Sunday, October 25, 2009

Why?

Like so many other young children, Ryan's favorite question when he was little was "Why"?

Why is the sky blue?
Why did the dinosaurs die?
Why do people believe in God?

I found that his barrage of questions was aggravating not only because of their frequency but also because it highlighted just how much actual knowledge I lacked about most things.

What am I Buddha?

However, as time passed, Ryan stopped asking so many questions and frankly has determined that he knows just about everything there is to know.

You'd think this would make me happy.

But then there's Justin.

I never knew just how much I would miss having to answer all those "why" questions until I realized that Justin wasn't asking questions at all.

The dreaded "wh" questions. The backbone to socially reciprocal conversation.

Like so many things for our kids, asking and answering questions is really hard. Truth be told, I really don't think I appreciated just how difficult and complex our language is until I had a child for which none of it came naturally. He has had to work so hard for every word, every concept, every nuance. Just when you think he has it, it's gone. It reminds me of the arcade game that Ryan loves to so much. It's the one with the "claw" that you lower down into a pile of stuffed animals, and then have to grab one without dropping it. Just when you think you've got it, it disappears.

I remember in the early days how I use to think that all of Justin's problems would be solved if only he could master talking. I automatically assumed that once the light bulb switched on that he would just "get it" and the rest would follow naturally. I had no idea that even after he had well over 300 words that he would still struggle with putting those words into a coherent and meaningful sentence.

Thankfully, little by little those sentences are coming. First came his ability to communicate his wants and needs. Then came some "what" questions. Over the summer came "where". Each step a building block for even more to come.

So, the other night, we were at the dinner table and Justin was looking disdainfully down at his plate. He is a very limited eater and was not at all happy with the cheeseburger that stared back at him. I have long since given up trying to cajole, beg, and bribe him into eating. My husband is more stubborn.

"Come on, Justin take a bite for daddy."
Silence
"Please, just take one bite."
More silence.
"Justin, please eat."
Wait for it...
"Why?"

HOLY CRAP!

I, who had no problem stuffing my face with said cheeseburger, nearly choked.

"What did you say? Did you say why? He said why!"

My husband shot me a look to say, calm down don't make him self-conscious. As if I'd scare him away like a skittish deer. But honest to God it was so cool. Now to be honest, I'm not sure if he understood what "why" meant. He wasn't waiting for a response from my husband and, no, we haven't heard it since.

But it's a start.

As an aside, last weekend at the movie theater, Ryan and I had some time to kill and they had one of those "claw" games there. With willful determination, Ryan put his money in the slot. I waited patiently while he gave it a shot, knowing it wasn’t going to happen. But then it did. With the finesse of an experienced crane operator, he grabbed his prize and out it came. Ryan is now the proud owner of a pink and purple fuzzy dolphin that he has slept with just about every night so far.

Why do people believe in God?

Because miracles happen everyday.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Where the Wild Things Are...Revisited

As I wrote in a previous post, Ryan and I were anxiously awaiting the release of Where the Wild Things Are, and last weekend we were amply rewarded.

Where The Wild Things Are was a wonder.

In my last post, I wrote about the similarities between Max and Justin. The thing I was unprepared for was how much Max reminded me of myself at that age.

You see, the movie takes place against the backdrop of a little boy dealing with, among other things, the aftermath of his parent's divorce. His mother is loving but busy and frazzled with not a lot of attention to spare. She also seems to be starting up a relationship with a new man whom Max doesn’t like.

This, in a nutshell, describes a large chunk of my childhood.

Parents divorced; Mom and Dad were loving but busy; couldn’t stand Mom's new boyfriend.

As much as I predominately remember having a happy childhood, I also remember it being a tumultuous time of my life. There were so many times that I was angry. That I was confused. That I was lonely.

So many of those feelings sprang up, not just because of my parent's divorce. But because that particular event precipitated the time in my life where a lot of the innocence drained from it. That time when I realized that Daddy wasn't a super-hero and Mommy wasn’t a fairy-princess. They were just people, with their own lives and their own set of problems that didn't always include me. There's nothing scarier for a child than to realize that their parents aren't perfect and they can't always make everything all better.

But that realization does come, it always does.

It has to.

But that doesn't mean that the period between leaving childhood innocence behind (no matter what the reason) and dealing with the fear and insecurity that's found on the other side, isn't anything less than terrifying.

Sitting in the movie theater and watching the raw emotional vulnerability wash over the face of the little boy who portrayed Max, opened up a floodgate of emotions that I thought had dried up long ago. It took me back to a place that I haven't visited in a long time.

And I cried.

A lot.

I tried to hide it as best I could, because I didn't want Ryan to be scared. Isn't it funny how the harder you try to choke the tears back, the more insistent they are on flowing freely?

Not surprisingly, Ryan noticed my crying. He didn't get scared or upset at seeing me cry. Instead, he put my arm around him, snuggled close, and whispered in my ear, "I love you, Mommy".

Then he looked at me and smiled.

That pure unadulterated smile of childhood innocence.

He still has it.

Despite everything we’ve been through as a family. Despite the number of times he's been robbed of attention that has instead often gone to his brother. Despite the number of times he's been yelled at by a mother who is often frustrated and tired and he's in my line of fire. Despite the number of times he's asked the not easily answered question, "When will Justin talk to me?"

He still has it.

There is no cynicism. There is no sadness.

He is simply all things joyful.

I'm not yet ready to say good-bye to the sweetness that lives inside him right now.

I want to somehow capture it. Hold onto it. Swallow it whole.

Please don't go...I'll eat you up I love you so

I think one of the main reasons watching little Max on that big screen was so hard, was because it reminded me, in vivid detail that Ryan too will go through his growing pains. And it will be hard to watch. And it will be messy and confusing. And it will be something that I will try to help him through but will probably find my efforts futile.

Because ultimately, growing up is a journey we all have to travel alone.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Did you ever have one of those nights...

...When you were sick as a dog with a cold and all you wanted to do was take a mega dose of Nyquil and go to bed early.

But then your son wakes up at 1:30 AM crying (which is unusual for him), so you run upstairs thinking, "Great. He must be sick with my cold."

So then, you find him sitting up in bed crying hysterically and without thinking (and without turning the lights on) you pick him up out of bed and place him on your hip.

But when you feel the warm "splat" against your nightgown, you realize that he doesn't have a cold, he has diarrhea, which has soaked through his pajamas and is quickly soaking through your nightgown.

So then you strip your hysterical child and place him on the toilet and pray he doesn't make a bigger mess while you run downstairs and wake your soundly sleeping husband to let him know you need reinforcements.

So then you quickly change out of your nightgown, hastily washing it in the sink (and it's 1:30 AM and although your awake you're barely coherent), while your husband goes upstairs to assess the damage in the bedroom.

And then you think, how the hell are you going to clean this child since you have stopped buying wet wipes since he's been potty trained (and you can hear the "potty training gods" snicker).

So you grab the first thing you can find which is paper towels and run back upstairs to your still hysterical child, all the while marveling at his older brother's ability to sleep through absolutely anything.

So then, you're back with hysterical child and realize that given the mess it is really easier to simply throw the pajamas out than try to wash them, which is a problem since these are his 2nd favorite pair of Elmo pajamas. Meanwhile your husband has stripped the bed and your older son is still blissfully asleep.

So then you clean hysterical child with wet paper towels, knowing full well that this would probably be much quicker if you just threw him in the shower to clean him up but know damn well that this would only push him completely over the edge so you use up half a roll trying to clean up his bum and "bits".

So now, he's clean, but still not happy because now he's naked and looking for Elmo pajamas. So you make the executive decision to trek down to the laundry room in the cold basement to find his 1st favorite pair of Elmo pajamas, which are stained with peanut butter, but given the alternative they will do just fine.

So then you get him dressed and your husband takes him downstairs to calm him down, while you spot check the 30 some odd stuffed animals on his bed to make sure that none of them were casualties of this nocturnal explosion because that would be a BIG problem (luckily they all got the all clear).

So then you go downstairs to join your husband who said he'd stay awake with now calm but wide-awake child, so that you could go back to bed. But then he's asleep within 10 minutes which really doesn't matter since said child really only wants to be on your lap, where he mercifully falls asleep 10 minutes later.

And it's now 2:00 in the morning and you have to be up in 4 hours to get ready for your new job. And you're really fucking sick with a miserable cold and the Nyquil has worn off.

So, um, yeah.

Did you ever have one of those nights?

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Where the Wild Things Are



And now, cried Max, "let the wild rumpus start!"


Like so many others, we are anxiously awaiting the arrival of "Where the Wild Things Are", coming soon to a theater near everyone. This has always been a bedtime favorite for the boys. For those unfamiliar with the book, the story tells the tale of a rambunctious little boy named Max, who feels misunderstood by his mother when she sends him to his room for his mischievous play. One night after getting sent to bed without supper, Max "escapes" to "where the wild things are"...an imaginary world of colorful creatures.

In this fantastical world, Max is crowned king and he and his fellow "wild things" spend their days and nights dancing and frolicking to their hearts content. In the end, however, Max longs for the love and familiarity of his family and realizes ultimately that there's no place like home.

Even though the book is obviously fiction, it is a story that resonates greatly with me. Because in Justin, I feel I have my own little Max. So very often, Justin lives in a world of his own. Somewhat above and apart from the rest of the family, he's just not always quite in step.
As much as this has often caused me times of sorrow and frustration, I can only imagine how it must feel for him. I used to think Justin would isolate himself away from us because he didn't want to be around the rest of us. Eventually I came to realize that for Justin, his bedroom offers him escape to where his "wild things" are.

You see, Justin's room is replete with no less than 30 stuffed animals (and one rabbit statuary he absconded from my garden...don't ask). They are not all his, many are his brothers. Yet if a stuffed animal makes its way into our house, you can bet that eventually it will find its way into Justin bedroom.

Often, Justin can be heard talking to his animal creatures, singing to them, laughing with them, making up elaborate scenarios of play that only he would understand.

("Take that", I say to the doctor who coldly told me, he has absolutely no imaginary play skills).

This is his "safe place" to deal with whatever scary or stressful feelings he may be experiencing.

At times, I have tried to join this wonderful world of play, only to be told, "Bye-bye". At times, I have felt oddly jealous of his wild things because they were privy to the cherished conversation that Justin is so stingy about sharing with us. Despite my feelings, this has never been a world that Justin has wanted anyone to share.

Until yesterday.

I wandered upstairs to find him, quite literally, buried beneath his menagerie. I asked him, "What are you doing?"

He answered, "You wanna play?"

WHAT?!
I steadied myself. Don't get too excited, I told myself. After all, you know he always gets pronouns wrong. He probably meant, "He wants to play".

Slowly, I turned to leave.
"Where you going?"

And there it was. There was no misunderstanding his meaning. He wanted me to stay.

And stay I did.

Together we played with his animals, making them dance and sing and rumpus like there was no tomorrow.

Because, indeed, I don't know if there will be a tomorrow.

That's the thing with autism. Sometimes these moments are a breakthrough. Sometimes these moments are fleeting. But at the very least, I spent some time playing with Justin in his world "where the wild things are" and it was intoxicating. I could see the allure of him wanting to escape to this place when he may be feeling misunderstood and perhaps doesn't even understand himself.

Here amongst the wild things he finds total acceptance.
But like all good things it had to end as real life beckons. I can only hope that more and more, Justin, like Max, will continue to long for the love and familiarity of his family and realize ultimately that there's no place like home.

And Max the king of all wild things was lonely and wanted to be where someone loved him best of all.

Then all around from far away across the world he smelled good things to eat so he gave up being king of where the wild things are.

But the wild things cried, “Oh please don’t go-We’ll eat you up-we love you so!” And Max said, “No!”

The wild things roared their terrible roars and gnashed their terrible teeth and rolled their terrible eyes and showed their terrible claws but Max stepped into his private boat and waved

good-bye.
Where the Wild Things Are
by Maurice Sendak