Hopefully

Years ago, a friend of mine and her husband took their young son for surgery to correct a pectus excavatum, or “concave sternum.”  The condition wasn’t life threatening, but was noticeable and would likely worsen as he aged, interfering with sports or other physical activity.  He was about seven years old at the time.

The surgery involved a thin, steel rod — a knife, really — being inserted from the side of the chest, and pushed carefully behind the sternum to “pop” it out into place.  It was considered a routine procedure.

Sooner than expected, the surgeon appeared in the waiting room where my friend sat anxiously with her husband.

“We have a problem,” the doctor reported grimly.  The steel rod had accidentally nicked their son’s heart.  He was bleeding internally.

“But we think we can fix this,” the surgeon went on, and began explaining the correction they would attempt.

Stunned, my friend’s husband interrupted.  “Wait.  Wait.  Did I hear you correctly?  Did you say you think you can fix this?”

The surgeon looked him in the eye and somberly replied.  “Yes.  We think we can.”

*****

I used to say that the difference between my experience with my daughter and that of my son was that while I understood that any calamity could befall my daughter — she could get hit by a bus tomorrow — there remained a reasonable expectation that that would not happen.  It has never been so with Daniel.  Autism swept “reasonable” out of our lives.  Yet for years I sought reassurance that his life would, eventually, turn out ok, would merge onto a normal path, even, if you can imagine, that he’d be the miracle child who overcame the disorder.

I thought I’d reached a point of acceptance that such assurances are not to be, even believing I could live without them, that I’d adjusted to the constant ebb and flow of his life.  I realize now that I haven’t reached that place after all.

Several months ago my son’s group home manager, Kristen, regretfully informed me that Daniel could no longer be safely cared for at his current residence, the home we’ve loved, where he’s seemed to flourish for two and a half years.  They felt they had no choice but to give the obligatory “30-day notice” that a new placement for our son was necessary.

This shouldn’t have come as the blow it did.  There had been incidents, serious ones, during the last few months.  In February, Daniel’s beverage obsession drove him to drink windshield wiper fluid he’d spotted in a neighbor’s garage.  He spent three days in the hospital undergoing dialysis to flush the toxin from his system.  Just weeks later, he eloped to another neighbor’s house, barged through their front door, and began guzzling from a gallon of milk in their refrigerator.

I knew about these episodes, even recognized uneasily that they were escalating.  Despite his challenges, however, we’ve been happy with the overall quality of his life, the attention he receives, grateful for the opportunities he’s had to experience at least some of the larger world.  He enjoys a unique, hard-won bond with his primary caregiver.  It’s been the best place Daniel has lived for years.

Yet in retrospect I wonder if I’d been intentionally blind, unable to face the inevitable consequences of behaviors we’ve struggled for years to understand, desperate for a break from the relentless worry of parenting a severely autistic child.  Distracted, too, by the demands of running for re-election for my job as township clerk, perhaps I could handle only so much stress at a time.  Was the campaign my excuse to shut my eyes, for a few precious months, to the chronic challenges autism presents, even as my subconscious warned of a crisis, the culmination of fears I’ve harbored for his lifetime?

Kristen described an alternative they had in mind, a “one-on-one” placement ten minutes from his current home.  The new house would be equipped with an electromagnetic locking system to prevent elopements, a feature unavailable in his current home, designated as an unlocked facility.  His care team would transfer with him, lessening the impact of the move.

Everyone, she told me, agreed that this arrangement is what Daniel needs, for his own safety and that of others: his case supervisor at the managed care organization we work with to oversee his residential needs, their behaviorist, their nurse.  Everyone except the contract department, which controls the flow of funding.  They rejected it as too expensive, and directed the MCO to look elsewhere, to find another agency, another Adult Family Home, otherwise known as a group home, capable of managing Daniel.

“We want to keep Daniel with us,” Kristen told me.  “His behaviors are difficult, and we don’t want him to end up in Southern.”  She was referring to a multi-bed facility in southern Wisconsin, the kind of sprawling institution that’s the stuff of nightmares for parents like me.

I should have known these words were coming, words I told myself again and again to prepare for.

But I wasn’t prepared.  I wasn’t ready to learn that yet another living situation had failed, that his behavior was more than even this capable staff could handle, that we needed to start again.

I wasn’t ready to hear the word “institution” in relation to my son.

*****

That night I had to attend a campaign function featuring a national political figure, and set aside my panic over Daniel to interact with nearly a hundred jovial attendees.  I don’t know how I did it, but it must have been effective; my emotional shut-down carried through the weekend.  I didn’t — simply couldn’t — talk to anyone, not my closest friend or even my daughter, unable to face questions for which I had no answers, or probe a situation that left me breathless.  Holding the knot of fear and despair inside my chest was easier than facing it, than acknowledging again the powerlessness I’ve so often experienced in the course of Daniel’s life.

My husband understood this.  When I came home from work the following Tuesday he was on the phone, speaking to the supervisor of the managed care agency, trying to gather information on what came next, how we could fight the denial of the alternative our agency had offered.  He was told emphatically that the proposed home was not an option, but that the MCO would begin a search for another placement for our son.

“Hopefully,” she added, “it will be an Adult Family Home.”

“What does that mean?” I asked frantically when Andy hung up the phone.  “What does she mean, ‘hopefully’ an Adult Family Home?  As opposed to what?”

He didn’t need to answer.  I already knew.

*****

I’ve spent weeks reflecting on why that word crushed me as it did, why it evoked the opposite of its intention, that of encouragement, optimism, possibility.  I remember the desolation that washed over me, the certainty that no matter the outcome of this latest challenge, this particular piece of shitty, that there would be more to come; that after all these years nothing has become easier, we are still battling a war we can’t win.  We are still only at hopefully.

And hopefully isn’t enough where your child is concerned, yet that’s what we’ve been working with for years.  Now my longstanding fear that we’d lose my beautiful, bright and loving son to an institution was an actual possibility.  The shadowy menace held in the dark of my heart had taken shape, ready and waiting.

Autism is years of hopefullys, of fervent, desperate prayers that the next situation, or therapy, or medication, will make a difference, only to face again the inescapable truth that the disorder is lifelong.  “Hopefully” had turned on me, and I hid in my insulated bubble of mute fear for weeks as the situation unfolded, paralyzed, unable to write, or even discuss it with family or friends.

It had beaten me.  I was done.

Except we don’t get to be done when we’re parents.

*****

To explain the bureaucracy involved in the resolution of this crisis would take pages, and this blog is too long already.  Suffice it to say that things got worse before they got better.  The neighbors whose house Daniel had busted into back in March had called the police, and eventually the local newspaper.  Articles were published calling my son’s actions a “home invasion,” which left the occupant “traumatized.”  Readers commented online, including one who opined that people “like that” should not be allowed in the community but in institutions where they belong.

For several weeks it appeared that the only agency willing to accept our notorious son was a brand-new outfit in Fond du Lac, two hours further north, operating just one home, a dim, cramped, duplexed house with no fenced yard and owners comfortable with “restraint” when necessary.

It took two agonizing months, but in the end we got what we wanted.  Andy tells me that I played it perfectly, breaking from my paralysis precisely when necessary to move the process toward our goal.  I don’t know if that’s true, or if we were just lucky.  The owner of our current agency reduced the service rate originally proposed, leaving the contract department no excuse to deny his placement in the alternative house.  Daniel moved to his new, secure home a few days ago.  He seems comfortable there, happy.

On that first awful night of Kristen’s call, Daniel’s father Jeff told me to hang in there.  “Things always work out for Dan Man,” he reminded me.  I don’t have such trust in a larger plan right now, unable to forget the fundamental truth that things didn’t work out so well for Daniel, that his life was royally screwed before he ever had a chance.  I tell myself that I won’t be duped again.

A few weeks ago, though, Andy and I drove by the new house, which I’d toured but Andy hadn’t yet seen.  It’s a tidy, light-filled home with a swing in the backyard.  I can picture Daniel there, swaying gently as he blows his bubbles, shaded by the maple tree behind him, his aide Brittany by his side.

On our way back to the highway we passed a park where Daniel and I had shared a picnic two years ago, and without thinking I exclaimed, “Look!  That’s where we came that first summer!”  I laughed with exuberance. “Maybe, when things settle down, we can go there again…”

Hope remains resilient.  Or so it seems.

 

My friends’ son survived the accident on the operating table, and is now a handsome, heathy 27-year-old.

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.

Denny’s: A Love Story

Denny's

Several years ago, the former pastor of the church I worked for sent me an email a few days before Christmas, and we exchanged brief updates on our lives and plans for the holidays.

Chris and his family were going skiing in Michigan the week before New Year’s; I reported that Daniel would be home for the day on Christmas Eve, and we had our own big plans: dining at Denny’s, his favorite restaurant.

Apparently our upcoming yuletide celebration sparked an idea for the Christmas Eve sermon Chris was pondering for the new church he’d founded in Chicago. He hoped to illustrate the Magi’s likely bewilderment upon finding the humble manger, when they had anticipated grander surroundings befitting an infant king. He wondered if my feelings about going to Denny’s for Christmas perhaps echoed those muted expectations.

As it happened, I’d just learned that a letter I’d sent to the Chicago Tribune would be published on the 26th, and I sent Chris a copy of the text. In it, I described my adjustment to simpler holiday traditions, the gradual lessening of expectations as autism changed our lives.

Chris’s sermon was well-received, he told me later, my story of Christmas at Denny’s the hook he’d been seeking to hold his message together.

For years when he lived with us, visits to Denny’s were a high point for my son. We loved it too, as the franchise near our home was never too crowded to find a booth in which to ensconce Daniel while he waited, impatiently, for the meal he always ordered.

I remember in particular a Saturday evening shortly after Daniel’s twelfth birthday. His sister Natalie had her own life by then, rarely stuck with her parents on a weekend except under the most dismal of social circumstances. So it was just the three of us, Daniel anchored between Andy and me in a spacious, semi-circular booth, his eyes glued to the swing door that led to the kitchen across the dining room. Despite his elation at being there, he remained watchful: the food had not yet arrived.

A paper kid’s placemat lay in front him, on which he sporadically scribbled, when prompted, with the worn crayons provided by management to keep children occupied until their meals were served.

There was no distracting Daniel, though. Repeated assurances that his food would come soon didn’t cut it. I sensed him trying to relax, to trust us and his own previous experience, that his coveted “Sampler Platter” with a side of fries was forthcoming. Yet every minute or so he’d ask again for his food, tapping the laminated menu for emphasis.

“Frah? Cheh? Chica?”

And at last the Sampler Platter appeared, a heaping, monochromatic mound of fried mozzarella sticks, chicken fingers and onion rings, augmented by a plate of French fries. As it emerged from the kitchen he sat straight in his seat, his gaze riveted on the server’s progress toward our table, reaching for a fry before she had set the plate in front of him.

In moments his mood changed as he let his guard down at last. Only then could he truly enjoy the experience, smiling and chuckling while plowing through each delicious, deep-fried morsel, gulping his soda between bites.

That night seems like a lifetime ago, when hope still glimmered for at least a semblance of the normal life we dreamed of for our son. We’d recently begun tentative exploration of the scant, unappealing choices offered by our state for adults with disabilities, advised by transition specialists that it was never too early to begin preparing for this possibility.

But in 2004 nothing yet had been etched in stone; we were several years from the bleak December day we moved Daniel to residential care. He was still young, adaptable, impressionable. Dramatic, life-altering change was still possible, with maturity, continued therapy, the eleventh-hour intercession of God. It was possible.

Wasn’t it?

I still see him that night, his anxious face reflecting concern carried, unspoken, for a lifetime; that his simple request, finally discerned among so many unarticulated, misunderstood desires, would yet be denied him.

And once the food came, his worry allayed, he relished his modest treat, a meal of his choosing, oblivious to the world beyond the walls of the restaurant: the world of sports and video games, of roughhousing with peers or movies with fledgling boys whose voices were changing, a world of first, tentative contact with girls, a world of moving forward.

Is this what life holds for my son, I thought, the bright spot of his days eating at Denny’s with his parents on a Saturday night? This isn’t forever; it simply can’t be. This can’t be what God has in mind for my son, my beautiful, bright child. There must be more for him one day…

I didn’t realize that one day even Denny’s would be out of reach, that the disorder that limited his focus to a platter of fried food would render even that pleasure unattainable.

It’s been a year and a half since we took Daniel into a restaurant, even a fast food venue. Past incidents of upset and aggression haunt me. I don’t care if he hurts me; I’ve survived that before. I fear him hurting another, an unsuspecting stranger, standing in the way of the obsessions that seem to drive him now where food and beverage are concerned.

The team at his group home have taken him into eateries for over a year, McDonalds, Panera, Olive Garden. We’ve joined them there, amazed and encouraged by Daniel’s demonstration of acceptable behavior when monitored by professional caregivers. His case manager hasn’t encouraged us to try this ourselves, however, cautioning that Daniel must learn new patterns, breaking rituals and expectations formed over years of parent-child interaction.

Yet increasingly these last few months, I knew we needed to try. Andy and I chose mid-morning last Friday to give it a go.

We stopped at a Denny’s a few miles from Daniel’s group home before picking him up, finding it more crowded than the one back home. A few booths were unoccupied, however, and I asked the manager to hold one for 20 minutes until we returned with our autistic son. He didn’t seem particularly enthusiastic, but a booth remained vacant when we returned. Flanking him on either side, Andy’s finger hooked in Daniel’s belt loop, we walked quickly through the parking lot and into the waiting booth.

We must have looked odd, hustling our 6’1’’ son through the restaurant. Andy suggested I relax just a bit, that we needn’t behave like prison wardens escorting a convict to his cell. My heart pounded, though, the tension I intended to conceal thrumming off me in waves, the limitless calamities Denny’s held in store streaming like ticker tape through my mind.

Our booth ran parallel to the galley where orders were dispensed and the soda fountains were housed. Daniel craned his neck to get a better view, and I flashed on the image of him leaping over the partition, a maneuver of which he is entirely capable.

“I can’t believe it’s come to this,” I remarked mournfully, once we’d settled, a sticker book replacing the kid’s placemat on the table now. Andy remained calm, though, despite my anxiety, despite Daniel’s repeated demands for pop and restless gestures toward the kitchen. He covered my hand reassuringly. “Relax, hon. We’re doing fine.”

And then the beloved Sampler Platter arrived, complete with a side of fries. And Daniel relaxed, just as he used to do, wolfing down his food in customary fashion before we could change our minds. By the end of the meal he was beaming, giggling, encouraging our tickles, just as he did as a boy.

It was a tense outing. But it was a beginning, a return to a pleasure once enjoyed.

My son’s life now bears little resemblance to the life once hoped for, yet I recognize that those hopes, those expectations, were my own. I wish more than anything that I knew what Daniel hopes for, what dreams he holds dear, what experience he longs for.

Yet he remembers Denny’s. It holds meaning for reasons I may never fully understand. But he still loves it there.

Would he have been just as happy with his caregiver by his side? Maybe.

I think he remembers, though, that this experience, this treat, is part of our life, together.

Bon Appetit and Goodbye

Pancakes

I wrote this essay seven and a half years ago, several months after moving my son to a residential school an hour and a half from home.  Reading it today, I’m surprised at its lighthearted tone, when my heart had so recently broken.  I understand now my need to fend off a loss so deep I couldn’t fully acknowledge it all at once.  Nevertheless, I like this piece, which reflects my feelings around the changes in our family at that time.  I hope you’ll enjoy it, too.  —Kristen 

 

By the time I learned to cook it was too late.  And by learning to cook I mean finding the right cookbook, brimming with simple but enticing recipes for the culinarily unimaginative, no trip to Foodstuffs required.  After years recycling the same six or seven meals week after ho-hum week, “Weeknight Meals for Busy Moms” seemed like a godsend.

Except I’m not really a mom anymore, not in the sense that has defined me for so long.  My son no longer lives with me, and my daughter has one foot out the door, leaving for college in less than six months.  My husband’s schedule is erratic, bringing him home some evenings as late at 9 p.m.

Which leaves me alone in the kitchen, a slate of brand new family recipes on tap, my family no longer at the table.

“Wait!  Wait!” I want to cry.  “I’ve got it together now!  June Cleaver is in the house!”

But time waits for no mom.  I recognize the irony of finally mastering the art of the family meal just as my family scatters to the winds, symbolic of the loss I feel around the changes of the last three months, and those that are yet to come.

It wasn’t as if I didn’t try.  But the vaguely held images of well-balanced meals prepared with unhurried competence, then shared at a cozy table by my serene and typical family, never fully (or even partially, actually) materialized in real life.  More often I recall slapping together meals of rotini with a side of orange slices, or scrambled eggs and toast, if I hadn’t forgotten to buy bread.

And my family isn’t all that easy to please, either.  As a boy, my son displayed disdain for most every food offering (even those in my famous Top Five) only satisfying my frenetic attempts to nourish him with an occasional cup of lo-cal lemon yogurt.  During adolescence, when his growing appetite placed him in the “clean your plate and then some” club, my daughter’s willingness to eat virtually anything with calories diminished to the alarming but typical proportions of a teenage girl.

My husband, meanwhile, eats nothing containing butter, sour cream, cream cheese, cheese sauce, mayonnaise, hollandaise, béarnaise or any other coating, while alternately clamoring for more steamed vegetables and asking why I didn’t buy cookies at Costco.

So many of my half-formed ideas of what “family” means have reluctantly shifted since I had a family of my own.  The demands of parenting a truly atypical child were greater than I could have dreamed possible, and what I’d considered “normal” and “healthy” and “secure” flew out the window in the face of my son’s disability.

Mealtimes were just one of a slew of ordinary experiences impeded by his unique needs.  Eating in restaurants, family vacations, doctor visits, attending a movie or strolling the zoo; Sunday school, music recitals, a walk in the neighborhood, buying an ice cream cone – each formative and familial experience I had envisioned for my children took on new and often forbidding overtones in the world of autism.

My son’s move almost three months ago to a residential school for developmentally disabled children should have brought a welcome normalcy to our home, an easing of the uncertainly his volatility lent our lives.  And perhaps this will come.  For now, though, his absence is a loss impossible to imagine healing with time.

I still reach for his evening medications when I glance at the clock at 7:45, and feel the stab of emptiness as I pass his room on my way to bed.  The constant struggle of those last grueling months isn’t so vivid right now; instead, I recall the tenderness of his hand against my face as we read the same books, night after night, as the day wound down.

I long now to recapture something as it slips away and changes shape again.  That normal family around the dinner table could be mine, I tell myself, if I just had another chance.  I’d do it right this time.  Yet I recognize that I’m holding onto to an ideal that is merely that, a fantasy painfully relinquished as I did what was necessary to keep my family whole, however unconventionally that evolved.  The home front I forged as mother is not the one I intended, but it is ours and ours alone.

Today I remember the conversations my daughter and I shared over another round of “Chicken with Bread Crumbs” or “Pasta Salad with Italian Dressing,” watching her grow from hesitant girl to confident young woman in the process.

Or my joy at the sound of my son’s voice last fall, clear and decisive, asking for a second helping of one of my dinnertime masterpieces.

“Pancake!” he cried cheerfully.  “Pancake!”

Pancakes it is.

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.