Good Enough

The day before she planned to board a plane to Chicago for Christmas, my sister-in-law tripped on the stairs of her home, tumbling all the way to bottom.  Fortunately, she was able to call a neighbor, who drove her to the hospital, where doctors diagnosed a nasty concussion and badly sprained ankle.

Advised not to fly for at least a week, she spent the holiday alone, half a country away from the family who loved her.  It was not the annual reunion any of us had hoped for.

It could have been so much worse, of course, as we told ourselves repeatedly over the next few days.  Living alone, she may have lain unconscious for hours before someone found her.  She could have been permanently injured, even killed.  The possibilities don’t bear thinking of.

She was, in fact, lucky.  Yet luck is a relative term.

I’ve struggled with this kind of contradiction often since my son’s diagnosis, seeking the bright side, the countless positives in Daniel’s life to counter the implacable weight of autism.  These self-imposed pep talks seldom evoke the level of gratitude I believe I should feel, however, or appreciation for the grace I’ve been granted, again and again.  How often have I told myself that what I have, what my son has, should be enough, even as my self-pity shouts me down: “Of course it could be worse!  Of course it could!  But it’s bad enough as it is!”

Slowly, though, I’m emerging from this kind of wallowing.  This past Christmas I realized that, perhaps, I’m making some progress after all.  And I don’t know how I feel about that.  It’s taken me weeks to wrestle my emotions into cohesion.

We brought Daniel home for a day visit on Christmas Eve, an excursion we haven’t attempted in several years.  It’s easier on everyone, including him, to simply celebrate at his group home in Wisconsin, rather than tempt the erratic behavior that makes his living there necessary with transitions back and forth from the environment he’s grown accustomed to over the years.

This year, however, I decided to try again.

The holiday season is not particularly joyful for me, and despite my grim resolve each year to make it so, over the last decade it’s become a period to be endured rather than savored.  Exceptional work demands at the close of last year had me more anxious than ever, and a wise friend urged me to set aside, just this once, a few of the traditions I’ve felt duty bound to maintain, even as they brought more stress than satisfaction.  I tried to take her advice.  Christmas 2016, for instance, marked the first year since my children were born that I didn’t include their photo with my Christmas cards.  And what do you know?  The world survived, just fine.

Maybe this frame of mind helped ratchet down my expectations for Daniel’s visit, let go just a bit of my perfectionism and take the day as it came.  It didn’t have to be perfect; almost certainly it wouldn’t be.  And indeed, it wasn’t.

My Facebook post that afternoon painted an idyllic portrait of family togetherness, drawing supportive comments from my circle of friends.  My daughter, her boyfriend, and their enchanting puppy were home as well; we dined at Denny’s, Daniel’s favorite restaurant, and exchanged gifts around a glowing Christmas tree.

Pictures rarely tell the whole story, of course.

I’d planned to give Daniel his Christmas stocking, bulging with favored treats, before leaving for lunch, but he showed little interest, leaping from the sofa and pointing to the door — “Denneh?  Denneh?” — again and again until we tossed the stocking aside in resignation.

At the restaurant he was allowed soda to his heart’s content, but this did nothing to slake his obsession with the beverage, demanding more as soon as we got back in the car.  Nine years after leaving Illinois, he still remembers the precise location of the grocery store nearest our house, and pointed in its direction as we drove quickly home, praying he wouldn’t wet his pants before we got there, a very real possibility due to his public bathroom aversion.

Back in the living room once again, we tried enticing him with the mountain of merrily wrapped gifts assembled under the tree. He was having none of it.  “Stoar?  Stoar?”  His requests became more belligerent as I tried coaxing him with a sticker book, my well-stocked refrigerator sadly lacking the 16-ounce bottle he apparently had in mind.

“Stoar!”

One photo I posted on Facebook was especially popular, my once-little boy now towering over me, hands on my shoulders, looking deeply into my eyes as I smiled up at him with joy.  It elicited tender comments from far and wide.

“I can see the love in this picture!”

“You are his world!”

“This picture says so much!”

It said plenty, all right.  It said our whole happy Christmas visit had been hijacked by Daniel’s unremitting obsession; that I was desperate for the holiday’s magic to break the vicious hold of autism for just one day.  That as that photo was snapped, he’d just released my chin after pulling my face to his, laser-focusing as he repeated, again and again, “Stoar?  Stoar?  Stoar?”

We gave in.  Armed with a bottle of Coke Zero chosen from the gas station minimart, Daniel finally relaxed, giggling, posing for photos, enjoying time with his family before Andy drove him, happy and willing, back to his Wisconsin home.

It was an exhausting afternoon, another celebration driven by the disorder that has dictated the course of our lives.  But while the day failed to unfold as smoothly as I had hoped, it didn’t crush me as some past Christmas ordeals have done.

I don’t know why this was so.  Was it because my daughter was so obviously happy, or that her boyfriend touched me so deeply with his maturity, his affection and respect for his girlfriend’s special brother?  Was it the joy of their dog Mattie’s exuberance, the fun of having a puppy in the house?  Was it that we made it through lunch at a restaurant without incident, no hapless diner’s soda wrenched from their unsuspecting hands?

Did the positive, this time, simply outweigh the negative?

I can hardly believe it’s that easy, because I don’t do simple very well.  Separating my feelings around Daniel’s disability from the rest of my life is an ongoing challenge; his autism colors everything in my world.  With Daniel’s struggles so blatantly on display, enjoying a festive holiday feels like a betrayal, acceptance a sell out to my own longing for harmony, for normalcy, for simple. Daniel’s reality is my own, and conceding that it is good enough is defeat, like giving up on a Christmas photo.

A mere bottle of soda satisfied my son, but that wasn’t the way I wanted it: I wanted my will for Daniel to prove stronger than his fixation, than his disorder itself.  That kind of transformation doesn’t happen very often with autism.  I know this by now.  I still hope for it, though, unwilling to accept circumstances as they are because they could be, should be, so much better.

Yet this year I felt the grace of truth more powerfully: those circumstances could be worse.

And I hold these truths now as well: Daniel’s smile as he ran from Andy’s car to our back door, beaming, eager to be home again; his delight as Mattie pranced on his bed, licking his hands and face while I tightened his shoelaces and brushed back his hair.  His careful examination of the tree ornaments, touching, tapping, as he did when he was a boy.  His willingness to return at the end of the day to the life he knows now and embraces, untroubled, secure in our bond and our love.

For a few hours on Christmas our family was together.  Imperfect, stumbling, winging it, but together.

And this time — dare I say it? — that was good enough.

The Guardian of Positive Thinking

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A few months ago I received notice to file the “Annual Report on the Condition of the Ward,” a document required of legal guardians, roles Daniel’s father and I have served since our son became a legal adult.

The court doesn’t grant guardianship lightly, even in cases as clear-cut as Daniel’s.  Although he’d been living in Wisconsin for over two years when he turned 18, Daniel was required to appear in person at the courthouse in Illinois, twice: first, so the guardianship petition could be physically served to him, and again several months later, at the hearing itself.  We had to demonstrate both that Daniel needed our legal oversight, and that we were qualified to provide it.

Getting him to the courthouse was a logistical nightmare all its own, and by the time our case was called, we were tense and anxious and testy.  My husband hovered nearby as Daniel’s father and I escorted our son forward, ready to intercede should he suddenly bolt or become otherwise agitated.  We needn’t have worried.  Daniel stood complacently in front of the judge’s bench, oblivious to the gravity of the proceedings on his behalf, tapping repeatedly on a sticker book with his index finger, muttering his multi-purpose phrase, “Ahh doh doh doh doh doh doh doh dooooooh…”

We’d been prepped for questions the judge may pose: Did Daniel understand the nature of the petition?  Did he agree with its terms?  What plans did we have for his future, what long term arrangements had we considered or put in place?  And, as divorced parents, could we make decisions together, work in tandem for Daniel’s sake?

The judge asked none of these questions, though.  The evidence of her own eyes was the only proof necessary of Daniel’s need for a lifetime of stewardship.  An expression of muted compassion on her face, she simply signed our petition, and wished us good luck.

I try to craft a fresh-sounding response to the questions on the report each year, regarding Daniel’s living situation, health and welfare.  It feels like a test I never quite ace, my answers distressingly similar despite the passage of years.  I note our weekly visits, and the activities that occupy his days: community outings, accompanied by aides, restaurant visits, shopping trips, walks on the beach when weather permits.  Not a thrilling chronicle, but more than I once could truthfully recount.  His life is not what I want it to be, but it’s a fuller life than he’s had in years.

Noting that the report wasn’t due for several months, I set it aside, escaping to the pages of the crime novel I’d begun the day before.

The plot centered on a 19-year-old man, soon to be released after seven years of incarceration as a juvenile offender.  His newly appointed probation officer reflected that the young man would have been acclimated to re-entry into society with day outings in recent months: “The boy would have had excursions accompanied by one of his case managers.  Shopping trips, a meal at McDonald’s, a walk in the park.”

Shopping trips.

McDonald’s.

A walk in the park.

I had my annual recap of Daniel’s activities right there.  I need only copy, word for word, the description of a prisoner’s meager, supervised outings to capture the essence of my son’s life experience.

I shared this bleak observation with my husband later that evening, my remorse at failing to write a better story for Daniel’s life, that his experience hasn’t changed significantly in the years since we stood before the court to petition for guardianship.

“What kind of a guardian am I that Daniel’s life mirrors that of a prisoner?” I asked mournfully.

Andy listened patiently to my rambling, then asked a question of his own.  “Remember the closet?”

I remembered.

It was the room fashioned by Daniel’s teaching team in those last, desperate weeks before he left home for residential school, a one-windowed storage area off the special ed classroom of the high school where he was enrolled as a sophomore.  As his mood and behavior deteriorated, day by day, he spent more time in that closet than not, cocooned in his own, secure hideaway, sleeping, humming, fiddling idly with the same few books or puzzles for most of the school day.

And staff allowed it, because they were out of ideas by then, when all the painstaking structure and therapy, the routines and behavior plans and social stories had broken down, Daniel’s behavior so volatile that his team couldn’t walk him through the halls to the lunchroom, for fear he’d lash out, for fear he’d hurt someone.

“Remember the call I got,” Andy continued, “while you were at work?”

I remembered that, too.

They’d asked him to come immediately, to pick Daniel up as soon as he could.  Don’t bother parking, they told him, just pull directly across the practice field behind the school, as close to the exit near Daniel’s classroom as possible.

He recalled the bite marks, red and angry and swollen, across the teacher’s arm when she brought Daniel to the car, stark testimony to autism’s vicious hold on our son, the power it wielded, beyond our understanding or control.  He recalled the grief in the teacher’s eyes, the resignation of one who had fought so vigorously, and had nothing left to fight with.

Yes, I remembered.  I remember it all.

“I know he’s not where you want him to be,” Andy told me gently.  “But Daniel’s not in prison.  That closet was a prison.  They didn’t intend it to be, but that’s what it became.”  He took my hand.  “But he’s not there anymore.”

I don’t know how to let go of all that remains unmet in my son’s experience, to merely shrug and concede, “It is what it is.”  It will never be so simple.  Acceptance is an ongoing narrative, rehashed and revised and picked at, again and again through the passages of Daniel’s life.  I doubt I’ll ever stop questioning what I could have done differently, if it would have made any difference at all.  No one would accuse me of being a glass-half-full kind of person where my son is concerned.  Autism stole Daniel’s life before he ever had a chance, and I grieve that every day.

Yet I am grateful, too, more grateful than these pages reflect, for what my son has now, for his faltering progress since I completed my last guardian report a year ago.

Shopping trips.  McDonald’s.  A walk in the park.

Simple pursuits that just a few years ago we ached for Daniel to enjoy again, pursuits I can no longer provide for him alone.  I am his legal guardian, but no longer the right one to care for him.  How this haunts me sometimes, when I want him back so desperately, to savor his presence on a daily, reassuring basis.  I don’t remember the anxiety in those moments, the chronic worry, the certainty that catastrophe was imminent, a crisis that would prove irrevocable.

Yet I’m witness to Daniel’s adjustment to the life he has, the opportunities at hand.  I don’t know if these are enough for him.  But whether or not they are enough for me is irrelevant.  My role is to ensure that possibility exists for him, that doors open, that the self-indulgence of despair doesn’t cripple me.  It means embracing the progress we’ve discerned, however fragile, reaching past the loss, and daring to hope for more.

This kind of thinking doesn’t come easily for me, my thoughts so often colored by what could have been.  What life would I describe for my son were this disorder not a part of it?  I long to write that story, but that isn’t the story to be told.  The one we are writing now needs my passion, my energy, my faith.

I remember that, too.

Year after year, after year.

 

Excerpt from “Those We Left Behind” by Stuart Neville.

Camels in Wisconsin

Kids at Botanic Garden

My close and very wise friend Marla reminds me sometimes that, as parents, we are only ever as happy as our least happy child.

Which is problematic when a) you’re as co-dependent as I am, and b) children are a never-ending source of angst all around.

Oh, they are the wellspring of all that is most beautiful in our lives, as well.  I’m acutely aware of how fortunate I am to be a mother; I can’t imagine who I’d be without my children.  And therein lies the rub.

My equilibrium — because I’m old enough to know that “happiness” isn’t really the goal after all — is irrevocably tied to that of my children’s, as it is for most of the parents I know.

Aside from the advocacy role I’ve assumed on my son’s behalf, I don’t think I’m an overbearing parent; I’ve allowed them room to mature and explore, in different ways, while remaining close and involved in their lives, even as they’ve grown up and away.

My peace of mind, though, is dependent on their lives being steady, on track, on being good.  I’ve never learned that trick we are told to embrace as our children reach adulthood, that letting go thing I’ve heard about.  I wonder how many parents really have.

Instead, I ride each wave, every turbulent passage of my kids’ lives, feeling the ebb and flow of their experiences as deeply as my own.

There are times, though, when I wish I could disengage, when I imagine what a relief it would be to do so.

Often since my son’s move early this year I’ve considered our relationship, and my aspirations for him, the goals modified, adjusted or abandoned over time.  His diagnosis 21 years ago was the beginning of the end of almost every dream I had, back when his future seemed as boundless as my love for him.

No divine flash of acceptance acclimated me to the very different life in store for him than that which I’d mapped out so cleverly in my mind.  Submission occurred over years, covert moments of resignation so subtle I often didn’t even recognize their import, the setting aside of one dream, and yielding to another.

He’s living one of those altered dreams now, in a group home tailored and responsive to his unique needs.  His behaviors are accommodated, worked on, proactively addressed.  He is experiencing a fuller world than I’d dared hope for just a year ago.

Why, then, is it yet so difficult to view his life now as the fulfillment of at least one dream I’ve held on to, a circumstance realized after years of uncertainty and despair?

A few weeks ago I received a photo of Daniel taken at the Racine County Fair, which he attended with one of his specially trained aides.  Teeming with crowds and tempting distractions, it was an outing I wouldn’t have dared navigate on my own.

But there he was, engaged and laughing in the summer sun, sitting atop a camel.

He was clutching a boxy, harness-like contraption designed, apparently, to facilitate balance on the camel’s hump, giggling, it seemed, at the absurdity of his position, but enjoying it just the same.

My quirky, unpredictable son was riding a camel.

Laughing out loud in delight, I quickly composed a reply to Daniel’s case manager, who’d sent us the photo.

“Of all the dreams I’ve had for Daniel through the years, riding a camel was never one of them.  Seeing this picture, though, I can’t imagine why not!”

I recognized in that moment how bound I am to my old ideas of how life ought to be for my son, for both my children; what will bring them fulfillment, comfort, or — dare I say it? — happiness.  I understood, too, that so many of my dreams for both of them are my ideals, and mine alone, shaped through years of my own experience and regret, my own longings and missed opportunities.  The finely crafted hopes and dreams I have for my children may, in reality, bear little likeness to their own ideals at all.

How liberating this moment should have been.  How freeing to discern that my children, now adults, can — in fact, must — take the reins themselves, albeit in very different ways, weighing the worth of their experiences by their own standards, their own views on the meaning of “happiness.”  I really could let go at last.

Naturally, it didn’t work quite that way for me.  Lifetime habits are not so easily cast aside.  From my camel epiphany emerged a prickly, peevish reaction that I’ve struggled for weeks to articulate, a sullen acknowledgment of how desperately I would like events to proceed, just once, precisely the way I want them to.

Now that would be liberating.

How horribly self-centered, and how very common: We all want what we want when we want it.  But, oh, to have respite from the worry, the chronic concern over their welfare, their progress, their lives, which mean more to me than my own.  And I’m capable of convincing myself that this would be possible if they’d just follow those paths familiar and comfortable to me, if their lives, so vulnerable and fragile, so critical to my own, played out within the safety of my own comfort zone.

Screw the road less traveled.  I want my children traveling roads I’ve walked for them for years, if only in my dreams, whether they are roads of their choosing or not.

Oh, I know where this tantrum comes from, this petulant demand for a guarantee.  I’ve had enough of uncharted terrain, of stumbling along dark roads, praying for a lucid, benevolent end.  I want convention, the known, even if it’s known only in my fantasy.  How much safer than the fathomless range of possibility, all manner of depravity and disappointment, of suffering and loss the world may casually throw their way.

I want to let my guard down, to sink into the shelter of the way things were supposed to be.

And this is the crux of it, what it’s taken me the nine months since Daniel’s move to accept: that I expected his new life to be different than it’s turned out to be.  I thought I’d relax now that he is in competent, professional hands, and in many ways I have. But this transition has new complications, as well, fresh heartbreaks to adjust to, more painful because I didn’t see them coming. His life is better, infinitely better than it was, but not precisely as I’d hoped it would be.

The better part doesn’t include me.  And being a better part of his life again is precisely what I’ve been dreaming of for years.

Fortunately, I don’t often act on this selfishness.  I am living with the ache of feeling like an outsider when I visit my son, knowing I’ll never be the center of his world again.  I concede that, at least for now, his behavior deteriorates when I am with him, that our relationship is a trigger for the issues we are trying to curb.  I’m trying my best to accept that his need for me is diminishing, and that is how it should be, even though it feels like a loss I simply can’t bear.

I support with all my heart decisions I once could not have imagined my daughter making on her own, finding her way with confidence and grace.  I applaud her independence, knowing each new decision takes her a step further from the protective embrace of my influence.  I believe she knows that I’ll be behind her no matter what choices she makes, if she fails or succeeds; that she can always run back to me even as she’s pulling away; that I will be her champion for the rest of my days.

Weeks of agitation later, I understand that I’m here again, in another stage of letting go; it caught me unaware, as it’s done so many times before.  These periods have taught me, though, that any new experience surrounding my children can feel threatening, their lives in relation to mine in the balance, as I struggle to find my own place, my equilibrium, again.

My desire to hide, to look away from the bright new paths they may follow almost overwhelms me at times.  Who knows the distance those paths may carry them?  It is simply too painful to contemplate.

But holding them back would be more painful still.

What I Have

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Considering how mundane it was, the photo I posted on Facebook received a gratifying number of “likes.”  Just the two of us at a picnic table on a summer day, Daniel wearing the unnatural grin he invariably supplies when told to smile.

By social media standards, life with my son won’t win any awards for excitement or variety.  We have few adventures to chronicle, no photos of thrill-packed vacations, sports triumphs or covetable jobs over which to humblebrag.  Our interactions are more modest affairs, and ever more predictable.

My friends are sensitive to Daniel’s challenges, though, and supportive of my longing to connect with him after the nearly eight years he’s lived away from home.  Their likes and kind comments mean a lot to me, and I recognize that their acknowledgment is one of the reasons I post photos of us at all.

I wonder sometimes if I’m actually seeking encouragement, a kind of validation that these unremarkable visits with my son are indeed worthwhile, that their value exceeds my own longing for something more.  Because I feel more like a spectator than the woman once at the center of his world.

In my lowest moments, I question my relevance to Daniel’s life now that he’s a young man, cared for so efficiently by a team specifically trained to address his needs, the behaviors that rendered my care for him obsolete.

I was told to expect a change in our relationship when Daniel moved to this group home eight months ago, a shift in our interactions now that I’m no longer steward of his care, freed from those demands to explore a more satisfying connection as he enters adulthood.

As he’s been out of my care for years, however, this prediction never quite rang true, and I’m beginning to doubt it will ever apply to the two of us.  More than ever before I feel I’ve lost my footing as his mother, this part-time role I’ve been playing since Daniel was just 15.

Or maybe I can’t accept that the path beneath my feet may be the one we’ll be traveling from now on.

The scripts for our visits seem to be written before I arrive, and I brace in advance for the ache of resignation which follows me home.  I know how these visits will unfold, week after week, the joy of seeing my son tempered by longing for the deeper involvement that’s been missing for months.  Crossing into Wisconsin on that dazzling summer morning, the caption for the photo I’d later post to Facebook had already formed in my mind, clear as storm cloud:  Picnic with Daniel on a beautiful day.  It’s not enough.  But it’s what I have.

*****

We met at a local park, and sat together while Daniel tore through the sticker book I’d brought him, affixing the familiar images in their slots as he’s done hundreds of times before.  I stroked his arm and caressed his summer-short hair, deflecting as best I could his repeated requests for the soda stashed in my car, his treat for after lunch.  His obsessions have intensified over the last few years, and his associations of me, what he counts on when I come, are rigidly defined.  There is so little I can give him now.  I don’t know how to break the cycle we are enmeshed in, how to change the tenor of our engagement without breaking his heart.

Perhaps I should have tried taking a walk, just the two of us, free of the eyes and ears of the aide who accompanies him wherever he goes, even on my visits.  It’s been months since I’ve been alone with my son.  The compulsive behaviors we are working to modify are too unpredictable to trust managing on my own, seem to be triggered, in fact, by my presence.  Old patterns are difficult to break with autism.  Memories of losing control of my son remain, vivid, haunting and formidable.

Yet time with him has come to feel like mandated, supervised visitation, the structure in place to help him dictating the terms of our relationship.  I miss time alone with him, privacy as I mother him the only way I can:  tender, murmured endearments meant only for him, cuddles and hugs that leave me self-conscious when witnessed by caregivers who never knew my son as a boy, when he was, first and foremost, my child.

I’m ashamed to admit that I crave freedom from the support he so desperately needs, the scrutiny of onlookers I sense weighing my effectiveness with this special young man who used to be my own.  The very competency of the staff rakes the embers of my doubt, which has smoldered for years; the guilt that my own care for him was ultimately not enough.  I am an interloper, an addendum to the life he is leading now, a life fuller and richer than he’s experienced in years.

I don’t know how to reconcile this sense of loss derived from what should be celebrated, the normal development of my child as he learns a new life apart from me.  The bond I’ve been longing to recapture since the day he left home is swaying now under the weight of distance, of time lost long ago.

There is a history I’m still reaching for, written through physical proximity, through countless days of bathing and dressing and snuggling and tickling, of high fives and blown bubbles and brushed hair, of tied shoes and trimmed fingernails, of tedious car rides and leisurely walks on autumn afternoons.  A history composed as I fixed meals under his curious eye, enjoyed in companionable silence or giggling banter, unfolding from our seats in the bleachers while we clapped in delight as the dolphins he once loved leapt and splashed at the Shedd Aquarium.

It’s a rhythm scored over years speaking a language without words, weathering together the outbursts and tantrums and setbacks, savoring the small triumphs of our uncommon life together.  While resting side by side against his headboard, books or flashcards across our knees; as night after night I tossed his stuffed animals onto the bed as he called for them, laughing, by name:  “Zebra!” “Cow!” “Wolf!”  It was written by the warmth of my hand across his forehead as I kissed him once more, and once more again, before turning off the light.  “Good night, sweet Daniel.  I love you, Daniel, my sweet, beautiful boy.”

*****

It would be simpler, wouldn’t it, to accept that he’s moved naturally into a new phase of life, and embrace with gratitude all the good that life offers now, the opportunities the framework of this life provides?  Perhaps he is more content than I can possibly understand, taking all he needs from me and our unexceptional visits, the routine we’ve established, the mild experiences of my Facebook posts.

But I believe his life will not be complete without me, and the rest of his family, at the core of it, and I can’t rest until I find that place again.  The procedural support is in place to help shift his behavior in a more positive, independent direction.  But he needs the emotional nourishment of his mother, too; of all of us who have loved him without question for a lifetime, whose love transcends all circumstance.

I’m not ready to concede that this is enough, that superficial visits are as good as it gets with my son, or our relationship to one another.  No line will be drawn beneath Daniel’s life, or my experience with him.  I have a role that only I can play, even as I stumble and gasp and bungle my lines.  Letting go of my dreams for him has never been an option.  Acquiescence to a lesser experience would weaken my fight for him, my advocacy, my hope.

That hope is painful sometimes.  But it’s what I have.

Beating at the Darkness

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I read a lot of crime novels.  If you’re not a fan of the genre, you might be surprised at how evocative its language can be, how often a sentence or phrase cuts right to the heart of things.

Take this passage from Irish novelist John Connolly’s most recent book, “The Wolf in Winter.”  He’s describing the attitude of one serial killer toward another pair of killers, who are actually heroes in the series: “The Collector admired their single-mindedness, their focus… none of the fruitless beating at the darkness that come from those who have grief without power, and anger without an object.”

See what I mean?  Hits right where you live.  Or where I lived, anyway; where I lived for years.

*****

I was encouraged when my son began Kindergarten at the elementary school just blocks from our home.  Although in a classroom for students with learning, physical and developmental disabilities, his placement at our home school signaled a step away from the whole special services system he’d been enrolled in since he was two, that menacing world still incomprehensible to me in relation to my son.

We adored Ellie, his young teacher.  She was bright, nurturing, naturally fostering the affection we knew Daniel capable of.  Assigned to her class again for first grade, his tolerance of a regular school setting buoyed my hope that autism hadn’t completely stolen his future, that he still had a chance, somehow, at a normal life.

Two aides assisted in the classroom, a laid-back woman about thirty, and a less demonstrative woman in her mid-fifties, who seemed experienced in all manner of students with disabilities.

As it happened, she hadn’t experienced a student like my son.

*****

As first grade unfolded, Daniel’s behavior became more turbulent, outbursts and tantrums soon the norm, the communication notebook Ellie sent home each day reporting “upsets” or “incidences” more regularly as the months passed.  We met often and spoke on the phone, concurring that Daniel’s language deficit fueled his frustration, and framed exercises to help him express himself, searching for clues to his disruptive, unsettling behavior.  Together, we were hopeful, upbeat, determined to unlock the mystery of my cherished little boy.

Alone in the dark moments, though, I despaired of ever truly knowing Daniel at all.  My beautiful son was more an enigma than ever, moving on schedule from toddler to personhood, yet becoming a person I didn’t understand.  Autism and its origin remained inscrutable, while its consequences grew more familiar with each passing day.

I picked up the call at my desk on an April afternoon near the end of the school day.  By then I was divorced and working full-time at a Presbyterian church a half-mile from home.  Returning to work hadn’t been part of my plan then, but neither was so much of what had transpired in the last several years.  Still mourning my father’s death the winter before, I was running on overdrive, colored by grief, and doubt, by simmering, impotent fury.

“Kristen, I think you better come over here,” the young aide from Daniel’s classroom advised, her mellow voice tinged with concern.  “Dan’s fine, but he had a rough afternoon.”

“What happened?” I asked, alarm and dread spiking painfully in my chest.

“Well, he — he had a bad day,” she replied cryptically.  “And he wet his pants, and, well, he’s a mess.”

Ten minutes later I was in the classroom, cuddling my son as Ellie described his escalating moodiness through the afternoon: the back-arching and floor-flopping, the inconsolable fits of crying, the final wild outburst when he bit the elder classroom aide, bruising and breaking the skin on the back of her hand.

My face burned with trepidation and dismay; I sensed what was coming before Ellie spoke the next words.

“I think we have to start considering another placement,” she continued gently.  “I don’t know if we’re equipped for Daniel here.”

*****

I hardly recall getting home, arranging for Natalie to stay with our neighbors after school, or nestling Daniel in front of a video.  I remember only rocking in place on my screened porch, shoulders hunched as I dragged on a furtive cigarette, the future in all its threatening uncertainty crashing in from all sides.

“Now what?” I whispered again and again.  “Now what?

I learned the immediate answer to that question the next day as I sat in the principal’s office, invited, I thought, to discuss safeguards the team might employ to avoid another aggressive episode in the short term.

The aide Daniel had bitten, I was relieved to hear, had been treated by her personal physician, with no stitches necessary or follow-up likely.  Understandably, though, she was shaken, and had vowed not to work with my son again, a reaction that while hurtful, in my fragile state of mind seemed justified.  Bites, I knew from personal experience, hurt like a bitch, and losing control of an aggressive child is traumatic.

I expressed repeatedly my remorse at Daniel’s behavior, an attitude the principal hastened to quell, covering my hand with her own.  No one blamed me, or Daniel, for the incident, she insisted.  Everyone involved recognized that these episodes came with the territory.

However, the principal went on, taking a breath, on the advice of her doctor, the aide was requesting that Daniel be given a blood test.

She wanted my seven-year-old son tested for HIV.

The words didn’t quite sink in.  I gaped at the principal as she continued, reluctant, it seemed, to convey the message she was compelled by her position to deliver.

“She knows he doesn’t have anything,” she murmured apologetically.  “She’d just feel better, being sure.”

I stared at her, dumbfounded.

Five years of despair converged in that moment, deflecting all rational thought.  Five years of analyses and treatments, of therapies and exercises and approaches with scant, disheartening result.  Five years of pleading for unknowable answers to empty, futile questions, of desperate promises to an unwavering God; five years of battle with an unfathomable enemy, an enemy that, despite all our efforts, was winning.

I snatched back my hand and leaned forward, my body trembling with rage.

“I don’t give a rat’s ass about making her ‘feel better,’” I hissed.  “She was supposed to be protecting my son, not the other way around!  Natalie knows how to avoid being bitten by her brother and she’s only nine years old.  Don’t you dare talk to me about making her feel better!”

*****

I understood powerlessness then, the lost flailing in the dark, the stifling weight of anger ill defined.  I knew the bitter truth even as I was lashing out, heaving the burden of my grief on the only person at hand: there was no one to blame for what was happening to my son, no reason to which I could fasten my rage and my awful, consuming despair.  To accept the true answer, the impassive certainty that life isn’t fair, was almost unbearable; to recognize that however loudly I screamed, the world would simply shrug in reply, and go on.

As painful chapters often do, that one served a purpose.  From the wreckage of those days I found direction, and learned to channel the energy of my outrage more productively; to set aside the haunting questions whose answers, if they exist, will do nothing to change what we’re living with now.  The issues of why and how will always be with me, but I exist with them more peacefully now.

I still probe the darkness now and then, but my son needs my presence here.

I need to live in the light.