Friday, August 17, 2012

Day 60: Pearls before Swine

Nick injured the tendon in my right wrist with his bite. Three days later it still hurts when I touch it.

I had taken Nick to get measured for an orthotic. It’s common for children with autism to have physical difficulties to go along with the socio-psychological challenges they face. Nick is one of the 30% of people on the spectrum who have moderate to severe loss of muscle tone. For Nick, this is most evident in his trunk strength. His abdominal muscles are rather weak, which makes it hard for him to sit up for long periods. To compensate, he uses his posture to hold himself up. Instead of sitting on his bottom, Nick sits on his feet. He has hypermobility in his ankles, which means he can perform the super-human feat of having his feet flat on the floor with the rest of his body weight squatted above them. This way he can lean his torso on his knees rather than hold himself up, giving his tired core muscles a break.

This posture can cause a lot of problems. First, the weight of his body on his ankles has caused his heels to shift outward. If you look at your own feet and ankles, you’ll see your heel lines up directly with your ankle. Nick’s heels, however, are about an inch to the outside of his foot. Second, the posture has caused his shins to bow outward, making the bone more crescent-shaped than straight. Third, it has caused a curvature in his lower spine. He looks a bit like a stegosaurus with the knobby hump curving outward from his back.

The physical therapist wants Nick to get orthotics to straighten out his feet before he starts regular PT sessions. So off to the orthotic specialist we went.

Nick did so much better than he would have pre-risperidone. He flipped the light switches in the waiting room, but he was easily redirected. When we went into the exam room, he hid under the table, but he didn’t melt down. Progress.

Through coaxing and diversion I was able to get Nick through the physical exam. We even made it through the fitting. Almost. 

The mold of Nick’s left foot was perfect, but the mold of his right, not so much. She had to redo it. 

Scream, kick, bite, pinch, etc., etc., etc. I thought about posting pictures of the bruises I left the appointment with, but I'm tired of detailing my wounds. Let's just say there's a large patch of purple five-inches long and three inches wide on each arm. The cool part is that most of the damage is on the back side of my arms, so if I don't lift my arms up, you miss most of the freak show.  

That was enough to get me to finally do what I've been hesitant to do for the past couple of weeks--call Nick's doctor. She increased his dose of risperidone a tiny bit; we'll see if it helps.

But here's what I couldn't stop thinking about during the trip to the orthotic specialist, and I'm not sure if I should say it or how I should say it. It's just that there were all these pictures of products, from helmets to reshape infants' mal-developed skulls to titanium legs for children who had lost their own. There was my fearful autistic son, fighting in fear. There were then the thoughts of mothers I know, mothers whose children are on feeding tubes or have had open-heart surgery or have life-threatening asthma or are battling cancer or have lost the fight with an illness and are mourned. 

So many children, so many mothers face horrific, overwhelming, nearly insurmountable struggles. And it makes me angry when I hear mothers who have (thankfully) never had to endure such dark moments complain and feel overwhelmed by the healthy children they have been given. Getting my child to soccer practice is so difficult! My child has the stomach flu! My baby is teething! Back to school shopping is so hard! I have to sit in the pick-up line at the elementary school every day for an entire half hour! Oh my God! It's the most terrible thing I've ever encountered!

I struggle, really struggle, to bite my tongue when I hear mothers say such things. I want to grab them by the shoulders and shake them--HARD. I want to tell them that all they "endure" is really a delightful blessing of mundanity. I want to tell them they have a life full of blessedly pedestrian moments to be thankful for. I want to tell them that they are casting pearls before swine. How DARE they cast those pearls aside. I want to keep shaking them until they gather up every single pearl, clean them lovingly, and store them in the treasure box of their heart. 

Just, be thankful. Every time you are not sitting in an endocrinologist's/psychologist's/oncologist's/ nephrologist's/pulonologist's/any-other-ologist's office with your child, be thankful. Every time you are looking at your child smiling instead of suffering, be thankful. Every time the biggest argument in your house is about how much time your son gets to spend playing Nintendo, be thankful. Smile, even. Hell, throw a party--your child's fight is for video game time instead of for his life. Be. Thankful.

Because there are millions of mothers who would give all they have to live just one day with your "curses."

Monday, August 6, 2012

Day 49: Back to School

6:05 AM: Wake up from crab-fishing dream. I was throwing the hook and doing really well on the Cornelia Marie. Side-effect of watching Deadliest Catch episodes on Netflix before bed.

6:06 AM: Put some clothes on. Renew my yearly resolution not to be that mom who puts her kids on the bus in her flannel monkey pajama pants. Resolution should be broken by October.

6:07 AM: Wash face, look at my Zyrtec and Symbicort on the counter, decide to take them after I get the kids on the bus.

6:10 AM: Go out to kitchen to find Noah has all his medicine ready (I didn't know he even knew how to measure the doses!) and is getting his breakfast ready. He reports he's been up since four.

6:14 AM: Prepare breakfast for Nick only, since Noah is some fancy grown-up junior high kid now and doesn't need mom to make his.

6:20 AM: Go in to wake up Nick. He's wet his bed. Clean child. Strip bed.

6:26 AM: Very tired Nick tries to go back to bed. Not happy that his bedding is gone. Lays down on towel.

6:29 AM: Try to dress limp noodle child.

6:35 AM: Finish dressing limp noodle child, except for shoes.

6:38 AM: Bring Nick his Risperidone. He takes it on the first try. Phew.

6:40 AM: Offer Nick his favorite breakfast. He screams.

6:45 AM: Nick gets angry and tries to pinch me. And pinches me more. He's starting to build up a tolerance to Risperidone. Boo.

6:50-7:05 AM: Try to get shoes on Nick. It doesn't go so well. Noah gets so fed up with Nick's screaming that he starts screaming. Send Noah to his room.

7:08 AM: Send Nick to his room because he's gotten too violent about the whole shoe thing.

7:11 AM: Go outside to meet Nick's bus. It's disgustingly Florida humid out there. Tell driver Nick's too upset to get on bus this morning.

7:20 AM: Retrieve Noah from his room. Try to comb out his cowlick.

7:29 AM: Try to comb out cowlick again. Give up and decide he can impersonate rooster at school.

7:32 AM: Noah and I go outside to wait for his bus. They tell you it's a 10-minute window on either side of the official time so we should be out there 10 minutes early, but I want to avoid the disgustingly Florida humidity and wait until five minutes before.

7:37 AM: Official pick-up time. No bus.

7:37-7:47 AM: Anxiously wait for the far-too-wide 10-minute window to close so that I can call and ask where the eff the bus is. Mosquitoes nibble at my feet an ankles, a side-effect to the disgustingly Florida humidity.

7:48-7:51 AM: Call transportation. Dispatcher dispatches wrong driver, the one who goes to the wrong junior high. Dispatcher then dispatches correct driver. Mosquito bastards bite more, prompting runny nose and watery eyes.

7:52 AM: Go back into house to find happy Nick jumping on his bed. Phew. Throw Nick's school stuff into my car.

7:54 AM: Throw children into car, too. Air conditioning sooo much better than disgustingly Florida humidity. Wait for Noah's bus.

8:07 AM: Noah's bus arrives 30 minutes late. Drive Nick to school.

8:10 AM: Asthma attack from stupid evil mosquito-bite allergy begins in car. Denise had decided to take her Zyrtec and Symbicort after getting the boys off to school. Oops.

8:23 AM: Pull into Nick's school. Before getting Nick out of car, watch Noah get off his bus up the hill at the junior high. Aide meets him and he bounces into the school to start new life as fancy grown-up junior high kid.

8:24 AM: Put shoes on Nick. Unbuckle his car seat.

8:24 AM: Nick takes off his shoes.

8:25 AM: Decide shoes aren't important. I mean, really, aren't they just part of a heteronormative patriarchal ideology of conformity anyway? Decide Nick should challenge hegemonic forces and stage a shoeless rebellion against the man.

8:30 AM: Deliver Nick and his footless shoes to his teacher.

8:45 AM: Return home to my beloved Symbicort and Zytec. Rejoice that school days are so much calmer than the chaos of summer.