Sunday, July 6, 2014
This blog has moved
Welp, I'm not a toddler mom anymore so it was time for a new blog name. You can find the new stuff at autismmomisms.blogspot.com
Thursday, June 19, 2014
Shaded by our experiences
I recently learned a friend of mine is having another baby. I just had a feeling of doom when I learned that. Why would anyone want to have a baby when the chances of it being autistic are 1 in 68? I guess if nothing bad has ever happened to you then you figure nothing bad ever will, so you continue to have children. I wonder what her child rearing experience has been like compared to mine. She probably never regards her children with grief and weeps at the sight of them. So, if you never experienced parenthood as a tragedy then you may look forward to having children.
That's the thing. My life is a tragedy. The way my son is, is not a gift, it's a tragedy that struck him and robbed him of a normal childhood, heck it robbed his life. I don't care what those quacks on other blogs try to tell you. Autism is not a wonderful thing. I know I blog about how loving your kid is the bottom line and it is. I do love my son. But I grieve for him also. That's why I could never imagine having another kid.
Things to do! Gotta run, would love to write more on this.
That's the thing. My life is a tragedy. The way my son is, is not a gift, it's a tragedy that struck him and robbed him of a normal childhood, heck it robbed his life. I don't care what those quacks on other blogs try to tell you. Autism is not a wonderful thing. I know I blog about how loving your kid is the bottom line and it is. I do love my son. But I grieve for him also. That's why I could never imagine having another kid.
Things to do! Gotta run, would love to write more on this.
Sunday, April 27, 2014
How I feel about pretenders
Below is an e-mail I sent as a complaint for those parents who abuse the system to get services for their children when they don't really need it. Some parents seem like they are Munchausen and they just want something to be wrong with their child when there is nothing very significant going on. When it starts to affect me, is when I have to wait in line for services behind these pretenders, and that makes me angry. These people are the same as those parents who abused the disabled pass at Disney. They are sucking up services for disabled while the legitimately disabled wait in line behind them. These people make me sick.
The subject line of the e-mail was "Recipients are frauds."
The e-mail...
Last year I applied for a waiver for my son who is severely affected by Autism Spectrum Disorder. I recently discovered two people in my extended circle of acquaintances who receive the waiver. Both are high functioning, one is in college and the other is in advanced placement classes in their high school. I find it beyond disgusting and irresponsible that there are seriously disabled people waiting 12-15 years (from what I hear) to get one of these waivers and high functioning people who are independent with self-care tasks and have no intellectual impairments are taking up a space that should go to someone who is legitimately disabled.
My complaint is that 1) the waiting list is too long and 2) high-functioning people who are independent with self-care tasks and have no intellectual impairments should not receive services. Surely, there is something you can do in your organization to prevent these mostly healthy individuals from abusing the system and robbing seriously handicapped people of services.
The subject line of the e-mail was "Recipients are frauds."
The e-mail...
Last year I applied for a waiver for my son who is severely affected by Autism Spectrum Disorder. I recently discovered two people in my extended circle of acquaintances who receive the waiver. Both are high functioning, one is in college and the other is in advanced placement classes in their high school. I find it beyond disgusting and irresponsible that there are seriously disabled people waiting 12-15 years (from what I hear) to get one of these waivers and high functioning people who are independent with self-care tasks and have no intellectual impairments are taking up a space that should go to someone who is legitimately disabled.
My complaint is that 1) the waiting list is too long and 2) high-functioning people who are independent with self-care tasks and have no intellectual impairments should not receive services. Surely, there is something you can do in your organization to prevent these mostly healthy individuals from abusing the system and robbing seriously handicapped people of services.
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
That's not it
I've been reading some research studies that suggest Autism follows a trajectory. There are four or six trajectories depending on which research study you are reading. What kind of bugged me about it was this one research study suggests that Caucasian mothers who are educated and, I guess, more involved will have children who bloom and come a long quite nicely.
I fit that description and yet my child doesn't fall into the bloomer category. So, it has to be something different that makes the children bloom. Suggesting it's the mother is just researcher bias. Really, like I've mentioned before, whatever determines how far along these children develop is something that is internal to them.
Just like us.
Whatever determines who will be successful and who will be a loser and who will be a successful loser is all on what's inside of us and what we're capable of. It's the same with Autism. Sure, there are external factors that could affect you such as abuse, for example. Conversely, a very nurturing environment may help produce a child that's more adapted. But that's also the same for the general population.
I guess, what I'm trying to get at is it's not on the mothers. Your kid is going to be a spelling bee champ, or not. They're going to be a football star, or not. You can't make a spelling bee champ or a football star out of a kid who just doesn't have it no matter how hard you drill them. Basically what it boils down to is that your child's potential is your child's potential. It's a unique skillset they were born with--not a jello mold. All you can do is love the child you have.
I fit that description and yet my child doesn't fall into the bloomer category. So, it has to be something different that makes the children bloom. Suggesting it's the mother is just researcher bias. Really, like I've mentioned before, whatever determines how far along these children develop is something that is internal to them.
Just like us.
Whatever determines who will be successful and who will be a loser and who will be a successful loser is all on what's inside of us and what we're capable of. It's the same with Autism. Sure, there are external factors that could affect you such as abuse, for example. Conversely, a very nurturing environment may help produce a child that's more adapted. But that's also the same for the general population.
I guess, what I'm trying to get at is it's not on the mothers. Your kid is going to be a spelling bee champ, or not. They're going to be a football star, or not. You can't make a spelling bee champ or a football star out of a kid who just doesn't have it no matter how hard you drill them. Basically what it boils down to is that your child's potential is your child's potential. It's a unique skillset they were born with--not a jello mold. All you can do is love the child you have.
Saturday, February 15, 2014
Shake the dust off this thing
I actually stayed away so long I forgot my password. Got that straightened out. I'm typing this on the iPad, this must be what those bad typists feel like when they have to peck things out on a keyboard using two fingers.
I am almost finished with my Master's degree in Psychology, which I got into so I could learn more about teaching the developmentally disabled. I am here at this point and made a huge discovery that I am not responsible for fixing my kid. Absorb that. Seems like I wasted two years of graduate school learning how to fix my kid, only to realize when I'm almost done that it's not my responsibility. I finally realized that all I have to do is love him. Whatever he learns or doesn't learn is not on me, it's up to him. Maybe he'll get there and maybe he won't.
I, like many special needs parents, got caught up in making myself responsible for something I had no power over. We do that, assign ourselves the responsibility for our child's development, because we don't want to feel powerless in the face of our child's disability. It's really quite profound.
So, here I am struggling to learn to let go of the result and just love my son. That's all I am supposed to do. It's really hard, what really makes it hard, is the despair. It's really hard to find love in your heart when your child's disability is screaming in your face and all you feel is soul-shattering despair and begin to question if you even want to live anymore. And in this place, find your love, express your love. That is really tough.
I thought I'd write it all in my book, about loving your kid, but I'm not at the right place right now bc I haven't fully come to grips with the struggle myself yet. To be continued.
I am almost finished with my Master's degree in Psychology, which I got into so I could learn more about teaching the developmentally disabled. I am here at this point and made a huge discovery that I am not responsible for fixing my kid. Absorb that. Seems like I wasted two years of graduate school learning how to fix my kid, only to realize when I'm almost done that it's not my responsibility. I finally realized that all I have to do is love him. Whatever he learns or doesn't learn is not on me, it's up to him. Maybe he'll get there and maybe he won't.
I, like many special needs parents, got caught up in making myself responsible for something I had no power over. We do that, assign ourselves the responsibility for our child's development, because we don't want to feel powerless in the face of our child's disability. It's really quite profound.
So, here I am struggling to learn to let go of the result and just love my son. That's all I am supposed to do. It's really hard, what really makes it hard, is the despair. It's really hard to find love in your heart when your child's disability is screaming in your face and all you feel is soul-shattering despair and begin to question if you even want to live anymore. And in this place, find your love, express your love. That is really tough.
I thought I'd write it all in my book, about loving your kid, but I'm not at the right place right now bc I haven't fully come to grips with the struggle myself yet. To be continued.
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