Tuesday, December 31, 2013

2013 The Lesson of the Mustard Seed

Well, like everyone else, I find the last day of the year a perfect time to reflect and release.  What a year we have had as a family.So much has happened and we have hit new lows and found new highs.  I always thought that 13 was my good luck number because it is the day my son was born but this last years strains me to find good luck in it.

Lexi winning the silver medal in Special Olympics Golf


Last year at this time I was still unpacking boxes from our recent move back to our favorite town.  How grateful we were to find an academic program that suited my son and returned us to small town mountain life.  Little did we know at the time that we were headed into one of our biggest descents as a family.  As Winter progressed, so did my son's mental illness giving rise to many calls for help as Spring approached to all of his service providers.  Things were getting way beyond my ability to manage . By Mother's Day my son went in for his first psychiatric hospitalization only to have five more from then to Thanksgiving. The mental health system moves VERY slow and it took so long to see the psychiatrist and begin true assessments for a diagnosis.  In the meantime, symptoms continued to worsen and new ones popped in to play.  I would say that the very hardest part of the whole summer was the lack of understanding and shock.

As the diagnosis became clarified and medication was tweaked and tried and tweaked some more the shock wore off and the reality and grief process kicked in.  At one point my daughter burst in to tears alone with me and said she was afraid to leave the house ever day because she was never sure what she would come home to and if her brother would still be alive.  Every morning when I went to wake up my son my stomach would tighten as I would pray that the bipolar did not win and allow him a successful suicide attempt while I slept. I can write this out but nobody could ever really know the sick feeling in the gut that is constantly at play with an unstable child who is determined to kill himself unless you have lived it first hand. His thoughts were twisted and dark and the damage done by the psychotic breaks is significant and somewhat permanent.  In a way, not only will my son never be the same but neither will my daughter or I.

Lexi's scars-he wouldn't allow stitches-some of these bled for five days


As we have had a month and a half of stability (mostly) my son said it feels like so long ago that he was in so much pain and he is so glad to leave it behind in 2013.  My family has started to step, cautiously out of survival mode and in to a more healing place, looking to heal, rebuild, strengthen again.  I have enough information to know that stability is VERY fragile and with a bipolar autistic kid everything can change in a minute or less but I have also been taught to change my expectations and responses.

I leave behind in 2013 my hopes and expectations of my son as I used to know him and I treasure him as he is now, alive!, finding joy in music, painting, golf and his own personal brand of humor. My daughter feels safe enough to be irritated by him again and we are working on getting her ADD back under control.  I have begun to sleep a minimum of 5-6 hours a night and although I still have a tight stomach every  morning I wake up until I hear him answer my calls, I am digesting food better and getting sick a lot less.  We are trying to focus on our health and physical well being more as a family, engaging in different sports and activities, initially to counter the side effects of Lexi's medication, but also to help with brain clarity, mental balance, stress reduction and my visual impairment.

I have had many friends and family express concern for my daughter and I which is not easy to answer.  Yes, this has been hard on us all.  I am a single full time parent and a working Mom who is a part time law student and I have a degenerative visual impairment called Stargardt's which is made worse by stress.  It is truly one dimensional to consider that signing over my parental rights to the state and putting my son in a home would be better for my daughter and I.  I do not judge those who have had the strength to do this but I am not in that place and I hope to GOD I never will be.  I have researched my options and understand as many perspectives as I can possibly see from where I stand.  That is my son, my child, my daughter's brother and I believe he is mine in all of his disorders and mental illness and unique challenges for a reason.

I was reminded today that God does not ask us to have a mountain of faith but merely hold on to a mustard seed of faith...that small...and it will help get us through.  I have white knuckled my mustard seed and for that I am grateful that today is a good day.  I make no declarations of "I will never" or "I will always" because I have been humbled hard and think declarations are dangerous.  Taking care of my daughter and I, for now, is keeping my family together...our threesome.  We may lack grace at times but we NEVER lack love.

My family...traveling our journey!


I am not sure what 2014 will bring us and I have learned that making plans is a set up for disappointment so I will merely have loose hopes and goals and many prayers.  I told my son that if there is one thing I know that we can leave behind in 2013 is the shock.  We can be grateful for the medications and research being done on autism and mental illness and we can now walk with more understanding of what is happening and continue to look for different approaches on how to manage it all.  All three of us need to manage our family, my son in his mental illness, my daughter in her focus and anxieties and I in my grace, stability and strength.  I am grateful that through the vast amounts of sleepless nights, excruciatingly stressful months and the grief and pain that God has kept me strong and relatively healthy.  My eyes have not degenerated too much, my attitude can rebound and there has been no physical collapse. (knock wood)  !!!!

Is 2013 a bad luck year? I could see it from that perspective or I could see it as a year I was humbled and stripped down to find the truth in life, the mustard seed to hold on to, the grace in taking life one breath at a time.  Thank you 2013 for those lessons and I am so grateful to move pst them into more ease and joy.  May 2014 bring more smiles then tears and more digestion then sickness, more stability then shock and more hope then fear.  I begin towards the end of my law school career, beginning my fourth and final year in May and the acceleration toward the Bar Exam in 2015. I have the privilege of being on Law Review and exploring the perspective of a "legal scholar". I am blessed to watch my children grow and meet the challenges of adolescence one with ADD and the other now understood to have Autistic Spectrum Disorder AND Bipolar. I look forward to reaching our fundraising goals and receiving our autism service dog in the early summer months of this coming year and all the benefits related to that blessing. I am grateful to be honest and open in sharing my journey so that perhaps the shock and grief I have felt along the way could comfort or enlighten another to branch into acceptance.  Thank you 2013 and welcome 2014...let's see what you got!

An autism service dog trained by Pawsitive Service Dog Solutions

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

The Core Truth of Parenting - Humility

When I write this blog I write from only my experience noting that there are always other perspectives and paths crossing my own that require just as much respect.  With that said, I am writing from a new humility in parenting.  I have raised two amazing kids into their teen years and have learned so much thus far...what a blessing to have them be my teachers.  The autism diagnosis for my son was difficult and brought many lessons and revealed many truths about life, people and myself.  I was brought to my knees many times shedding tears of pain, grief and great joy and wonder.  My son's added diagnosis of mental illness has all but laid me out flat.

I have recently been pulled aside by my son's treating psychiatrist to tell me that in 20 years of treating patients, my son's case is one of the most complicated and severe she has ever seen and that I need to change my expectations  for him.  I am to relieve as much stress on him as possible and nurture whatever makes him happy.  A happy brain degenerates less then a stressed brain.  His mental illness is causing an extreme cognitive impairment affecting his memory. I clarify that it does not effect his intelligence but it does impair his access to his intelligence.  While I have spent 15 years advocating for my son to be in an academic environment that feeds his intelligence and still makes accommodations for his autistic spectrum challenges (which is rare) for the first time in my journey parenting my boy, I needed to ask for remedial accommodations. I cried while making that request, saying it out loud was a new level of reality that was painful to bring forward and move through.

My son, who was on track to go to a U.C (University). and always dreamt of being an automotive engineer in order to create cars that are environmentally friendly and lessen the impact on global warming...now he does not care if he graduates or even continues high school.  The psych doc gave it to me straight telling me to allow him to fail at school, teach him it is not the end of the world and teach him that wherever his happiness and passion guides him is where I need to nurture and feed.

My first response was, how do I let go?  For over 14 years it was all he ever wanted, as his mother, do I hold on to who I knew him to be?  Do I hold on to my son before the mental illness started eating his thoughts?  Do I let the mental illness steal him away from me or do I fight for him to be who I knew him to be?  Where do I fight? Who do I fight? Where do I grab him and hold on tight enough so that he will look inside me and find himself again?  My beautiful, brilliant, quirky boy...what is happening?

As if I were holding a pile of sand in my hands, the tighter I squeeze and hold the more slips through the cracks. I have had to stop and humble myself in my parenting role.  Down at the core of what a parent's job is wanting your child to find happiness.  Yes, we want health and happiness but the mental illness, like a cancer of the thoughts has robbed us of the "health" aspect so I need to go to the very core, root of parenting and in that is wanting my son to find happiness.  What does that look like?  Is it painting, or golfing, or playing with film making, or computers. It is not what makes ME happy as his parent but what makes HIM happy as a soul in a less then ideal shell in this life.

The jury is out on whether he will be self sufficient or even fully functional as an independent adult...psych doc does not feel that the possibilities are strong on that but my son is amazing and if he really wants something, he can do amazing things. I have to not allow this adjustment to lock my son in a box of disappointments or lower standards but instead allow it to free him.  MY change in perspective and expectations needs to free his spirit to go PAST the mental illness and the thought cancer and let his spirit soar.  Does driving a golf cart do that for him...yes, it does.  Let's go drive a damned golf cart.  Does painting do that...yes...let's paint.  Does making goofy videos make him laugh and smile...yes...let's make videos! If he stabilizes and one day master's his mental illness, school, college, etc will be there to try again but in the mean time I must grab on to his happiness and passion and joy like I used to hold tight to his hopes and dreams of college and automotive engineering.

Once again, my son is being my teacher. I am learning what is truly important in life.  These lessons are hard and grief is involved but if I can really and honestly let go and find acceptance in who he is today, right now, then I can find great joy each time the darkness is conquered by his smile, his laughter and that one dimple that pops out when his eyes twinkle with happiness.  Oh how I have loved that dimple since the day he was born.  I have found my true battle.  My battle is with his darkness.  Some days it wins, it takes him down, it takes me down and his sister.  Somedays I win, with a small army of people who care about him.  I am humbled by this journey and when I am laid out flat in grief, heart ache and fear it is much easier to find the ground beneath me.  It is there, on the cold hard ground that balance can be regained.  This is my journey of parenting someone with autistic spectrum disorder and mental illness. This is my opportunity to learn through humility. Grace wins every time I see that dimple.  I am off to schedule a ride on a golf cart.