We had a guest speaker this morning, a man who spent two decades as an attorney until he could no longer ignore that he was being called to the Lord. He spoke of the challenges of seminary school. Many things you might expect, but he took a moment to reflect upon humanity. He said that our culture has a way of driving people inward, compelling us to be proud and competitive, and that this is the antithesis of what we should be doing: exposing ourselves, living vulnerably, letting our community embrace and fortify us. So I will do that; tell a story about a week whose hours passed anxiously and left me feeling as though I woke up somewhere I had not intended to be.
It began with a sentence I read a year ago:
63% of Teens with
Aspergers and High-functioning Autism are bullied; they are 50% more
likely to demonstrate suicidal ideation and 28 times more likely to attempt suicide.
I wish I could unlearn this. It doesn’t loom, not exactly.
It is more like a dark cat that saunters through our weaker moments. A pause, a
glance, a reminder. It takes my breath away. But a pause is just that and life resumes
its normal speed, and the creature wanders away…
I don’t think about these numbers more than I should, more
than any parent in our situation would. I don’t think about them at all when it
is bright and sunny and we’ve had a great week at school. But the weather turned
cold and dull last Sunday and I knew they would come creeping through. Feelings
of distance and uncertainty followed me around the rooms of our house where we
were stranded inside, looking out the windows, waiting. I tried to find my way
out with friends, but the air was stifled, I couldn't connect. It is hard for
me to keep up with conversations about home décor and crock pot recipes, when my
mind is suspended elsewhere: Who do I
need to speak to next, are we out of intake? Has our case manager been
assigned? What is the next step, what’s working, what’s not working, the ABA
bill was how much this month? I am a mouse on a wheel, spinning in
circles, desperate for answers. I know I need this, camaraderie outside the world
of special needs. And I remember being there, lost in a Color Book. Can’t I go back? Paint is important. I believe that. Don’t I?
It rained all the way home.
Tuesday was our parent support meeting. The woman that leads
the group is the mother of a kind and beautiful 9 year old girl. This has been
a big month for them: Georgia legislators pushed through the bill, named for her
daughter, which will require insurance companies in the state to cover autism therapy
interventions for preschool age children. They have improved the lives and the
futures of no less than 32,000 families. That was last week. This week the same
girl was bullied by some kids at her school. Because she has autism and an
Instagram account. The sentence purrs and the week moves slowly.
Friday I went to the school to have lunch with my daughter
and a nice-enough boy sat next to us and opened his lunchbox. He looked at me
and reported: “She has to ask the teacher to help her play with people at recess
and if they don’t want to play with her she cries. She cries in music, too. She
puts her hands over her ears and cries and cries and cries.” And then he turned
back to his lunch and went on about his ham and cheese. And the numbers rose
out of nowhere, circled my legs, told me to get her out of there, take her home
to where it is safe and dry and there’s no one to tally up what behaviors are
inadequate, unacceptable.
I should have told him about last year, how much better we
are now, how much progress has been made. I should have explained that the
music hurts her, like needles in her ears. She told me once it feels like it is
squeezing her brain. I should have done sensitivity training with the
classroom. Read them a book that explains what a sensory processing disorder is
and how a perfectly lovely day can be ruined by escalators or polyester or
people singing in unison. I should have
bought her those headphones.
I am angry. With the boy and the cat and everything that is
easier than this. I called my mother and got a pep talk. Everyone has unshared
problems. It is all relative. Keep your chin up.
Saturday: Dog grooming day. The clippers hum brilliantly and
the fur falls off in downy clouds. It’s the closest thing I have to a Zen
garden. I was covered in hair when I finally stood up an hour later. Our
toddler had been playing with the tufts, chasing them as they blew haplessly
around on the porch, so I took him upstairs to shower with me. There we were,
standing under the water, and he was laughing and laughing and laughing. And I could
feel it: the week and the numbers and the words breaking apart into a
collection of sounds and shapes that don’t mean anything without knowing what
time will make of them. I see my son’s smiling face as he looks up toward the
pressure and warmth of the shower. He is perfect, beautiful, happy. I think: how well we are represented by the
person we become when we quietly let go of superstition and the things that
keep us separated and hold tightly to what is real and binding. We are more
than pieces of life ambling through the weeks in a year; we are parts of a
whole. And special needs are more than headphones and tears at recess, they are
the landmarks of parenthood, of family, humanity. I pick my little boy up and
hold him. The water is hot and wonderful. I could be melting.
I hear my daughters in the room next door, having a very
neurotypical conversation about kittens and bracelets and bugs in the yard. The
playground is miles away and autism is a small box filled with six letters and the
memories we are learning from. I’m wrapping it up for you, our gift, our
special needs. I don’t know what they will mean to you but I know they will be entirely
relative.
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