

Yes, tried it consistently.

Nope.

No, really. It didn’t.

Because this idea only takes into account tantrums or defiance that are triggered by a negative or ‘control’ factor. It doesn’t account for the meltdowns that are triggered by a siren. Or a cellphone playing some awful pretend-music. Or a stranger making eye-contact with him. Or someone telling him he’s cute. Or the nice greeter offering him a sticker. Or the kid who asks him to play. Or sleeping late. Or waking earlier. Or I put strawberry-orange juice in the blue cup instead of the red cup. Or music is playing overhead. Or I put his right sock on before his left sock.

Or I touched his Legos immediately after washing my hands and now his Legos are potentially contaminated with water and wet Legos = hell on earth.

And it doesn’t consider that positive emotions and experiences can also trigger them.

He does something amazing? He gets super excited? He gets tickled to hysteria? He plays chase until he is giddy? He enjoys something so much that his excitement or joy exceeds his ability to regulate?

Meltdown.

From too much joy.

Yeah.

So even in play, when other kids are jumping and bouncing and hopping along like Tigger, free to use up their boundless energy, He has to be contained. I have to do my best to keep him level. I have to balance his emotional state like blood sugar; never too high, never too low.

I am the keeper of boundaries; emotional, physical, cognitive. And when I can’t manage them, we both suffer.

Now, it is getting better. I can anticipate him better. His language is improving so that we can understand each other better. Our routines are fixed with all of his therapies so for the most part we’re good.

But there is always the unplanned.

My phone rings.

Or I get a text.

Or something spills.

Or I don’t understand what he is saying.

Or … or …

These days we are much, much better. These days little hiccups don’t always end in a meltdown. Right now we might go whole days without a meltdown. A year ago we didn’t. A year ago … we were in a much different place.

Now we have whole hours at a time when he is just floating through the day playing with me, living in a bubble of therapeutic play in his comfortable, predictable little world. It’s easier to get him back after a small upset and it’s really freaking awesome. So awesome that meltdowns are no longer the driving, maddening force they once were. They aren’t what fuels me and keeps me going. Now, more than before, I’m fueled by hope. Hope and the knowledge that we are making headway. That we are moving forward.

So there ya have it. And I wrote all of this because someone said their crying child was having a ‘meltdown’ and I, in all honesty, said out loud “If that’s a meltdown then what the hell do we have?” And I posted it for all of you to read because a friend, not knowing what the difference is and what we really have on our plate, asked an honest question that I gave a vague, rambling answer to, not unlike this post which is ridiculously long and probably still doesn’t answer the question. A question I am still trying to find a suitable answer for.

I was given more than my fair share of words in this life, but never enough of the right ones. When I find them, I’ll share them.

So, until then…

How do I know he’s not being a brat?
I don’t always.

How do I know when it’s autism?
I can feel it? I can see it? I can hear it? I am making an educated guess based on diagnoses, experience, therapies and working with and watching and loving him every day of his little life.

How do I know when it’s a child with autism struggling to understand a world that doesn’t make sense to him?
It always is. Always.
Even when it’s not.

Love,
Spectrum Mom 

Almost meltdown  ...  &  ...  recovered



Friday, October 3, 2014

The Look

Hey friend,

I got a "look" today from a woman as we were leaving the grocery store, but it wasn't the usual look. It was the pinched smile, raised brow and sympathetic eye gaze of someone who, if nothing else, "got" that my Boy was miserable. 

I was alternating hips so his headphone-wearing self wouldn't give me a black eye, walking full blast past the pumpkins toward the parking lot.

And she got it.

She got that he was not wailing and screaming at the top of his lungs through the aisles because he thought he could manipulate me. He was not thrashing because he thought he could win. He was not crying and snotting and choking because he needed a stronger momma or a Bible thumping on his ass.

He was full on meltdown and long, long past rationalizing a way out of his torment.

I didn't know her. I don't know that I would recognize her again if I saw her. I have only a vague memory of light hair pulled back tightly from her face. Or maybe it was brown and just highlighted. I don't know.

But I saw her.

And I was grateful.

There are lots and lots and lots of blogs and articles online complaining about the rudeness of other people when autism affects their day unexpectedly. I've had a few of those incidents myself, but only a few.

The rest can usually be categorized as either blank-stared shock or awkward avoidance. A small percentage, usually someone of the more... Ahem... Grandmotherly persona, occasionally attempts to cajole him into distraction, which doesn't work and in fact usually makes the situation worse, but is actually very thoughtful.

The rarest of the rare though, the golden response, the creme de la creme of acknowledgment,

is sympathy. 

Not sympathy for me because 'my child has autism and OMG!!!' but sympathy because 'he is upset and his Momma is sad that he is upset.'

It might come from a place of experience or empathy or compassion or just flat out kindness. I don't know. And I don't know because it is so rare.

It's a very lonely feeling, having a child you love more than anything in the world fall apart in front of you when you know the only thing you can do to make it better is push through or leave. It's isolating. I can handle it like a badass, don't get me wrong. I can carry that 45lb, writhing five-year-old superhero under my arm like a football all the way through a super Wal-Mart and out through the parking lot like I carry the mail. I can stay calm and keep my head up, my keys ready, his shoes on and still make eye contact with anyone in my way. There is no defensive lineman that can block a Spectrum Mom.

I can usually even find my car in the lot the first row I walk down, too. This is part of my natural awesomeness: don't be intimidated.

But no matter how well I can manage grocery shopping during a nuclear meltdown, I still feel the social isolation of it. 

Deeply.

So, Ms. Eye Contact, I just wanna say "thank you."  Thank you for holding my gaze long enough for me to smile back. Thank you for breaking me out of the zone and spending 2 seconds out of your day to acknowledge me. 

Thanks for really seeing us.
Love,
Spectrum Mom


(& Super Underpants thanks you, too)