Learning to Accept My Autistic Son
Originally published on Mother of Confusion
My son was born after midnight during the cooler days of May, before the Central Valley could blaze triple-digit temperatures.
The delivery room was packed full of people. The doctor, several
nurses, my husband, my parents and my mother-in-law were in attendance.
As my son emerged into the world, I expected him to gasp and then cry
about the abrupt ejection.
He did not.
Instead he was quiet and blue. The umbilical cord was wrapped around
his slender neck several times. Of course I didn’t know that yet, but
the jubilant faces of the others gave way to peaked, pinched
expressions.
When I asked what was wrong. The response was, “Nothing. Everything’s okay. It’s okay.”
The reassurances scared me. I was only 20-years-old, but already I knew people lied when things were really, really wrong.
Did I not push hard enough or fast enough? The doctor had yelled at
me to stay focused, but I kept passing out. He had to assist the
delivery with a vacuum device.
Before I could convince myself my baby wasn’t coming home, he cried.
Once assured my son would keep breathing, the doctor plopped him on my belly. When
his skin touched mine, I panicked. My stomach felt as slippery as satin
sheets on a waterbed. The baby was going to shoot right off and smack
the floor. I grabbed on to him and asked for a blanket — something,
anything — to give some traction.
Maternal fear knifed sharp and deep. The days of planning the
nursery, rubbing my swollen belly and wishing my son would be born
sooner, rather than later, felt whimsical. What the hell was I thinking?
I searched for my mom. She sat on the left side of me and appeared happy, but exhausted.
“Mom.” I felt shaky. “I can’t do this. I can’t.” I
wanted her to hug me and to tell me it was going to be okay. I wanted
to be reassured.
It took her a moment to process my proclamation. When she figured
out what I’d meant, she chuckled. “Well, too late now kid. You already
are.”
Huh?
Before I could say anything more the nurse brought over a blanket. I
wrapped it around Jay’s mottled pink and white body. Jimmy reached over
and smoothed out his hair and traced his fingers across his greasy
newborn skin.
As abrupt as it felt, my mom was right. I was already doing this. I was already this kid’s mom.
I sucked in a deep breath, forced my fear aside, looked down at my son and fell in love.
Comparisons
I pounded my fist on the bed. “I can’t do this. I can’t.”
Jimmy looked at me from his computer chair with surprise.
“I don’t want to be a mom anymore. It’s so freaking hard.”
Jimmy nodded. He had heard my outburst at Jay a few minutes earlier.
“Can’t I just quit? Just for one day?” Man, I’d love to have one
happy-go-lucky day without the worry and stress. Maybe someone could
conk me on my head so I’d forget my obligations.
I just needed to release the fear that constantly gnawed at my gut.
My baby boy, now 14-years-old, was struggling in school again. Heck,
he had been marched to the Vice Principal’s office earlier in the week
because of a classroom meltdown.
Luckily the VP knew that Jay was a special kid. He knew what looked
like disobedience in another student wasn’t the same for my son.
Jay had autism.
They worked through it.
However, I didn’t. Jay’s shutdowns were increasing and his grades were falling. Again.
I felt like the world we had so carefully constructed for him was cracking apart.
I lamented to Jimmy. “Why can’t he just do it? We’re all working so
hard for him– why can’t he pull himself together and at least try? The
other kids in his autism program do it.”
This wasn’t the first time I had wondered why Jay couldn’t be like
the other kids. Only, before, the other kids were neurotypical.
When Jay was a couple months old, I saw babies his age cooing and laughing at people. I wanted him to do the same.
When he started preschool and hid under the desk for weeks after the
other kids adjusted – I wondered why he couldn’t go out and play like
everyone else.
When he still couldn’t ride a bike at age ten, I forced the issue. I
grabbed the new bike he’d gotten as a gift and made him get on it. I
pushed and ran with him for part of the way and then, against his
pleading request, let go.
If he had no other choice, he’d just do it. Right? It was like what
other people said – I wasn’t being strong enough with him. I coddled
him too much. I just needed to make him do it and he would.
“Peddle. Just peddle the bike Jay!”
He didn’t. He wouldn’t. The bike slowed down and tipped. Instead of
sticking out a foot or a hand, Jay sat stiff. He landed on the curb
still gripping the handle bars.
I was pissed. All he had to do was peddle. Now he was banged up and bruised up. Why didn’t he just ride the damn bike?
It wasn’t until Jay was thirteen I got my answer: Autism.
Acceptance
Just over a year ago, Jay’s diagnosis helped us find him a school with an autism program.
Nowadays, mostly, I’m shouting out about his triumphs. I share with
family and friends his dreams of becoming a wildlife conservationist or
that he’s crazy about Indiana Jones, Pirates of the Caribbean and
Naratuo. I let them know he’s made a gaggle of friends and gets asked
to sleepovers and birthday parties.
Jay’s recent progress has felt like a miracle. Everyone’s rejoiced.
So why was I freaked out? It took me a couple of days – after my rant to Jimmy – to work through it.
What I discovered? The problem wasn’t Jay. It was me.
Sometime after his diagnosis, my expectations switched back to default mode.
Now that Jay had support, he’d get right back on track. He’d
graduate high school and go to college. His meltdowns and setbacks
would be a thing of the past. Heck, one day he’d even get married and
make me some grandbabies.
What did I forget? Oh yeah, Jay still had autism.
That’s right, the key component to all of this – I just glossed over
it. Mentally I put us back on the
everything-is-going-to-be-okay-forever-and-ever track.
Society’s milestones of youth and adulthood applied again. I boxed us right back into the pretty package of social norms.
When Jay didn’t behave according to that plan – when he didn’t keep up his end of the fantasy – I had my own meltdown.
The truth is I’m scared. I don’t know what life for Jay is going to
be like as an adult. I don’t know that he’ll graduate high school or
college with his peers — or ever. What other parents can expect, I
can’t.
What I do know? Before I can ask the world to accept or have
tolerance for people with autism, I have to do it first. I have to
accept Jay for exactly who he is and let him set the pace.
This means no more preconceived deadlines or we’re-on-the-right-track checklists.
I have to stop and take a deep breath, shove aside my fear, look at my son and love him.
We’ll do this together.
We already are.
Editor’s Pick by Arianne from To Think Is To Create: Having autistic children myself, reading Genevieve’s post about her autistic son moved me deeply. I knew readers with special needs kids in their own family, or those who have a friend or loved one suffering, would all relate to and be inspired and comforted by this beautiful post.
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Such a great reminder to want what we have instead of longing for what we don’t - Thank you for sharing.
Wow.
Isn’t it amazing how we forget what we learn so easily? Thanks for the reminder and keep up the good work!
My first comment evidently didn’t post, so I’ll just say thanks for sharing this with everyone!
Great article. My son is 13 and also wants to be a wildlife conservationist. We regularly visit sanctuaries around CA online to see the age limits and requirements. He wants to start by volunteering at the Zoo, going to high school there and interning at the Humane Society.
Hopefully they will both achieve their dreams.
I’ve only been a mother for two years, but the gap between expectations and reality and resetting our expectations (constantly, it feels like) is the most difficult thing about parenting.
What a beautiful, thought-provoking post. Your love for your son is so obvious. Thank you for sharing this.
Welcome. In the World of Acceptance, there is less anguish. There is more joy. There is more peace. It is not the dissolution of heartaches, lost expectations or frustrations. But, it is a World full of rich Blessings. Thank you for your courage to share and to travel. I am a sister on this pilgrimage. http://www.GraceGoad.com