Wednesday, April 17, 2013

A Good Day

Today was the middle day of school vacation.  Two days behind us, two more days to go.  RJC has people to hang out with most of this week, but today was a mommy day and it was a good day.  A really good day.  One of those good kind of days that can almost make me forget the bad days.  A day to be cherished.

We met one of RJC's school friends and his mom to go bowling.  They bowled two games together - for the record, she bowled a 100 and a 110 without bumpers.  They fell into a nice routine, both obviously enjoying themselves.  RJC likes to acknowledge every strike and spare.  She "gets" bowling.  Then we went to their favorite restaurant where she ordered for herself but even better...she actually ate.  She didn't play with her food, she didn't waste her food.  She ate her food with obvious enjoyment.  No lunch is complete without ice cream so that topped off the meal and we headed home.

When we got home she wanted to bake "a yellow cake with chocolate frosting in two circle pans."  So she did.  She did everything independently.  She got all of the ingredients out, measured everything correctly, broke the eggs without shells getting into the batter, and used the hand mixer to mix the batter.  She knows that she can't lick the bowl (evil mom that I am) so she happily skipped off to play on the computer while the cake was baking.  Once cooled, she helped me frost the cake then helped herself to the first piece.

A few hours later we were off to Special Olympics track practice where she did quite well.  She didn't need me next to her at every given moment and participated quite nicely.  When we first arrived, she went to take a walk around the track, quite independently.  She really enjoys seeing
her teammates and the coaches so it was a nice way to spend an hour.  She broke her personal record for the Long Jump.  The weather was decent too!

Next stop - grocery store.  Another favorite activity.  This was a quick stop but she made sure to grab the pizza that she loves.  We came home and she made herself quite comfortable while she munched her dinner. 

So, it was a good day.  Nothing big happened, but our good days are when the ordinary happens and it goes well.  It's a lack of anxiety, limited yelling, and obvious contentment.  It's enjoying the people she's with, participating in activities she likes, and (like the rest of the world) enjoying a meal or two.  What's really cool is that when these days occur I really, really appreciate them.  It does not escape me that other people would find a day like today to be...mundane.  Just another day in the year.  But us?  Oh no.  It was a good day.  And good days are to be cherished.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

The Challenge of Parenting a Child wtih Autism

I've been doing this parenting-a-child-with-autism thing for 20 years, 10 months, and 3 days.  Not that I'm counting.  Some days I do it pretty damn well.  Some days I really stink at it.  Many days it's a combination of both, but on my best days it's really neither.  The best days are those days where we just move through without too much of a thought as to how autism will play in our plans.  The challenge of parenting a child with autism is finding a way to have those best days.

Today it was the best of times, it was the worst of times.  Today was one of those days where I did some things pretty well, and other things - not as well as I wished.  RJC had spent her second weekend away and except for the first night where she didn't fall asleep until 2:30 AM (and apparently self-talked her way through the night) I understand it went well.  We went to pick her up.  So far so good.  Then she got in the car and started to play on her iPad - Angry Birds.  Well, let the screaming begin.  No matter what I said she could not gain a modicum of self control.  I am sure that being tired and anxious from the weekend did not help her escalated reaction.  To be clear, I am talking about the kind of screaming that people hear through closed windows.  It was that loud.  I tried to talk her through it.  Nope.  The plan was to go grocery shopping and then for pizza and she was excited about it.  It was on the calendar, and thus, it was to be.  I explained that we couldn't do these things if she was screaming.  Nothing I said was getting through and I finally drove home instead of to the grocery store.  It was the right thing to do, though this decision escalated her behavior into pinching and self-hitting her face over and over.  It was the right thing to do because it is important to never reinforce poor behavior.  It was not the right thing to do in terms of showing understanding of her autism.  I always have a difficult time with this balance.  From my behavioral point of view, I did the correct thing.  From my "mommy" point of view it was a pretty lousy choice to make.  I do not believe this was a conscious choice of behavior.  It wasn't like she was being a brat.  This was her autism taking over.  As a professional once told me, "She just doesn't have an 'off' button."  So what I did pretty damn well today was to make a choice to attempt to make a connection between her behavior and what she gets to do so that once she makes this connection she can learn to control her reactions.  What I did that was not so great was to resent the situation.  I was annoyed that this was our moment to reconnect and it was a disaster.  On the outside I was patient and understanding, speaking in a quiet tone.  Gave her meds to get her through, washed her face with a cold washcloth and snuggled on the couch.  On the inside I was angry that this was the first thing that happened as a reunited family.  I wanted hugs and excitement and I got yelling, pinching and self-injurious behavior.  I suppose to put a final good spin it, I can say that all calmed down as the meds kicked in and we were able to reinforce the good behavior with grocery shopping and pizza. It's been a quiet evening since.

The next five days will not be the kind of days I pray for - where autism does not play into our plans.  It's school vacation.  Can't even begin to put autism on the shelf.  It's five days of juggling work and child care.  It's five days of RJC asking me what her schedule will be when I really don't know.  It's five days of trying to think of things that will keep her amused and busy, that won't cost a zillion dollars, that she enjoys.  It's five days of never, ever forgetting that autism is in our lives. Five days that, experience tells me, will feel like five weeks months years. 

After that, though, I will look for those days where we just move through without too much of a thought as to how autism will play in our plans.  I will look forward to the lack of anxiety, the sheer joy of being with my girl.  And I will work to find a way to have more of those days.  Not because I deserve them - but because she does.