Sunday, August 14, 2016

A Moment of Real

Phew....

This morning I woke up at 6:30am and no one else was up yet.  I thought I should really try to get more sleep as tomorrow is the first day of school for the year and Hubby starts his new job with a little bit of a commute.  We all can use sleep right?  Well, evidently my brain thought NOT!  So I rolled out of bed and put on some running clothes, grabbed some headphones and my shoes and went onto the front porch.  The underground sprinklers were on and I whined for a few minutes in my head about getting wet before I even started working out.  I put my shoes on and decided to skip through the gardens to miss the vast majority of the water.  I still got WET!..ugh  ok not so bad it was a little cool to keep me cool while running.

I figured I'd just do one mile then I could take a shower and say there I did it...right?  Nope I ran and got to the half mile and kept going figuring I'd just do two miles, but kept going then and the same at the 1.5 miles.  Well nearly 4 miles later I made it home, and in less than an hour and drenched in more sweat than those sprinklers had I just gone through on the sidewalk.


So where is the Real in this?  Well here is the real...I am not a small girl by any means.  I have been trying to lose weight for years, well I have been saying I have been trying. I work out at least 4 times a week, some weeks even 6 or 7 times.  I try to eat healthy, though somehow bad carby foods and chocolate keep finding their way into my mouth.  While running I fight the demons in my head that berate me for trying, telling me I am too slow, that the stitch in my side and the racing of my heart is me dying.  I fight those voices that have been placed in my head by so many others over the years that I am Fat, that I am worthless, that I will never be small or skinny, that I have a cute face.  I fight the fear of what I will look like smaller and the extra skin that I will have.  I fight the fear that I will no longer have breasts that hold themselves up to some extent as I lose fat.  I fight the skin on skin of my thighs and arms on my body.  I fight the pain in my ankles, the stress fractures in my feet, the twinges in my knees, and the inevitable knotted muscles in my back.

Here is another real...I can run, I can jump, I can swim, I can bike, I can push myself, I can accomplish more than I set out to do, I can fight those voices in my head, I can calm the anxiety that tears my stomach up, I can be better.

Here is my final real...You can do all these things too.  You can be the best you once you allow yourself to become the best you.  You need to control your thoughts.  You need to know that what you think of yourself is far more important than anyone else. Yes there are those that will smirk or outright laugh in your face for you trying.  Know this, they do it out of fear of not accomplishing something great in their lives.  Go get your life.  Make you the best.  These are the reals for today.

Friday, August 5, 2016

End of Summer Blahs and Teacher Ideas...

The end of May and the beginning of June were filled with so many exciting thoughts and hopes of what I could do with the kids ranging from flying kites, searching for sharks teeth in the river, and making popsicles.  We managed to accomplish a lot of fun things including the kite flying and making ice cream, but missed out on some many other things as the days can only hold so many opportunities.  School starts in a mere 10 days from today.  Backpacks are littering my table as are school supplies across every flat surface of the kitchen as we sort for five different schools and kids.

The kids are anxious about starting school again and the chance of a "mean" teacher.  They are all up in each other's faces and business and we are over the screaming and frustrating shrieking that happens every few mins.  We have normal family moments, though most are not privy to them...our little dark secret finally revealed.

So with these blahs of things not accomplished, adventures unhad, and fears about the future I was thinking about various ideas to get the school year started right.  My first thought is ideas as gifts for teachers to help them get through the next year:

Teacher Survival Kits:  A tupperware container filled with hand sanitizer, baby wipes, tylenol, small snacks and chocolate, band aids, and a starbucks gift card.

Bag of Bags:  If you have a sewing machine you could buy some fat quarters from the nearest superstore or the fabric store.  Just sew some quick bags for the teacher to use as baggie book bags, or to put materials for individual subjects into.

The Biohazard Bucket:  A bucket filled with nylon gloves (non latex), clorox wipes, pine sol, and antibacterial cleaner for that month when everyone in the class is sick and the desks and walls need washing down.

A Bag of Colors:  Get a cute gift bag and fill it with a multicolor package of Sharpies in various tip widths, dry erase markers, highlighters, crayons, markers and colored pencils.  Perhaps add a stack of post it notes or fun pads of paper to jot ideas down on.

The Walking Health Room:  Create a tupperware container filled with bandaids, kleenex, a roll of toilet paper, gloves, antibacterial wash, and notes to go home to the parents explaining about an injury.

Lunchsack Surprise:  Place various snacks within lunchsacks like a juice box, granola bar, protein bar, animal crackers, or goldfish for the teacher to hand out to the student that was unable to get breakfast or lunch.  

Craft Cart:  Make a small basket or box containing everything that would be necessary for arts and crafts: construction paper, water color paint, cups, markers, crayons, scissors, glue, pom poms, popsicle sticks, yarn, glitter, foam letters, stickers, fabric, maybe even needles and thread.

Small gifts like this are a sure way to start a teachers year with a little pep in their step and allow them to truly work with our children knowing that they have a few things already covered and in their back pocket.

Thursday, August 4, 2016

Special needs parenting

I have been sitting and thinking a lot about this the past few months.  What it means to be a parent or caregiver to a special needs child.  I have my own, something I never in a million years would have thought that I would have to deal with.  Both my husband and I are well educated, live a fairly healthy lifestyle, I exercised while pregnant, didn’t take prescription medications while pregnant or nursing, took all the classes, and read all the books.  I had been a nanny for years before, had a teaching degree, and worked with hundreds if not thousands of children before having my first child.

So why should it have been surprising that I would have not just one autistic child, but two diagnosed and possibly another 3 that are undiagnosed?  Well because..that is why, just because.  I hadn’t seen it in my family, and at the time I didn’t see it in my husband’s either. My husband has ADD and dyslexia, which we knew of going into this.  I was pretty sure that I would see the dyslexia as it has been shown to move down gene lines, especially to males.  I have three boys and two girls.  One boy and one girl have dyslexia and ADHD along with their Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) diagnosis.  The other three kiddos all shown Sensory Processing Issues and more tickmarks for the ASD as well, but they handle life and school so we feel it isn’t necessary to get that diagnosis on paper.  I don’t want the diagnosis to rule where they go in life.  I only wanted the diagnosis if it meant that it would finally open doors for the kids in terms of help for school, therapies, and answers to questions that float like the elephant in the room.

We had no issues with the pregnancies and ultrasounds showed no abnormalities that would point to a specific disorder.  When the first was born, I can remember hearing: he has fingers that will play the piano beautifully, he has the hands of a surgeon, he is trying to hold conversations already (at a few days old).  We walked into parenthood with beliefs that our children would sail through life, be good at everything that they tried.  They would be able to play sports, our house would be full of friends every day, horseplay that would result in multiple trips to the ER (because that is what boys do), and that school would be easy. 

Here was our reality, our firstborn had colic so bad he screamed non-stop for the first three months…I mean 24 hours a day of screaming.  Colic has since been linked to children on the ASD, along with other gastrointestinal disorders.  Our first had nearly 100 words at a year old, knew all his colors and shapes by two years old, could read simple books at age three…and then it stopped.  He began losing words to the point that we had to have speech tested. By five years old he couldn’t tell you letters or their sounds anymore.  He repeated kindergarten because he could no longer count or identify numbers.  By the time he was in first grade he was in intensive reading and writing therapy, learning his letters and sounds once again and how to hold a pencil correctly.  We had testing and more testing to figure out what was wrong.  He no longer looked people in the eye and conversations were strictly about trains or parts of machines.  The doctors in Wisconsin said they believed that he could be on the spectrum, but once he would be diagnosed insurance would no longer cover therapies, medications and more testing.  The same held true in Michigan.  Even seven years ago states were allowing insurance companies to be exclusive about what they would cover or not cover, autism was not something they had to cover yet.  We were lucky to have some really amazing teachers and aides in the schools we have attended over the years that allowed my oldest to grow in so many ways.  He was finally diagnosed officially at 13 years old with ASD, Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD), ADHD, dyslexia, and dysgraphia.

You will hear when you have seen one child with autism, you have seen just that…one child with autism.  This held true for me.  I had taken a few classes in college on special needs. Autism was a short two month area out of all those classes.  I “knew” what to look for and “knew” what it looked right, because I was taught this is what it looks like, XYZ.  Anything outside of XYZ was something else and to move on in a different direction.  

As a parent of now three children after my daughter was born I thought I “knew” what I was dealing with, after all my son had a lot of the classic traits.  We went nearly eight years thinking that my daughter was bipolar, manic depressive.  Something that we would be dealing with later in life with medications and therapy.  The pediatricians all said there was nothing to do at the early age other than show her love, consistency and when the bottom fell out be there for her as a strong parent.  At the age of seven my daughter had something done to her that no parent or child should have to deal with, due to the PTSD involved with this situation she was put on her first antidepressant/ anti-anxiety meds.  Everything seemed to be getting better other than the night terrors. So we upped the dose and tried to move on.  We moved to Florida and found a pediatrician right away who took one look at my baby girl and said this is beyond what I can handle and sent us to an excellent psychologist and psychiatrist in the area.  It was with the very first appointment in the very first ten minutes we were asked, have you ever though that she may be autistic.  Absolute horror struck me harder than anything ever before; not because someone was suggesting that something was “wrong” with my daughter, but because when I truly stepped back and looked I saw everything that I missed…every trait, every quirk, everything.  Upon further testing it was resolved that she was not bipolar, but was autistic—just on a different part of the spectrum than her brother with her own unique issues to be addressed.


You are probably wondering how does she handle it all?  I have to tell you that I grieved for the perfect child, the easy going child, the star sports star, the kid that never would be.  I still have days that I have my own pity parties about how hard it is to do it all.  With that being said though, my kids all have such amazing talents, convictions about life, motivation, and enthusiasm.  They are the first to jump out and help someone in need, to see the other child on the playground that has no one to play with, and the first to offer some type of advice in how to accomplish something.  They don’t hold eye contact well, they can not follow a stream of conversation that doesn’t interest them for more than a couple of minutes, they have extreme sensory issues about food, clothing, noises and the textures of everyday items; including pencils and paper.  They are highly intelligent and are doing amazing in school in the subjects that they understand. My son is and high honor roll student every quarter and thinks anything less than 150% is failing.  My daughter shows extreme talent in art and fashion.  Both have friends and peers they care about.  I don’t have the daily running through the house, rough housing, and trips to the ER.  That is okay.  I have to praise and find blessings in what IS, instead of finding grief in what I thought would be.

Normalcy interrupted...

Things have been going well for us the past year, until a little hiccup last week Tuesday.  Last week Tuesday we found out that the contract that the hubby was working with had not been resigned by the company that he was working for.  The issue with it other than him not getting a paycheck (a really big issue), is that he should have been told two weeks earlier.  So here were are actually three weeks in total without a paycheck and lots of interviews going on.

We are not sure where we will be headed in the really near future and for the kids that means that there is a lot of uncertainty in a lot of their life. School is supposed to start on the 15th here.  They are all signed up to go.  We are hoping and praying that something comes up job wise soon so that they can stay here.  I have been doing side jobs like watching others kids, helping with autism groups, painting growth charts, and a variety of other things but haven't had a full time job in a number of years.  We had kids and decided that we would do what we had to do to raise the kids ourselves, even if that meant that one of us would be working.  With two kids on the Autism spectrum and another with health issues it was imminent that one of us was available for therapies, doctor appointments, tests, helping when a meltdown happened and the school needed help.  It means that one of us is available 24/7.  I have a degree in Elementary Ed.  and that means that it is a rather low  paycheck.  With the hubby working in the IT field with some fairly specialized centers it meant he would be the breadwinner.

Kiddo #1 is staying home this year to be homeschooled.  He will have a chance to take some high school credits and learn a few things the schools wouldn't be able to catch him up on or in other cases excel through.  He was on high honor roll all last year and did amazing with his sport he played last spring.

Kiddo #2 is still doing great in his Tech Magnet School and is excited to try his hand at illustrated and graphic arts this upcoming year.  He is highly involved in garden club at the school and origami.

Kiddo #3 will be attending a project based school for grades 6-12.  That means less transitioning later on in school and a chance to use her creative talents and abstract thinking to move through the rest of her schooling.  She is an amazing artist in Paint programs, we are hoping she will grow to higher levels as her confidence grows.

Kiddo #4 still amazes us with his math skills and how caring he is in general.  This upcoming year will be the first year of tests for the state and that is a bit scary.

Kiddo #5 is attending a Research Development School.  She is reading about a grade and a half above level, is wicked fast with certain math skills, and has amazing computer skills already.  I swear this girl is more like a 35 year old woman.

I'm still running and working out.  I've taken to cycling as much as I can and finding my way out and about in the gardens as frequently as I can.  Life isn't normal now, but I am really praying it goes back to normal again soon.