25 March, 2023

...time out (in)...

The house is quiet.
Nothing but the ticking clock and the clicking keys.

I'm home...alone...for a brief moment while 'the boys' are out.
A rarity.
Nay, an impossibility.
I can count the hours of alone time I've had in recent years on one hand.

I don't know what to do with myself.

I'm avoiding the toys strewn on the floor, and the kitchen mess, and the ever-growing list of chores. I've stepped over the toys gingerly and blinkered my eyes to the counter in my periphery.  I'm avoiding it all...because if I gave in to that urge to clean and tidy and fix, I'd still be serving them...not myself.  And they'd arrive home to the same exhausted, touched-out, drained version of me that I've become of late.

But I don't know what to do with myself.
I don't know what to do for myself.
I've fallen out of the habit of time out.

So I opened this page...the blank white expanse in a dimly lit room...just enough to force my focus.

But what to write?
What to think about?
What's left of me that isn't someone else's person?

I'm spread thin...which is funny, as I'm the heaviest I've ever been.
(Perhaps I should be using this time to cycle and burn this me back into the shape the old one had?)  

I don't know how to say no...or how not to give 100%...or how to delegate to someone else.
So I'm spread thin.
And everyone is getting less and less of me...as I slowly wear down to nothing.

~~~
That wasn't where I thought we were going, there.
Let's wrangle these words back together.
~~~

The house is quiet and I've an hour or so to...
do???
What, exactly?

There's nothing that's just mine...just me...anymore.
Old habits...old hobbies...old daydreams...
They've been naught but cinder for years now.

I spent the first few minutes of my "time out" picking things up and prepping to clean.
Then, I startled into the realization that I shouldn't do any of that...not now, not with this precious 'one time only' opportunity.

So here I sit....fingers flying...mind...ummm...blank?
I don't know who to be if I'm not theirs.
I've spent so long postponing...myself...that I can't remember what she likes.


~~~
Is this part of the healing?
It feels more like depression.  Situational depression. Nothing permanent or chemical.  Just...the ebb that comes with the flow.  The emptiness of pouring everything out into others.
~~~

I've reasoned my way out of every notion that's flickered through my subconscious.
You're sleep-deprived. Take a nap! /Can't...won't be able to sleep tonight if I do.
You could take a long, hot shower!/Nah, waste of water.
Watch something? / I'm not current on anything current.
Read! / Um...the only books here are Henri's.

So here I sit...filling space and taking time.
Not very well.
Not in a way worthy of the occasion and the rarity.
Not with the fanfare and fun of "time out...in".
Just...here...
Here, on this page, where my mind unspools through my fingers and leaves a trail of words behind.

Perhaps I should have gone with the cycling, instead...





 

...copy/paste and expand...

What follows, in bold, are the words from a recent series of my personal Instagram stories.  Having shared them in that format on a vulnerable whim, I've copied them to here as a 'stepping off point' for further conversation around our family's current situation: navigating young adulthood and social-constructs around success and productivity, disability, support needs and resources....and the ever-unfolding dynamic (complete with seismic shifts) of hope, expectation, and delay.

Just taking a moment to sit with these thoughts while Henri nurses.
That previous slide barely scratches the surface.  Johannes is brilliant...brilliant in ways most of us can't even comprehend or measure.  That's not bragging. It's actually the complete opposite.  It's complaining.
Because high intellect is met, in society, with great expectation.
And in the case of high IQ autistics, that expectation can be devastating.  Because it too often assumes that the individual can 'push past' or 'break through' the very real limitations of his disability and somehow, miraculously, 'behave' as a neurotypical.  It casts them in the light of failure if they aren't 'making the most' of their intellectual gifts and potential within neurotypically-designed/understood parameters.

Since the very earliest days of Johannes' public-school education, it was recognized that he was 'gifted'.  His mind is a wonder to behold. Conversations with him on most any subject take to staggering heights and glorious descents.  His capacity for data...for knowledge, is...beyond.  And his ability to reason and extrapolate and expand upon that data is limitless.  I often think of him as the ultimate problem-solver.  His mind takes a problem down to all of its basic elements and then forms a string of sequential 'fixes'...all innovative, all reasonable but not necessarily probable...  He's able, at a moment's notice, to draw from anything he's taken in (read, heard, seen, experienced, etc...) in order to extend the dialogue into unexpected areas.  
He is, as I have often said, the most interesting person I know.
He is 'gifted'.
He is also disabled.
(As my personal "editor in chief", he has approved the above use of terminology.  But...and this is big...we don't tend to use that phrase in that manner, because language is nuanced and language around diagnosis and disability has been so misused in society.)
Neither cancels out the other.
Disability, or, rather, the specific support needs he has, are wholly separate from self-or-intellectual manifestation.  They are not 'over-ride-able' or 'dismissable' or even 'set-aside-able'.  They are part of his core-processing system.  
To imagine that logic and reasoning can somehow overturn the basic coding of neurodivergence is...laughable.  And yet, that very notion has been a constant.
Because, you see...
...he's 'gifted'.
Gifted: given something 'extra', exceptional

And...
Exceptional means...
...the rules don't apply.
???
Wait, what?

So heading back to the above....from the beginning, he was singled out as 'gifted', as exceptional...and therefore as someone to whom the rules wouldn't be applied.  The fight for services and supports was bitter and bloody...an ongoing battle whose #1 casualty was always, always his self-perception...his confidence.  Both sides manipulating language and diagnostic terminology to suit their end goals.  Far too often, the 'path to IEP' was littered with shame.  The 'team meetings' we had here at home, strategizing how to utilize specific anecdotal evidence of support needs while utterly ignoring his many, varied strengths and skills...  The conversations, ongoing even now, in which I repeatedly told him that he would have to listen as 'so called experts' defined him by terms that never, never applied to him...broke him down to a series of deficits and problems to solve and useless, rote 'skills' to drill. 
He was gifted.  He was exceptional.  He was...an exception to the expectations.
He was...in fact, expected to intellectualize his way into neurotypicality, one AP class at a time. 

And here we are...some 10 months after graduation...
And he remains gifted.
He remains exceptional.
He has, in 10 months' time, been living an exception from the expected.

Because he didn't matriculate at the Ivy Leagues as expected.
He didn't fast-track his way through freshman year to an internship.
He didn't submit his first prosthetic design for consideration.

He hasn't yet recovered from the battle.
And he hasn't miraculously intellectualized his way into the neurotypical life with all its functioning requirements and demands. 

Creating an environment in which Johannes can continue to learn and grow...using both his talents and his passion...to build his own best life, is an ongoing challenge.

There is no structure in place, now that he's graduated.  There's no daily responsibility to show up for...no grading system in place to carve out the failures and successes.  There's no desk at which he sits and performs the exercises of ongoing education, because the areas on which he's working...studying....applying...aren't found in textbooks.

He's learning how to be exceptional in a world that's built for the unexceptional.
And he's breaking himself into pieces, trying to mimic the habits and skills and routines of neurotypicals. 

And, frankly, so am I.  Because the support system...is me.  The support person...is me.  The daily living skill driller...the calendar...the timer...the reminder...is me.  The office manager and social media director for his business...is me.  I handle the books and the schedule and the stopwatch on every project, every proposal, every venture.  I am the clock. I am the (sometimes, hopefully) stable ground.

It is a full-time job.  The "managing" of this talent.

A full-time job squeezed into limited seconds...minutes...never hours... 

Because I have other children...other responsibilities...other jobs....all of equal importance.

And, in what's perhaps the most important piece, it's completely unpredictable. There's no guide.  No applicable rules or schedule or system.

There is just whatever each day brings.... incalculable stimuli and overwhelm...and the ongoing need for ever-reversing, ever-evolving response. 

~~~

Watching his former peers 'moving on' in their freshman years is a heartbreaking lesson in this parenthood...of managing my own expectations and wishes, of reordering my life around his very real and present ongoing support needs, and of not experiencing what is the norm for so many others.

It feels like an end.  A death of a dream. 
Even though it's not. 
It feels like everything we both worked toward was just suddenly ripped out of existence.

It does not feel like a postponement.  A 'gap'.

This gap year feels like failure.

Because it's not, likely, just this one year.

The assessments I have to do as his parent and his support person have made it very clear that he is Not Yet Ready...and that feels like a crushing blow.

It feels like the road to a bright and beautiful future just hit a dead-end.

Feels.

Feelings overrunning fact.

Feelings, with roots in the fear center of motherhood, that have been allowed to fester and run wild. Feelings that find red flags and justifications in the minutiae of daily life. 
Feelings that drown out hope.
Feelings that cloud my judgement.

It feels like an end, and it is.
An end to this particular chapter.
This first-10-months-after-graduation chapter.

The next page is...blank...
And that is just as terrifying.
The lack of characters and lines conjuring up insecurity and doubt.

Johannes and I are in a very different season right now.
It's been challenging.
It's been devastating.
It's been beautiful.

We move in colliding circles around each other daily...never too far from the other.  The points of intersection wearing away like friction burns as we both try to scratch out patches of independence.  He, chomping at the bit...wanting to assert his young adulthood and sit as an equal at the table.
Me, desperately trying to shake off my ever-present-shadow and have a single conversation that he doesn't push his way into.

Both of us, at the end of each day, finding comfort in our routines and our silent companionship.

We're learning to find grace in the uncomfortable.
We're learning how to acknowledge disappointment while managing to not emotionally invest in it.
We're learning how to grow a whole new partnership.

Years ago, I wrote of his growing up and growing out in terms of a relay race.  I wrote of how we'd come to the part where the baton is passed, from me to him.
What I didn't realize was that there's a time...extended in our case...where the baton is held by both.
A time where both runners...the one exhausted of effort and the other, just now catching up and hoping to overtake...are equal stake-holders...err...baton-holders.


The partnership...the teamwork...is both a mutual effort at keeping that baton aloft, and a tug-of-war between two runners, both intent on crossing that finish line.  

And most of the time, we're both failing to keep it together.

That friction of intersection?
That tug-of-war?
Daily.
My suggestions and supports so often in conflict with what he wants to be able to do 'by himself'.
His lack of independence or, rather, his ongoing support needs in conflict with my need for him to grab that baton and let me take a slower lap.

More pointedly, his still-constant need of me...a drain on my energy and resources and an interference in attention owed to my other children and my other responsibilities and my own self.


This is NOT what I envisioned.
It's not what I thought we were working toward.
It's not what all those therapies and IEPs and support plans were for.
It's not what those straights As and test scores led me to believe.

This 'gap'...this, between...and after...and before???...and undefined passage of time?
This wasn't expected.
It's become a lesson in pivoting.  In...taking our team out of the race even through it looked like we were in the lead...  In slowing and even stopping our forward movement, in order to assess damages...treat injuries...and readdress the cost/benefit analysis of continuing in the next heat.

It's something else entirely.
And you know what?
It's really, really hard to come to terms with where we're at and what's in the immediate future.  Because I was never planning for him not to overcome.

That's my own crutch.  My own 'reckoning come due'.
It's my 'toxic trait'...meeting each challenge overcome with one bigger and bolder...and in some cases, completely unreachable.
It's NOT ON HIM.
It's 100% my own failure to realize that Effort In does not guarantee Output.
It's my failure to wholly accept that his support needs are the core-processing system...non-negotiables.
It's my own completely inappropriate Great Expectation.

And it's been with me since the beginning...since the first diagnostic test.  It's been the rod in my spine that kept me standing when the rest of me fell to pieces in early days of diagnosis and behavior. It's been the light at the end of the tunnel when my own overwhelm has swallowed me up.
It's been a Friend.
A Saviour.
A Hope.

It's been a lie.

Because there was, in fact, never an Overcoming to be had.
Nor needed.

I never accepted that there might not be a 'breakthrough' and full, functional independence.

I had pictures in my mind...possibilities of 'life after' highschool/college/career.  An off-campus residence for daily support.  A two-family home with regular reminders and assists.  A car service account...a grocery shopper...an automated evening shutoff.

Independence, by way of met support needs.
Hands off...while hands on.

That's Not where we're at.

I never paused in my efforts to acknowledge the very real possibilities of what mothering an adult autistic person might look and feel like.
And neither did he.

We're both taking tentative 'first steps'...wobbling and grasping for support, as we try to plot out not only where we actually are right now...but also, what might come next.

So here we are...scouting out this new territory and trying on hats for size, as we rewrite our team's playbook.

I'm finding myself chafing at the feel of those hats...those responsibilities that I thought I'd have been able to pass off to him 'by now'.  They're old, familiar companions...sure.  They're rote and routine and almost mechanical.  But I am tired of them.  They require energy that I feel drained of right now.  They require me to split myself in two...one side always observing/analyzing/reacting in advance to perceived areas of support...the other just trying to be all the things to all the other people.

I wish everyone else would just stop expecting my neurodivergent son to follow a neurotypical path.

"Silence!", I want to shout.  "Silence. Your unsolicited opinion has no place here."
Silence, please?
Stop forcing your way in. Stop adding the weight of your 'disappointed expectations' to my already overloaded travel-pack.

Yes, he's gifted.
Yes, he's exceptional.
He is all three...gifted, exceptional, autistic...and so very, very much more.
The standard path...the expected, is Not For Him.
And likewise, it is Not For Me.

I wish we could just breathe easy and know that it's all coming together exactly as intended, and neither he nor I need to hit benchmarks of 'normal' progression.

I wish we could.
I think we should.

Let's just do that.


13 March, 2023

...spring cleaning...

Much as I would like to think that some echo of my former self still lingers, the truth is that this chapter of motherhood has effectively killed her off...and with her, all sense of scheduling, organizing, and planning.

That's not to say I don't still try.  The planner sits atop the kitchen table, full of hastily scribbled "reminders to self" and checklists and calendar notations.  But at the end of every day, the page tells the true story...a few lines of text checked and crossed off in the early hours of caffeination...and then, abandonment.  Each day rolling over into the next, with a growing list of to-dos and want-tos...and, worse yet, should-have-alreadys...

'Twixt toddler-hood and the (now) 20 year old, my days are a precarious balancing act of tasks/goals and chaos control...and that's before adding in the "crisis management" that has been the operating system of recent months. 

Come night...or, rather, midnight and her shadowy sisters, I pause long enough to copy the lines of one day over into the next and shake loose the disappointment-irritation-shame of having failed to accomplish once again.

So here I sit, with planner beside me, full of 'best laid plans' and the traffic snarl of 'good intentions'.
Here I sit, in contemplative silence (of inner self, not surroundings...ha!) marking the passage of days and idly scrolling through my handwritten notes.
Wondering, as always if I'll ever get back on track.
Wondering just where and when and how I got off track to begin with.

And then I hear the hushed murmurs of my two boys, from but a few feet away, where they play.
Two boys.
One young adult.
One newly minted three year old.
Playing with all the wild abandonment of boyhood at trucks and dinos and transformers.

Ah.  Yes.  There it is.  The off-ramp.
Of motherhood.
Motherhood of this variety.
The "drop everything to be in the moment" motherhood.
The "tend to the curiousities" and let the rest fall away motherhood.
The "wear all the hats" motherhood.
The "embrace both skills and deficits of disability" motherhood.
The...
Stop
Drop
and Roll With It
motherhood.

The...pause now to pick up the pieces and wonder if I'll ever even get back to finishing this post motherhood.
6:37 a.m.

05 March, 2023

...tidying up...

It's a gorgeous day, outside, today.

Crisp and clear...sunny and bright.

The pull of fresh air has my fingers itching at window sashes and doors...the impulse to fling them all open and welcome in the *idea* of spring almost too strong to resist.

It's gorgeous, outside.

But here within these walls, as I pause in the middle of a frantic morning clean up, the bright sunlight highlights all the flaws.  The hairline cracks and chipped paint.  The mismatched touch-ups and faded spots.  The cat hairs and stains.  The fingerprints and finger-paint-prints and nose-prints.

The light streams in from the picture window and draws out dust-bunnies from their dark warrens. It forces its ways in, casting the front rooms into stark relief...multiplying contrast and saturation...drawing the eye to the shabby of our chic.

I've walked away, for a moment.  Taken a time out to stop the rising tide of anxiety.

We've *company* coming today, to celebrate the boys' birthdays.  Company, with a capital C.

C:
for criticizing
for condescending
for comparing
for correcting

And I've taken to the page to exorcise (or, perhaps, exercise) my self-loathing spiral...to step away from the hustle-and-bustle and tousle of rearranging and relocating that 'needs must' when welcoming anyone into our small space.  I've felt the anticipatory panic bubbling up and given myself an 'out' of blank white space and silence for a moment or two...or ten.

Around me, the chaos builds.  A battle of dueling vacuums in the living room.  Drip-drying dishes on the counter. Bin on the floor, overflowing with "clutter": those bits and pieces of daily life that would be scrutinized and sneered at.

Beside me, here at the table, a hastily scrawled 'to-do' list that seems to double in size each time we each set off to complete a task.

So much effort...
So much work...
Just to avert...
No!
Just to minimize the damage of the pointed barbs that will be delivered with such deliberate intent.

So here I sit, breathing in and out...slow and steady...and getting rather heady from the lack of oxygen.  Forcing myself to write it out rather than act it out in slamming drawers and hard-flung doors. Deliberately taking time out to get out...of my own head, of my own way.

It's a gorgeous day, outside.

There's nothing to be done, inside.  Nothing but a quick tidy and rinse. Nothing but a cake to bake (please, oven, don't mess with me today) and decorate. Nothing but a table to set.

Nothing to be done, inside.

Except...that's not true...because Company is coming and no matter what I do, they'll find fault.

 




04 March, 2023

...headed for a breakdown...

It's been...a minute...since my fingers hit the keyboard in *this space* and I'm not all that sure, as my fingers fly, of where the words will go or what they will decide to say.

I started this year with fresh perspective and lessons learned.
I started it with an end goal, and the strategies to get there.
I started it with a word.


And here I am, start of March, covered in scabs from freshly-picked wounds.

Mother-wounds
Inner-child wounds
Trauma-wounds

February was a whole thing.  A month. 
A slow-motion crash? A journey? A karmic joke?

 February was a bubbling up of things I meant to address...someday, somehow...not now... 

Ha!  'Cause that usually works out so well for me!

February was the stretching of scar tissue and tearing of stitches and the knowledge that my journey to healing was going to involve reliving the past and getting wounded all over again.

February was a month of connection and division.
 Of frantically trying to snuff out both little sparks and raging wildfires.
Of trying to clear all the refuse and somehow compartmentalize each action item despite the impossible tangle of intersections.

February saw my intention to heal and said, "Great idea...so, hey let's go ahead and break you all the way down to your original parts first with a series of completely overwhelming experiences."
And I had no choice but to turn myself over to the process.
This time...opening myself up to the realness of it all...feeling the feelings and poking at the damaged parts...allowing that pain to wash over me afresh...

Because...
Healing means:
   breaking bad habits
breaking down unstable barriers
breaking toxic patterns

Healing means Addressing It All ~ Analyzing It All ~ Accepting It All...

...and only then, Releasing It All and moving forward in wholeness.

~~~

So here is March, and I'm slightly woozy from the wounding and rebandaging.

But I'm on my way.
Little pieces I'd left in shambles are...reconstituting...resurfacing...reanimating.
Little bits of me I'd buried are coming back to the surface, and I'm learning...daily...how to share the beauty of them with my family and with myself.

I'm healing those wounds and those patterns and those foundations.

It's slow...and altogether unsteady...with sudden gaping drop-aways...but it's happening...

Healing.







...March : The List...

 Now I don't know about you, but I'm thinking this whole "March comes in like a lion..." thing has some pretty good potential.  Fierce, wild, and altogether forceful?  Sounds good.  Ready to tear things up and make a snack of February?  Even better!

Bring it on March...we're ready to ROAR!!!


First a few old familiars...best laid plans and all that...


❐ re-tile the entryway (I know, I know...is it even worth it at this point?) But...this repressed interior decorator needs that flow!

❐ daytrip to a new locale in New York

❐ daytrip to a new locale in Pennsylvania
 
❐ dinner with just Johannes (this is 100% guaranteed to be on every list!)
 
❐ lunch with just Henri (as is this!)

❐ take Henri on a train ride (surely we can plan a daytrip around this)

❐ visit Ringing Rocks Park (I mean...it's a must with my little rock-star!)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

And now for something new...

❐ now that Early Intervention is over, let's go ahead and rearrange our living space to suit our daily needs a bit better

❐ diving into signing and signaling

❐ future focus: minds on moving! Time to scout out new vistas!

❐ put it in the book: schedule those healthcare appointments

❐ city streets, new eats, family completes

❐ salty air and Red Bank fair

❐ visit an aquarium and adopt a fish for Henri







...march plans...


 

...February : The List...recap

  Farewell, February.

Farewell, though so much of you still seems to be lingering...carrying over into this new month with your unfinished business, your tentacles of unresolved trauma and tribulation, your long-reaching consequences.  You've tried your best to throw us off course...and in some disappointing ways, been quite successful.  We'll feel you still, I'm sure, come June.

But here we close the books.  Some boxes checked, and others empty.  An accounting, of where we hoped to be and where we landed. A visual aid to remind me in years to come how best laid plans were thrown off course by illness (yes...again...or is it ongoing?) and emergencies, and reunions...and a revolving door of challenges, choices, and next-right-things.

I feel quite wrung out by you..."I'm tired", my ceaseless chant...or whine...or excuse.
I'm tired.  Too many irons in the fire...too few sparks to keep the blaze roaring.

But here I draw the line:
-------------------------------
Because for as much misery as you brought, we filled you up with moments (big and small) of pure joy, pure love, and pure life.  We poured into you reignited relationships, daytrips aplenty, mini-adventures, hard-won milestones, celebrations...and plenty of cake!



Sure, there are unchecked boxes up above.  Disappointments logged in empty space.
But February...you were full.
To the brim.
To overflowing.
You were full all the way into this start to March.

03 March, 2023

...happy 3rd birthday...

 You are my spitfire.

My change-maker.
My past-demolisher.
My new-world-builder.

You are pure energy.


I've watched you...
watching, listening, learning...
then tuning out to sort the data into applications.

I've watched you follow, then lead... observe, then demonstrate... struggle, then conquer.
You burn hot and bright, even in your sleep, a little flickering flame of constant change.

You bring me back to home.

I love you, my little one. Fiercely, wildly, and with arms that will always spin your cares away.
Happy 3rd birthday, Henri!
x

02 March, 2023

...time's up for two...

 'Just begun,
and still so new,
how can we say goodbye to 2?
Journey's end,
much more to see,
as we step forward into 3!'


What a second year you've lived, my little one. What a big, bold, beautiful bruiser of a year!


You are a force of nature...a bulldozer...a leveler and a level-up all-in-one!
You are my favourite first sight and goodnight, and the most hard-fought joy of all the in-betweens. You learn by leading, and you grow by challenging.
And you bring me into your world where you truly are King of the Wild Things.


Your fierceness is matched only by my fierce love for you, and together we are limitless! Cheers as we close out your 2nd year and look to a future you are going to command!

01 March, 2023

...but the first of many...

 A spark:
...of something new
...of fiery determination
...of limitless curiousity
...of exponential growth
...of change


Closing the very first chapter in the book of you, as you graduate from Early Intervention.

Just shy of 3, and already laying the foundation for a beautiful life of learning and growing. I'm so proud of all your hard work and your resilience.

You, little Henri, are a trailblazer...and I can't wait to see all the new vistas we'll explore together.



Happy Graduation!