Monday, March 16, 2015

"All Blues"



I have not put word to page in a while.  At least not in terms of this blog.  I tend to write on a daily basis, it helps me deal with things, and I am the only person that is willing to listen to me go on and on, for free.  There have been forces, for lack of a better word, pushing me away from blogging.  This is my blog, and I can write whatever I want, but I tend to want to keep things about Holden and Zane, and autism.  That is certainly plenty to write about, but sometimes issues arise that make me want to write about other things.  The first thing that transpired, that really pushed me away from blogging for a bit, was an incident that happened at Vons while taking Holden out on an outing.

Holden’s behavioral therapist and myself were taking Holden to Vons to work on some of his independence skills.  The main one we do at Vons is work on him purchasing an item through self check.  As is often the case with Holden, he became side tracked by a cage of colorful balls.  He eloped to the cage, we caught him at the cage, and he began to have a minor, all be it loud, meltdown.  After a few loud shrieks, a man sitting at a table near the cage began to yell at us to “keep that kid quiet and take it outside.”  I expressed to the man that Holden is autistic, to which the man replied “I’m sorry for that, but you know you can keep him quiet, or get him out of here.”  I would love to say that I was the perfect example of patient, and took this moment to enlighten this man on just how wrong he was about Holden and autism… but I didn’t.  Instead I got in the said man’s face and in no uncertain terms told him he had no idea what he was talking about.  I was quite thorough in expressing his lack of wisdom and compassion.  For those of you who know me, I tend to be scaring looking on my best day.  The man decided he no longer needed to be in Vons and quickly departed, and I tried to calm down and get back to the task at hand.  By this time Holden was laughing and giggling with his therapist.  We got back on task, and completed Holden’s shopping trip.  I was left wondering if I should write about this event.  I don’t really want to promote the negative, and certainly not everything is negative. I wanted to wait until I could balance it with something good.  

A few weeks later, while doing the same thing, in the same Vons, just such an event happened.  We used to give Holden a post-it note and some money before we left the house for Vons, so he could pay for his purchase.  We would prompt him to look at his list, and see what we needed to get.  At some point while in Vons, he must have missed his pocket, and the post-it and five dollars were gone.  I kind of figured it was gone.  So we looked around briefly, then went on with Holden’s shopping, and I was going to pay with a card.  When we got to self check, the self check teller came up to me and asked if a post-it note and five dollars were Holden’s.  She has seen us in there a lot, and knows Holden by now.  Someone had found the money, and turned it in, and the Self Check person recognized it as one of Holden’s lists.  I felt grateful to the unknown person who turned in the money, and grateful to the self check person, who happens to have an autistic niece.  

We have also had some really nice people at Blender in the Grass go out of their way for Holden.  There was the askew cup that was righted for Holden at the 5-points Blenders, and the cashier in Camino Real who saw Holden getting upset when I ordered him the small, and he began to insist on the “big cup”, who said she would have the person make it in the big cup for Holden.  Also the entire place was very nonchalant when Holden let out a piercing scream while waiting for his Smoothie.  Not to mention the guy sitting at the bench that Holden enthusiastically climbed onto and snuggled up to.  I rescued him from Holden’s unwanted affection, but he took it in good stride.

Sometimes it’s the little things, like after Holden screams, and I tell him “Too loud”, and by the time I look up from Holden, nobody is staring at us or giving me the “if that were my kid” look, that makes such a difference in a day.  I don’t blame the people who jump, when Holden does something really loud, unexpectedly, hell he startles me sometimes.  I don’t even mind when people have that “I wonder what is wrong with that kid” look.  But the guy in Vons, telling me that “you know you can make him stop” pushes me over the edge, especially when I am already struggling with 1001 other things.  

The absolute best, is running into other parents who have special needs kids.  We have our short conversations while wrangling our kids.  People walking by are sometimes shocked as we grab our kids shirts as they try to sprint off.  I honestly don’t know many other parents with special needs kids, but it sure is fun to talk war stories with the ones I do have.

I think I needed to write this blog, so that I could start writing again.  I need this to be about good things more than bad.  because the truth of the matter is, it can be a daily struggle to deal with everything going on in my life. There are so many things that I can’t or won’t write about.  I needed to take this one little block, and set it aside.  There are still forces pushing me away from writing, but knowing that I have finally faced one of them makes me happy.  



1 comment:

  1. Jonas, you are a super hero!! As a parent of a kiddo with SPD / ADHD I get it. We straddle the mainstream line so when I do get together with parents of kids with a similar makeup it's like meeting up with old friends, relief. The brooklyn yahoo group that I belong to has saved my tushie so many countless times! Anywho, I find the general public can be so ridiculous. Like, would that guy tell a person in a wheelchair to get up and walk because they're in his way? I'm glad you got in his face. Maybe he learned something that day.

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