Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Accepting uncertainty

Many times over the last year I’ve decided that my blogging days are over.  In typical fashion, though, I have a hard time admitting that I can’t or won’t do something.

I spent a half hour recently going back to the beginning, to my first entries in 2007 and following.  What struck me most intensely was the anguish I so often poured out, the trials and tribulations, the discouragement and frustration…and, even though the last six months have been without a doubt the most challenging of Stephen’s life, seeing those old entries so full of pain reminded me that we’ve been through many valleys already.

One entry from the past was titled something like “The 4’11” Tyrant.”  Yet, the way Stephen acts now, in the grip of puberty and hormones and god knows what else, I feel ridiculous for referring to him as a tyrant all those years ago.  Talk about a perspective shift…  Of course, he’s no longer 4’11”.  He’s very nearly my height, 5’7”, and his weight has steadily climbed upward, thanks to the side effects of Risperdal.  We continue to rely on that drug to keep him calm – at least most of the time – and while we try our best to keep his servings small, he is a carb-fiend and good luck to anyone who thinks they can improve his diet.  We’ve tried.  He was stubborn and set in his ways years ago.  Now multiply it times 100 and you’re getting close to what we deal with now.

The sudden onset of fierce OCD right around his 13th birthday has shaken our already fragile world to the foundation.  We have been to 4 doctors, at last count, and are on our second try with meds to treat OCD.  Of course, the meds must be started slowly, be allowed to build up, slowly increased to “therapeutic” levels, and THEN, you hope they work.  If not, then you have to slowly decrease, try the next suggested medicine, and start all over again.  Meanwhile the tantrums continue.  The head-hitting continues.  Not every day, no.  Less frequently than February/March?  Maybe.  But the idea of them, the possibility of these horrible fits, lurks under the surface constantly.

We are practically levitating, we are so carefully walking on eggshells.  Sneaking in and out of the house whenever possible, to avoid the separation anxiety.  Sneaking Kerry downstairs to drum when Stephen isn’t looking, closing Kerry’s bedroom door and pretending he’s in there – even though the drums are clearly heard – somehow keeps Stephen from screaming and demanding “IS KERRY????!!!!????” and hitting himself.

And underneath and beside and entangled with it all are my inborn neuroses.  I was raised by a nervous mother and I learned my lessons well.  Even when there is peace, my heart races, trying to prepare for the next bout.  I worry all the time.  ALL. THE. TIME.  I worry about things that may not happen.  BUT WHAT IF THEY DO?  Surely my fixation on future possibilities will ease the shock when/if they happen!  It’s just smart planning to ruin your life and the lives of those around you with permanent nervousness and tension.

Lately I’ve been facing the reality of what I’m doing to myself and to my family with this…STUFF.  It is incredibly hard for me to even begin to contemplate letting go of my worry/anxiety combo.  I have such a twisted and bizarre sense of loyalty to it.  Somehow for years I’ve justified maintaining this mentality – pointing to the admittedly few times things have really gone badly as proof that I was right to worry all along.  Over the last few months I’ve started to see clearly how wrong that viewpoint is, and what a waste of precious resources it is to try to exist like this.

Yesterday, I was fretting and stewing about how best to get Kerry out of the house for his first marching band practice, doing my best to foresee every possible issue or problem, how I would handle it, what I would do if the first thing I tried didn’t work, carrying that thought all the way through to the conclusion I typically jump to in my mind, which is:

If he won’t calm down, I give him med A.  Failing that, med B.  Failing THAT, call the doctor.  If that doesn’t work, I have to take him to the hospital.  Oh god, how would I ever leave my helpless man-child in the care of strangers?  What if they won’t let him keep his iPad?  How many diapers do I take? Would they restrain him?  What about work tomorrow?  What if THEY can’t help him at the hospital????

As humiliating as it is to admit, THIS is the madness that shoots through my brain like an electric current in the space of mere seconds.  This lunacy saps my energy, takes away my appetite, shuts down my common sense, and robs me of the moments of happiness that still exist…not to mention the very obvious effects on those around me. 

It has to stop. 

Life is hard enough, taken at face value, without the addition of these mental meanderings…honestly, as I read it again it might well be something someone would babble in a fever delirium.

People like me think that worry is helpful.  That anxiety serves a purpose, that we can somehow foresee the future and prepare…it’s all nonsense.  While a certain amount of awareness of outcomes is smart and practical, it’s a far cry from the storm in my head. 

I’ve been this way as long as I can remember, and somehow have muddled through up to this point.  Maybe it’s my age, maybe it’s the sharp increase in the difficulties we are experiencing, maybe the clear impact it’s having on me, my health, my family - who knows why I’m forced to face the absolute futility in continuing this way of “life” now, but it’s happening.  I am using mental images of the color red, of stop signs, etc. to try to halt my damaging thoughts, to try to throw off the worries when they come creeping, or sometimes RACING in.  I’m working hard to stay in the moment, to be mindful of THIS moment…and this one, and the next, letting things unfold as gently as possible.  To allow myself to be aware of the future only in a general sense but refusing (often over and over and over) to start sending tendrils of thought snaking their way into the uncertain future.  Part of my task is to radically accept uncertainty – because the alternative is simply impossible.

I’ve always worried about the uncertainty of what is to come, always allowing my thoughts to slide into negativity, sure if I expected the worst then I’d be prepared, or at the least I’d be happy if A BAD, HORRIBLE, DEVASTATING THING didn’t happen.  Now, I must accept the pure, unvarnished nature of life’s uncertainties, and try to believe two things: 1) Things just might be okay in the future and 2) If they’re not, I’m not alone, and, along with the people I love, I will survive.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Growing pains

Since my last entry, we have been through hell.

Two months ago Stephen turned thirteen.  In the ensuing days it has become clear to all concerned that Stephen has begun going through puberty, and this “rite of passage” is a nightmare for our family.  The “temper tantrums” I mentioned two months ago have escalated into brutal meltdowns – crying, screaming, stomping, pulling hair…and most heartbreaking of all, hitting his own head with his hands until he cries in pain.  Unless you’ve been through this, or seen something similar, you may not understand.  I can’t find the words to express how devastating it is to know that your child in such emotional pain that he is compelled to cause himself physical pain.

It is awful and horrible and it shatters our heart and souls…on those evenings when the meltdowns go full bore, the walls begin to close in, the very air is hard to breathe, and peace and hope and joy seem impossible.  As I wrote in my journal recently: “Happiness is for other people; not for us.”  Twice I have nearly wrestled Stephen into the car, thinking wildly that I would drive him to a hospital and storm into the ER: “TAKE THIS CHILD AND FOR GOD’S SAKE SOMEONE DO SOMETHING.”  David’s calming hand on my shoulder has stopped me, and he has been able to get Stephen settled, and life goes on, after a fashion.  We walk on eggshells.  We consider EVERYTHING before we do it.  Will this bother him?  Are we ready to deal with that or this or the other thing?  It's no way to live.

I have continued my decade-long quest to find help – and we are finally meeting with some success: call backs, appointments set, in-home services coming soon – and I am thankful, of course.  In the end, though, there’s always the underlying pain, the knowledge that in some ways he’s never going to get better, he’ll always be a big, overgrown toddler..

Stephen also has developed severe OCD symptoms.  Every little change bothers him.  EVERY LITTLE CHANGE. 

My idea of what goes on in Stephen's poor head:

Daddy takes his glasses off to clean them but no NO NO. Daddy WEARS his glasses and I must stand here and fret and possibly cry until he puts them back on. 

Daddy is outside cutting grass?  I can SEE him but he is not HERE where I can keep track of him so NO NO NOOOOOO.  I will stand at the window and ask 'Is Daddy?' every ten seconds.

The paper towel is hanging down off the roll.  That is not how it goes.  I will stand across the room and point and grunt and squeal at Mama until she rolls it back up.

My pants are wet but they are the pants I have had on all day and I do not want to change.  Wet is bad but change is worse. Mama's pictures about dirty wet clothes make sense but change is BAD and I cannot change.  It hurts my head.  I will hit my head because the world hurts me and my body feels different and I don't like it.

Mama walked downstairs.  IS SHE GONE? I know 'be right back' but I don't like 'be right back.' I like everybody where they belong. 

And I could give a hundred more examples.  We've always known autism was bad.  We've always had struggles.  But nothing could have prepared us for this.

We have an appointment with a new doctor in a week.  We hope to talk about changes/additions in meds and possibly get Stephen some help as we live through this harrowing time.  In my head, I think of it as "The Dark Time."  The darkest yet.

Friday, February 15, 2013

Love you forever

Any mom reading this is familiar with the children's book Love You Forever.  The premise is a bit on the ludicrous side if you look at it from a certain perspective - how weird would be it be to climb up a ladder to your grown son's room after he's asleep so you can pick him up and rock him "back and forth, back and forth"?

However, as I look at my life at the present time, I'm starting to see that the story, in fact, may be pretty close to what the future holds for me and my "baby."

Today Stephen is thirteen years old.  He is only a couple of inches shorter than me, and outweighs me considerably.  And he still sits in my lap, and we rock back and forth.  As long as I'm living...my baby he'll be.  Literally.

My thirteen year old son still isn't potty-trained.  He gets tummy aches and cries like a colicky newborn.  He throws temper tantrums like a toddler.  His face is still babyish, his hands small and soft.

This picture was taken about a month ago.  He cuddled up to me and I was struck by how young he still looked.


Even though today is his birthday, we're not having a party, or even doing anything different.  This is the first year we've done this, but after thinking about it a lot, this is the best way.  We just got over Christmas and its barrage of sensory input and presents out of nowhere.  Stephen still gets a weekly "surprise" from the mailbox, so really, we celebrate 52 weeks a year.  He doesn't eat cake, and having parties just stresses everyone out.   So, we'll defy convention, and even though David and I whispered, "Happy Birthday" to our son, that will be the extent of the celebration this year.

I love you forever, my little man-child.  I will hold you and rock you back and forth, back and forth, as long as my arms have strength.




Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Times Between

The little village looked as if it had grown up naturally, part of the surrounding forest.  The villagers loved their home, and nurtured it carefully and tenderly, aware of the treasure they possessed.  Babies were born, laughter rang through the quiet village streets, little events brought changes...and life moved on.  The children grew and changed.  The sun shone, rain fell, winds blew, heralding the arrival of each new season.

Then one dark, chilly morning, the villagers sensed an ominous presence in the air.  A great heavy mass of black clouds hung low, bizarre lightning flickered, and the winds howled.  Unfamiliar with anything but the gentle rains that came and brought life, the villagers huddled together, frightened.  They ran for shelter, terrifed beyond anything they had ever experienced.  The storm ripped and tore, moments felt like hours...every window shattered, every tree bent and bruised, torrents of angry water flowed through the streets.

Just as quickly as it had come, the storm dissipated.  Ribbons of blue sky appeared, mocking the darkness that had covered the sky so completely moments before.  The sun emerged, washed clean, and shone insolently over the wreckage of the village.

Dazed, the villagers began to appear, many shaking their heads in confusion.  Children raised their hands to the sunlight, recovering their smiles and giggles quickly - rebounding absurdly fast as children do.  Adults were slower to appreciate the warmth that belied the devastation that lay in front of them.

A meeting of the elders that night brought about plans to prepare for another storm such as the one that took the village so completely by surprise.  One man was appointed to watch the skies from a nearby hill, charged with alerting the village should those black clouds ever appear again on the horizon.  A group of women were put in charge of gathering up children and animals if the alarm sounded.  Every person was given a job, and each was determined to do that job, and protect themselves from future dangers.

In time, the alarm bell sounded.  Panic set in, but this time the village was prepared.  Shutters clamped shut, everyone found a safe place...the winds howled, the very foundations shook.  Trees were uprooted, stones hurled through the air as if thrown by a malevolent giant.  The village withstood the blows, but still some were injured.  Bodies were bruised and broken.  Homes destroyed. 

All the preparation...the plans, the safeguards... Nothing could stop the storms.  The damage was swift and sure.  The adults shook their heads in sorrow.  Their world was forever changed.  Even when the sun came out, as the sun always does, the elders eyed it distrustfully.  When the children danced and laughed in the golden rays slanting through the forest trees, their mothers worried just a little more than they did before.  What if the sky lowered blackly and the winds began to scream again?

Even when the sun hung brightly in an impossibly blue sky, the signs of the storms were ever present.  Foundations were weakened.  Trees lay dead on the forest floor.  Instead of windows letting in the light, there were heavy shutters, keeping the houses dark. 

In the Between Times - and there were many - the villagers tried their best to enjoy the peace and harmony.  But the memories of the Storms were intensely real and never quite left their consciousness.  And life, though pleasant at times, was never the same again.