31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs: Inspiration Pr0n

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs

Inspiration pr0n is this:

Inspiration pr0n is all the posts of disabled people doing normal things like working out, and then “what’s your excuse” or praising them for the ordinary. It’s also the high school kids who vote the girl with Down Syndrome homecoming queen so that they can go viral on social media, but they would never have lunch or hang out with her in real life. It’s the objectification (that’s why it’s pr0n) or disabled people to make other people feel good about themselves.

It’s not wrong to be inspired by someone being resilient or someone doing something pretty amazing. The problem comes when you’re using someone else’s situation to make yourself look more tolerant, more humble, or more giving. People are not made to be used.

You also do not get to make comments about how much someone else’s life must stink. They might have a disability of some kind but that does not mean that their life is automatically horrible.

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs: A Re-Blogged Guest Post

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs

I’m up to my eyeballs in Excel assessments so you’re getting a re-blog of a guest post I wrote for Laura of Coptic Dad and Mom. Enjoy!

I probably should give you some background on why Laura thinks I’m qualified to talk about this.

My son Daniel was born at 29.5 weeks when I developed HELLP Syndrome. (The story of his birth is here.) Preemies tend to have delays because of their gestation; but Daniel did not even hit milestones when his adjusted age was factored in and he was diagnosed with global developmental delays at 18 months old. When he was 2 1/2 years old, we were at a developmental pediatrics appointment when they told me that he was very clearly autistic. My former husband was thanking God upon hearing this news because it explained so much. I, on the other hand, barely made it to the car before I started sobbing. The ADOS was administered a week later and Daniel received a diagnosis of mild/moderate autism. Appointments for glasses and hearing aids followed later that year. Last fall, his neurologist added an ADHD diagnosis to the mix and put him on Adderall which was life-changing for him and for us because it meant that he could sit still and play for longer stretches of time and other ADHD meds allowed him to calm down at night. At 7 years old, he is *FINALLY* starting to talk, he still is not potty-trained, and he attends a special autism program for school.

Additionally, being premature means that his immune system was very compromised until he turned 5 years old and we got to know the pediatric emergency room, pediatrics ward, and pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) at UC Davis Medical Center very well in the three years we lived near Sacramento. I spent over a month of my life sleeping in the PICU and the pediatrics ward during that time when Daniel would get RSV and I still keep spare underwear, toiletries, and a 24-hour supply of my medication in my laptop bag so that I am prepared for another hospital stay if it happens. I also got to be on a first name basis with some of the attending physicians at the pediatric emergency room because of all of our trips for respiratory issues and febrile seizures.

So yes, maybe I am a bit qualified. 🙂

I am not going to lie — parenting a kid with special needs can be very hard. I frequently describe life with Daniel as having multiple children at different developmental levels combined into one child and there are days where I’m banging my head against the wall because I feel like I am failing as a mom. Other days, things go smoother than expected and I feel like I *might* actually know what I am doing. Every kid is different and what I can tell you are things that have worked well for me as well as things that I wish I could say or could have said to people earlier in my adventures in parenting Daniel. Given that Daniel is autistic, many of my examples will involve that particular condition though they can apply to a number of other conditions that cause developmental delays.

For the parents:

[+] It is OK to be upset when you get a hard diagnosis for your child and it is normal to feel overwhelmed. My Catholic friends talk about their jobs as parents being to help their kids to heaven and when you get a diagnosis of autism or Down Syndrome, that gets a lot more complicated. I think as parents, we want the best life possible for our kids and it is incredibly difficult when we learn that this won’t necessarily happen. We also have images in our minds of things like introducing our son to their first roller coaster or walking our daughter down the aisle. These things may still be possible, but getting to that point will be harder than it would have otherwise been.

[+] Love the kid you have. Your kid may not fulfill all your dreams for them but they are still yours. Find things to do with them that fit where they are developmentally and in terms of abilities. Daniel’s former physical therapist used to tell me that “[they] treat the kids, not their diagnoses.” Your kiddo is more than a cerebral palsy diagnosis or an autism diagnosis — they are a beautiful child of the King of Kings who is loved by God more passionately than any mother or father can love them. I can also tell you from my experience that every milestone they hit will be ten times greater than it would normally be because you know the blood, sweat, and tears it took to get there.

[+] Build a support network. This network includes not only your kid’s therapists but also people who have children with the same diagnosis. Daniel’s preschool had “Picnic on the Green” twice a year and all of the parents of the kids in the ABA (autism) class usually ended up having their play area to ourselves as the parents of all of the other preschoolers generally congregated on the other playground. This meant that we had a small and intimate group every time and it became a time to talk to each other about what worked for our kids, how we were struggling or thriving as parents, and a chance to get to know all of them better. Given how completely shy and introverted I am, I probably would not have joined a support group on my own and I appreciated having this community. Your support network should also include people who you trust to watch your kid and who are willing to learn how to work with them as well as websites for any groups that deal with your child’s diagnosis. I personally found that the Facebook for the MIND Institute was a really good place to go to for information on how to work with Daniel.

[+] Support your spouse. I say this one from personal experience: having a kiddo with special needs can put a serious strain on your marriage; and unless both of you are supporting the other, it will not be good. This means that if the wife is home with the child all day, the husband needs to do bathtime or bedtime with them, learn how to work with them effectively in case the wife needs to go somewhere, and needs to give her at least a small break when he gets home from work so she can shower, catch up on housework, or stare at a wall for 10 minutes. I am not saying this to be a feminist — I remember the fatigue from having Daniel at home by myself for 16 hours on my former husband’s busiest days and not getting a break unless he decided to take a nap.

[+] Find what works for your family. Every kid is different and not everything works the same for them. We found that keeping our stroller for Daniel until he was almost 6 years old worked well for when I was headed to an appointment by myself because then I could strap him in and not have to worry about him running into traffic while I grabbed the Binders of Fun from the car or locked the doors. When I would travel alone with him to visit my parents in northern California, that stroller meant that I might be able to use a public bathroom without him running away or getting into things.

[+] Have a sense of humor. Life is too short to be serious and sometimes, you just need to laugh at the absurdity of a situation. The name “Binders of Fun” came out of the time when I went to register Daniel for kindergarten and did not have all the documents that I needed because the special education people had not told me what I had to bring. After dropping Daniel and my former husband at home, I grabbed the two binders of paperwork, went back to the school, and said something along the lines of, “OK… I have the Binders of Fun. What do you guys need?” The school secretary and the school psychologist laughed and those two (now three) binders of paperwork were christened “the Binders of Fun”.

For the community:

[+] Please don’t compare our kids to yours. Nothing is as soul-crushing as hearing someone say, “Your child started walking at 2.5 years old? *MINE* was walking at ten months old!” We are already quite aware of how delayed our child is or of what limitations they have. We really do *NOT* need someone to remind us. Instead, please celebrate our kids’ milestones with us because you probably do not see the amount of work it took to get there.

[+] Please remove the word “retarded” from your vocabulary. There are few things that are more hurtful than someone describing my child as “retarded” or someone using the word in my presence to describe the ridiculous actions of another person. There *ARE* better and more specific words to use. Please find them.

[+] Unless you are parenting a child with our child’s diagnosis or you happen to be a researcher on that particular subject, please do not give us advice unless we specifically ask for it. I have pondered creating a shirt that reads “Yes, my child is autistic. Yes, we vaccinated him. No, he is not on a gluten-free diet. Please go away.” The reason: I have had so many people come up to me and tell me about how my child’s autism was caused by me vaccinating him, putting him on a gluten-free diet would cure him. My response to this is to usually just stare at you as I try to summon up some polite words to tell you that you have no idea what you are talking about and you are telling me that the thing that makes my child unique is my fault. Vaccines do not cause autism (Daniel’s is genetic), going gluten-free does not work for many children, and autism is not a condition with a cure — it is a neurological condition that affects the way you process sensory information.

Also along these lines, please do not criticize any decisions we make about how we are choosing to deal with our child’s diagnosis unless it specifically endangers them. I have had many people berate me about why I am not homeschooling Daniel, why I have not put him on the GAPS diet, why I have not put him in an institution to make my life easier… (I am not kidding about that last one.) I lack the expertise and patience to effectively homeschool Daniel, I want him to be socialized and learn how to interact in the real world, and I want him to learn how to live independently. Please help me to do this and do not criticize me for how I choose to go about it.

[+] Please speak to our child normally. Daniel’s receptive communication (his understanding of language) is completely normal — it is only his speech that is delayed. This means that asking me nastily in front of him if he understands English is quite insulting to him and to me. He understands you when you say “hi”, he knows you are talking about him, and if you put out your hand for him to shake, he will shake it. When he was younger and we lived near Sacramento, a couple of the employees at the local Trader Joe’s would have one-sided conversations with him or make race car noises as they were pushing the shopping cart to the car. Those times always made me smile because they were including him and treating him like a normal kid.

[+] Please feel free to ask us polite questions about what you are seeing or ask us if we need help. Until Daniel learned to walk, I had to carry him everywhere and or stick him in his stroller. I remember a shopping trip two years ago when I dropped my wallet while trying to keep ahold of Daniel and pay for groceries. The lovely cashier at Trader Joe’s grabbed another employee to hold on to Daniel, helped me pick everything up, and made sure I had help getting to my car. Other people have opened doors for me when I had Daniel in the stroller, have offered to carry something to my car, or have held a shopping cart still so I could lift Daniel into it. (I am only about 5’1″ tall so putting him in a shopping cart requires lifting him up almost over my shoulders.) As far as questions, asking me politely if he is autistic is not insulting nor is asking me why I am doing something with him a certain way. I have no problem explaining why I am touching his mouth to get him to speak or signing “all done” to get him to move on from something.

This is just the tip of the iceberg on my experiences with parenting Daniel and I am more than willing to answer questions that people have. My email address is jen[at]grace-filled[dot]net and I am usually good (most times fanatical) about returning emails. 🙂

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs: Mental Health

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs

Yesterday, I spoke about the caretaker parent needing to have time scheduled in for recharging. In the past, I’ve been told that making such a request was unreasonable and as the mother, it’s my duty to stay home with my son.

Yeah… no.

My mom stayed home with us until we were 4 years old and then had to put us in preschool/daycare because she had to go back to work. (My dad was a mechanical engineer and Silicon Valley was having job issues at the time. It was not economically feasible for her to continue staying home with us, even though she wanted to.) As much as I hated being left at daycare every morning (and howled for months every time we were dropped off), I did have fun and was in daycare after school every day until my brother and I were old enough to stay home by ourselves. When I got pregnant with Daniel, I expected that he’d be in daycare and I’d be working. The bump in that road came when he was born so prematurely. Daycares *REALLY* don’t like preemies because they tend to have lingering problems and their immune systems are really fragile. While we were living in Montana, Jon and I managed to juggle our work schedules so one of us could be home with Daniel every day. I didn’t start being a housewife and stay-at-home mom until we moved to southern California.

So… having said that, having that time to recharge (and I’m talking about maybe an hour or two to myself at the end of the day) is essential to my well-being and it’s not an unreasonable request. After all…

You can't give what you don't have.

There is such a thing as caregiver fatigue and I’ve seen some pretty scary cases of it in my own family. The caregiver needs to have some break from what they’re doing — it is impossible to give that much without doing something to recharge your mental/emotional reserves.

Another aspect of mental health is your spiritual life. If you’re atheist, that might look like keeping your belief in good people. If you’re me, that means getting some time each day to pray and read Scripture. What that prayer time/quiet time/devotional time looks like is up to you but it is essential to find time for it.

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs: Marital Impact

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs

Laura of Inclusive Ignatian Spirituality asked me a couple weeks ago if I could address the impact of having a kiddo special needs has on a marriage.

Absolutely. 🙂

I wish I could say that it had no negative impact on mine but it did. If I had everything to do over again, I would have really laid down what needed to happen back in 2011 when I was staying home with Daniel while Jon was off doing church stuff. It was really difficult for me to be home with Daniel because a.) I hate being a housewife with a burning passion, and b.) I felt really resentful that Jon got to leave the house every day and go work in an office, take drives, etc. without having to figure out how to occupy or take care of a kid who was a challenge to understand. I am a perfectionist to the maximum degree and the fact that I couldn’t figure out how to reach Daniel really caused me a lot of pain. Jon’s day off was Friday and I had to try and get all my doctor’s appointments, massages (medically-necessary because of the fibromyalgia), and Daniel business done that day so that Jon wasn’t having to blow off any of his commitments on other days to watch Daniel. My life got a lot easier when he started preschool because I gained a 5-hour window where I could try and get stuff done and not have to think about how to work Daniel into the equation. Still, almost all of Daniel’s care was on my plate in addition to the full-time job of advocating for him. (Those who think that Medicaid and SSI are easy programs for which anyone can qualify has never had to apply for either one or try to keep the services for which your kid qualifies.)

If I could do everything over again, I would probably have sat down with Jon at the beginning of his call in Galt and listed what needed to happen and divvied it up so that I didn’t have all of the housework, almost all of the Daniel care, and all of the Daniel advocacy on my plate. Ten days into our time in Galt, Daniel ended up in the PICU and that kind of threw everything off including the unpacking of the parsonage which really didn’t ever get accomplished.

I guess my recommendation is that a couple needs to sit down and talk through what needs to happen for their kid and how best to make that happen. If the mom is going to stay home with the kiddo, the dad needs to count on that being on the same level as his full-time job and not his wife having nothing better to do and able to take on all the housework in addition. Things like chores need to be split in such a way where the care-taking parent can focus on the kid but also get some time to recharge. I’m an absolute introvert and need to be BY MYSELF to recharge so that meant that while Jon, an off-the-charts extrovert, needed time with me to charge his batteries, that time couldn’t be time where I could recharge. Instead, things like taking a book to a coffee shop or restaurant and reading while I ate counted toward recharging time and I usually stayed out in the living room and watched TV/surfed the Internet while Jon put Daniel to bed.

Again, the way you make this work is going to vary from couple to couple and family to family. I never really felt like we made it work all that well because I was still under an incredible stressload; but I think part of that was the fact that I was a pastor’s wife and was constantly on display for people to critique so I always had to be perfect or else I incurred the wrath of some of Jon’s parishioners.

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs: An Example of Being Thankful in the Midst of Crisis

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs

I’m trying to get my Excel homework done and uploaded so please accept a snippet of a post on Thanksgiving in the midst of the PICU from 5 years ago.

So I’m sitting on my fold-out bed in the PICU (Pediatric Intensive Care Unit) with Daniel. (He got my cold. Chest colds and him don’t mix well. He spiked a 102F fever and started having problems breathing. I think the rest of the story is self-explanatory.) In an effort to ward off the pity party that I’m so incredibly tempted to throw for myself, here are seven things I’m thankful for right now. Oh yeah… updates on his condition and what’s going on can be found here.

— 1 —

Daniel having Medi-Cal through SSI. It’s paying for what our insurance doesn’t. Given that our last PICU trip involved a 19 day hospital stay, this could add up pretty quickly.

— 2 —

My mom. She drove us to the hospital (we’re down with my parents) and stayed with us until they brought Daniel upstairs. This entailed reciting loads of poetry and nursery rhymes and helping to hold the little bear down while they did unpleasant things to him. Words can’t express my gratitude.

— 3 —

My evil twin. He brought Jon down with a container of Mushroom Risotto for me. Last time we had a PICU stay, he stayed with Jon and I through the worst night and hosted my parents on the weekends so they could be with Daniel and I.

— 4 —

Jon. He read to Daniel and came upstairs with us and prayed with him. He also brought me clean underwear and pajamas as well as part of my prescriptions. I’m loving the clean underwear, the jammies, and the Klonopin.

— 5 —

The speed of the ER peeps once the words “respiratory distress” were uttered. We were only down in the ER for 3.5 hours. (Normal is 4+.) We had a doctor checking him within 10 minutes. That’s impressive.

— 6 —

People praying. I put out the word to my people and there should be prayers ascending. Please also add yours in. We can’t get enough prayer right now.

— 7 —

Being ahead on NaNo. It’s meaning that I might actually make it to 50K before 11/30 this year.

The Simple Woman’s Daybook: October 23, 2016

For Today…

Simple Woman's Daybook

Looking out my window… dark. It was in the 60’s today with some clouds moving in a little bit ago and a short shower. My joints are feeling better now that the BIG weather systems have rolled on through.

I am thinking… about my week and what is on my plate in terms of school, Daniel, church and everything else.

I am thankful… I’m doing better in terms of this stupid virus than I was last Wednesday afternoon and evening.

One of my favorite things… when all my numbers balance on my Accounting homework. 🙂

I am wearing… jammies. Church clothes were my turquoise/black/white bokeh Easter dress with a black camisole underneath (Kohl’s), my black cardigan (Kohl’s), black tights (Target back from when we lived in Montana), and my black flats (Naturalizer). A couple people commented on how pretty I looked in my dress. (I usually dress up for church but my outfit today was apparently a big deal?) After church, I changed into my blue-green shirt from Old Navy and jeans from Kohl’s.

I am creating… formulas for my Excel submission assignment that is due tomorrow at 11:55 p.m.

I am listening to… “Cops: Reloaded” on TV. I’ll probably switch to various musical pieces in a bit.

I am hoping… to be over this stupid respiratory thing soon.

I am learning… about adjusting entries in Accounting.

In my kitchen… steak, potatoes, bacon caesar salad, and cookies with ice cream for dessert.

In the school room… Daniel’s “fall family meeting” went super well. He’s making progress and his teachers/aides/therapists are smitten with him. 🙂

Post Script… You know you have the respect of your LGBTQ friends when ones that are very anti-religious send you an article from a religious publication you like and ask for your honest thoughts on it. 🙂

Shared Quote… I have two for you today. The one on courage is from my friend Laura.

A lovely RFK quotation.
Laura's quotation on courage.

A moment from my day…

Closing Notes: When I was writing my piece on Friday, a piece of code that was supposed to bold something got inserted in a weird place and I didn’t find it until last night when I was reading over something. It ended up putting the last part of the second C. Everett Koop in bold type… a part that I think *ALL* of us need to read and re-read endlessly in this election cycle.

Well-played, WordPress. Good move, God.

Hosted by The Simple Woman.

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs: Hospital Bags

31 Days of Parenting Kiddos with Special Needs

I’m still feeling like I’m dying so I unfortunately had to skip my grandma’s 96th birthday party today. (I’d feel really bad giving her this mutant death cold as a birthday present.) The kidlet and I went and got French fries after everyone left for the party and we’re currently hanging out on the bed having screen time.

Pardon my double-chin...

Given the amount of time I’ve spent in the pediatric ER and hospital with my kiddo when he has had mutant death colds, RSV, and respiratory issues, I thought I’d share what I used to keep in my laptop bag in the event that we were hospitalized.

  • clean underwear (because I can live in one set of clothes for days at a time but I need clean underwear to be sane)
  • a clean set of jammies (because inevitably, whether or not to admit him would be decided at 3 a.m.)
  • a 24-hour supply of my daily medication (because I have to function in order to take care of the kid and this gave me some time to compile a list of stuff for Jon to bring)
  • granola bars (because 6 hours in the ER makes you hungry)
  • travel-sized toiletries (in the event that the kiddo got admitted so I could take a shower on the unit)
  • a bunch of bottles of alcohol gel (because I’m germphobic to the max)
  • my e-reader (for when I would get to go have a meal by myself)
  • my laptop (duh!)
  • an extra power cord for my laptop
  • an extra cellphone charger

Any of my other special mama friends want to add to this?