*** Trigger warnings: dark humor, sad and hard stuff, all
mixed together ***
Dear Readers,
Thank you for having me, Partial/incomplete Monochrome
Persona (PiMP), back for this post! Having, via my Guest Writing, complained
her main COMPLAINTS last year (http://fullspectrummama.blogspot.com/2013/01/first-anniversary-lists-iv-complaint.html),
Full Spectrum Mama was in an expansive mood for 2014. Except -- she still
wanted to COMPLAIN that the wrinkles, plus pimples, plus hair loss, plus,
admittedly, the very occasional, minor, miniscule mood swings of The Peri (our
cutesy nickname for perimenopause) are no fair.
This line of reasoning might be summed up in a more general
COMPLAINT, one deemed eminently acceptable by THE COMPLAINT DEPARTMENT (TCD):
Some things are just No Fair. Is this fair? No.
In any case, this year TCD opened briefly in order to accept
a multitude of READER COMPLAINTS gathered on behalf of PiMP by Full Spectrum
Mama. Thanks, everybody, for so generously sharing your woes, irritants,
protestations, and objections, as well as your grievances, grumbles and
grouses; also: your cavils and quibbles, not to mention your jeremiads, beefs
and whinges!
The COMPLAINTS are addressed in two formats: first, a list
of shorter COMPLAINTS that are self-explanatory and simply needed to be
complained; second, a more in-depth series of COMPLAINTS and RESPONSES from
TCD. PiMP had originally intended to separate the funny ones and the sad ones,
but the uniquely enticing combination of pathos and snorts won out. In the
latter section, readers will find the more serious COMPLAINTS clustered toward
the end.
I. Acceptable Complaints, Hereby Justifiably
Complained
Having to wait for other people to finish eating before
having dessert*
The girl I like doesn’t like me*
Magic tricks are not one of my talents*
That teeth are not white*
People who say, “You only get what you can handle”
When you start working on something that either a. you've
been looking forward to doing for a while or b. needs to be done quickly, and
your child finds you at that exact moment and asks, "Can I help?"
Cancer
Fleece
Recurring patterns
Grownups with very small hands
Dull knives
Teenage hormones
Disability porn [google it – definitely an acceptable
COMPLAINT!]
Cold doorknobs, cold floors, cold steering wheels
Thanksgiving
Your child barfs on another kid’s lap. In a full minivan. At
the beginning of an hour drive home from a school ski trip.
My husband groans and sighs constantly. He says he isn't upset, sad or in pain,
but that he needs to sigh and groan...
My cats do not get along (they want to kill each other). Don't
even think this is trivial.
I have to eat every 2-3 hrs.
Intolerant people
People with rightness disease
That Republicans have so much power
Stirring natural peanut butter and getting oil everywhere,
then, the next day, spreading it straight from the refrigerator and it’s hard
as a rock
Moving
When pets die
Mean kids
When people who don’t have to earn a living open hobby
businesses that take customers away from those who do need money
Getting full before you are done eating
When people treat my kid like a pet
Oh and I did get SEVERAL complaints from New Englanders
about snow: borderline unacceptable. But we get it.
* Junior Complaints (from children)
II. Acceptable Complaints, Hereby Complained and
Investigated
Complaint: Why
are men such babies?
Response: PiMP
does not have The Answers. At TCD, we accept (sometimes) and process (when
deemed necessary) THE COMPLAINTS. PiMP also finds PiMPself a little vulnerable
on this one.
C: Dear
PiMP: If my dog continues to bark I will twist his head off like a bottle cap.
You mean like that?
R: Why
yes, I do. Please don’t, though. PiMP believes in Animal Rights, except for
beagles – in that case, you’ll get a special dispensation.
And, in a
similar vein:
C: Dear
complaint department,
I really love my two little dogs.
They are like fuzzy children to me. But they bark so much at my poor innocent
neighbors that I regularly want to rip their vocal chords out (the dogs, not
the lovely neighbors). This is a serious complaint and I would like for you to
help. Thank you in advance.
Sincerely, Barky and Barky's Mom
R: Are
these dogs beagles?
C: Dear
PiMP,
I got some complaints. My chief complaint today is:
I’m working so hard (complaint #1)
that I’m burning extra calories.
My Lean Cuisine luncheon is not keeping me going (complaint #2). And no one is bringing Chinese
dumplings to my office (complaint #3).
R: PiMP shares
your concern, but does not have The Answer. PiMP suspects that eating just one dumpling is better than consuming
MANY, MANY Lean Cuisines; therefore, using an unusual kind of circular logic,
PiMP concludes that the best solution may well be to eat MANY, MANY dumplings.
C: Why
do some people get all the luck?
R: And some
guys get all the pain. Right? And some do nothing but complain? Sure, it’s a
song (Rod Stewart: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuYvKLZXKhI)
– but it’s true, too. And when PiMP starts to think this way, PiMP tries to
remember that for every disastrophe, there must be something equally,
balancing-ly wonderful.
Yeah, that works sometimes.
C: Today, my
complaints are: 1) I am not drunk;
2) I am not drunk in Spanish Wells [idyllic Bahamian island]; 3) I am neither
drunk in Spanish Wells, nor with the people I find most endearing, amusing,
fun, capable and awesome.
R: Please send
airline tickets c/o TCD
C: Dearest
Complaint Department
Today at work i wore a new Asian
inspired jacket with cranes on it. My mother gave it to me for Christmas and i
think its cute, unique and looks good. Not a single person complimented it or
even mentioned it today. Is it more likely that the jacket sucks or that all of
my co-workers had other things to focus on today? Or, perhaps my co-workers suck. In any case, i believe
something sucks and can’t figure out which one.
Thank you kindly.
R: What
a faaaaaabulous jacket! There, now do you feel better? Back to work.
C: Why
oh why oh why, I am stuck in this hovel-fest donkey-cart town with absolutely
no mobile phone network, my friendships here (such as they are) are all in
tatters, I am surrounded on a daily basis by the most revolting fashion
disasters, too tight, clashing colours, painful attempts at matching and
generally just wrong.
I need style, grace and something
nice to look at - no wonder I have become totally addicted to Downton - such a
lovely century and a tasteful, rule bound and class based society. Now I must
venture forth into the horrid road outside my office (of course my office is a
veritable bastion of good taste and visual delight - replete as it is with
lovely plants and tasteful black and white photographs) as I need something to
nibble following insane running and gym activities early this morning - but I
will have to endure day glo nylon plastic yuck. And I ask, as Miranda from The
Devil Wears Prada would, why can’t it all
just go away?
R: It
can.
C: Non-driving
Driving COMPLAINTS:
1.
Parents who stand in the open door
of the school bus chatting with the driver for 10 minutes, completely oblivious
to the 100 or so cars that are backed up in both directions. This has gotten to
be a common occurrence around here and I don't know who started it, but I would
love to know how these people find this to be acceptable behavior. Typically
their child is already standing there with them looking like they'd rather be
watching Pokemon [yay pokemon!] than hearing the latest school bus gossip, so
it doesn't appear to be that their child is taking a long time to "de-bus."
Argh....
2.
One
might have to annihilate the majority of NH pickup truck owners north of the
state Capitol. It's fun to sit
parked, waiting for the two yin & yang oriented trucks to end their
conversation about cordwood inventory, who bagged the finer bear or what Bob's
wife has been up to (except when you're tryna get to work). On the one hand, I can appreciate this
as charming - that they care enough to stop, inquire & flagrantly disregard
the conventions of traffic flow.
On the other, it is absurdly self-involved! Maybe each of us should invest in one of those
dashboard-mounted emergency lights. The proper response to obstructive talkers
may well be impersonating a police officer.
R: PiMP
respectfully suggests [censored].
C: OMGerd...Complaints…
I have so many, but my son just turned 39, so...I think most complaints of mine
are outdated. My most basic problem these days is...since he's an adult who
lives on his own (mostly, a program checks on him 1-2 times a week and gets him
to Dr visits, etc), he can tell me easily: "Mom, I don't want to talk
about it." And there is SO much to talk about. He left better services
because he's fairly high functioning and didn't like being lumped in with
seriously handicapped individuals (pardon my language...this is the language I
learned and have not kept up with whatever the new vernacular is these days).
When young, he had about 20
'labels'...some of which fit, some of which seriously did not. He spent all of
his school years in 'Special Ed'...some of which was abominable and demeaning.
He graduated high-school at 21...but was not at all ready to go out into the
work-world. Take 'Horticulture' for example; instead of the usual 200 or so
Latin words a kid had to learn in this class...their idea of fitting the class
to him was to have him learn just 40 Latin words! Of course, he flunked the
class.
While he reads the paper and sports
magazines and can talk some about current events that he reads, he has troubles
with 'getting things right' (not making mistakes); OCD (big time), smells &
bodily functions will make him gag & vomit (there goes his job as janitor),
wanting so much to be liked he'll do things to make another laugh (over and
over), staying on task (but does well with a supportive buddy who works WITH
him), and on and on. He's not worked in several many years (hell, engineers are
out of work!), and is furious that where he was just forced to move has BEDBUGS
and COCKROACHES, but changes bed-sheets about 3-4 times a year! [sigh] Oh, and
he was loaded up on so many drugs 'to help him' that he resented feeling weird
all the time and now refuses to take any that might actually help now.
MY complaint is: HOW can I learn to
talk with him in a way where he doesn't feel 'less than'? He clearly needs
help, but hates that he does. Neither of us has the vocabulary...and too many
'old' words were used in the past. As a kid he had teacher's send him back to
his 'special' class with a note: "I don't have time for him
today"...a bruised hand print on his butt from a male PE teacher, being
made to stand in a corner for soiling his pants or for 'projectile vomiting' on
purpose (just before the household came down with the flu).
Crud, I could go on and on. But HOW
to let him keep what independence he does have and HELP him learn more about
his 'disability' (as we've grown up calling it)? Recently he was switched from
Medicaid to Medicare (I have no reason why), but perhaps that will give him a
therapist who will talk to me, too. GRRRRRRRRRRRRRrrrrrrrrrrrrr...
R: Oh dear
Mama, even TCD wishes it could solve this one, and turned to FSM for her
thoughts:
I just had to let out a huge breath
as I had been holding it the whole time I re-read your COMPLAINT.
It’s funny, I often think those
words, “less than,” when I think of my son. NOT because he is in any way so,
but because he is often erroneously perceived as such. I never want him to hear
that in my voice or sense it in my attitude and so I so get what you mean.
We had a rough weekend this weekend
where I was trying to explain to him that he is going to have to work so hard
to live on his own if that’s what he wants and he is still mad at me. I tried
to explain that everybody has stuff they have to work on – that his sister has
to work on being kind, that I have to work on healing myself from hard stuff in
the past…
I talk so much with the few people
I know who have similar children: the ones who are “high functioning,”
academically gifted, etc. but who struggle daily with social interactions and
common sense stuff like hygiene and transitions and finding things and places
(some of this sounds familiar for ME, too ;) ). The uneven skill sets that
sometimes come with disabilities – great strengths, great challenges – make
life hard in this neurotypical world. We worry, like you, how our beloved
children will make it out there. They are just on that line where they won’t
necessarily need daily help or supervision but they will need some. And I think the worst part for most of us is: what
about when we are gone?
I feel sick when I read about the
stuff that happened to your dear son in school. I wish I could say that sounds
completely out of the question now, but I do feel we parents are still fighting
for accommodation and integration in ways that fully respect the needs of our children.
Right now my son is in a new school that is a much better fit for him, but I
have friends whose children are being treated in ways that are quite
disturbing. And they are having to fight and fight and fight!
You must be tired. I know they are
and sometimes I am, more than I can say...
And then there are those very basic
things too, like low expectations. Research shows that low expectations
generally lead to low learning/achievement. That’s another thing we fight for –
that our children be encouraged to reach high: 200 Latin words not 40!!!
At the same time, those of us with
children on the spectrum often feel pressure if our children are not “savants”
in some area – equally ridiculous!
I know you love your son above all.
I know you don’t see him as less-than; I know that for sure. That must come
through in your voice and in your actions. Without the amazing love and support
you have shown him where would he be now? (This is true for all children, but
even more so here!)
As a philosophy teacher I often
find myself celebrating questions (stuff we have objective/definite answers for
is called “science”). I think you are asking the questions that will lead to
adequate and sometimes even happy answers for you both. Language evolves and I
think we do now have more tools in that toolbox. See if you can talk with your
son about what language feels right for him. Does he have an email address?
Sometimes written is easier to process than spoken.
If you DO find any answers, please
let us know.
Love,
FSM
C: As far as
hard stuff or questions. One of the hardest things for me is when my amazingly
wonderful unique and mostly HAPPY boy gets so frustrated with his struggles in
certain areas, that he feels he should not have been born and states it to me
like that. Could kill me right there as you can imagine.... Then he calms down, but in those
moments -- not easy for both of us!!!!
That may have been more than you bargained for or not in the direction
you had in mind, but telling it like it is....
R: PiMP’s
icy heart breaks at these words. In fact, this concern was shared by several
parents in a sentence or two but this really expresses this painful,
devastating scenario. So many of our children (and ourselves) are completely
daunted by a world that sometimes seems not to understand or include them as
equals.
Children
are exposed to the knowledge of suicide so young these days. Add to that the
challenges and differences some (most) of them face and it’s almost inevitable
that in moments of duress that terrible thought might enter their minds.
Perhaps the best parenting advice
PiMP ever heard was this: “The odds are with them,” a phrase which sustained
PiMP through many a high fever or croup and might offer an infinitesimal
glimmer of hope in those low points.
We have to use every tool in our arsenals to strengthen those odds, to support
our loved ones so that they are armed to face those particular challenges with
which they contend.
And then there’s the world at
large. Part of our job as parents
is to offer a longer-range perspective on that world.
When they feel sad, Full Spectrum
Mama always tells G and Z that things will get better – as they get older, as
the world becomes a more open and all-embracing place.
PiMP is also a teacher, and
sometimes PiMP asks PiMP’s students whether things actually are getting
better - more inclusive, less
bullying-prone -- and sometimes, usually, people
say they are. Here’s hoping that’s true.
C: So I
am tired of the seeming inability of people to understand that my son
communicates differently. He does not understand nuance. He does not understand
non-direct language. Word problems are going to flummox him. If you overreact
to discussions of body parts two things are going to happen: he will be ashamed
of his body AND he's going to talk about these things MORE. Negative social
interaction is social interaction....That's just a start...
R: What good is this idea that there are traits that
some on the spectrum might share such as this one if no one takes them into
account in interactions???? Okay, maybe not the FIRST interaction, we all need
to learn about others, and differences, etc -- but once it has become
clear??!!!!!!! In the last few weeks alone, PiMP has heard from friends on the
spectrum and/or with children on the spectrum about family, friends and -
especially, sadly - teachers sharing the inability you mention. Step up, people.
C: Here's
what slays me: the
well-intentioned relative, who truly does mean well, but whose remarks just
sting beyond their imagination. Most recently, my brother told me that my son
can't "blend" or "pass for normal," so it might be kindest
not to keep sending him to the school for normal kids where he struggles to fit
in.
Ouch. Seriously, ouch.
R: OUCH!
And in another family vein:
C: My
Mother does not understand (believe?) that my son has autism. I am not sure why
this is, exactly. My son was officially diagnosed when he was 4. His cousin (6
mos younger) was diagnosed in 1st grade. At which time my Mom tried to explain
to me what Asperger's was. I said, "I know. My son has it. I've been
explaining that to for 3 yrs." Her response, "Not like this."
Which is true in the sense that every child is unique and manifests it differently,
but she meant it that my son didn't *really* have it or had it to a much lesser
degree. *sigh* In the end, it doesn't really matter because we live far away,
so I let it go...even though I have to remind her like 3 times a year that he
has autism. Over a recent trip down to Fl, the cousins spent many hours
together. Safe in an understanding of each other that was simply beautiful.
Truth be told, my sister-in-law (his Mom) and my sister(his aunt) noticed just
haw similar they were to each other..but then my sister (a teacher) and my
sister-in-law both have a deeper understanding of what's at play.All this is
preface to the Mom story, my complaint:
When we arrived, I set down the
rules/limits very clearly to my son and explained what we were doing in
advance. This was to lessen his anxiety and to give him parameters to work in.
Almost immediately she began with, "just let him do it. It's alright. He's
okay"...etc. Implying I was too strict and overriding my rules. By the 2nd
day, when he asked me something and I said no, he looked to her to overrule me.
Not understanding nuance, without always rules...there are no rules... Anyway,
by the 3rd day, he fully expected her to overrule me anytime I set a rule.
(This makes complete logical sense btw). She was driving back from my Sister's
and he kept asking why we were driving the way we were back home. (It was
admittedly not a direct route but my Mother has her peculiarities) I told him
it was okay, but he kept asking because a) he was nervous and worried we were
lost and b) he expected Grandma to say 'let him be'. But she didn't because to
her this was questioning her authority and she got angry. Which escalated his
anxiety.
And started him asking "Are
you mad" every couple of minutes. Once back, while he was eating dinner,
he started asking questions again...and she flipped. Yelling crazily at him. He
burst into confused tears and I had to comfort him. She asked me...something..I
don't remember...and I answered "He doesn't understand"
Her response was, "well I
don't understand why he won't mind."
It took ALL my strength not to yell
back, "Because you spent the last three days teaching him that while at
Grandma's he doesn't have to listen to Mom. And he's in an unfamiliar place.
And he has high anxiety. And you have set him up to fail."
I gave a calm(er) explanation...insufficient...but it boils
down to:
She doesn't see my son as disabled
but he functions well in *certain* situations. She has decided my nephew's
particular issues are the true disability...and therefore any issues of my son
are willful. Also, she sees fear as a kind of sin (her words) so a high level
of clinical anxiety makes no sense to her. I just...am glad we're home...
R: PiMP
feels very sorry that your Mother is clearly out of touch with Reality. Nothing
is more frustrating and disjunctive than when another person – especially one
with whom we “ought” to be in tune --
has a completely different perspective than the one which is reflected
in objective facts, such as, ohhh, I dunno, the diagnosis of a pediatric neurologist, the educated
opinions of educators and, oh yes, parental experience.
PiMP
applauds your healthy and effective parenting efforts and apologizes for
Motherly non-compliance and undercutting of your hard work. PiMP suggests you
take strength where you can -- from home, from community, and from the deep
bond you clearly share with your son.
PiMP would like to remind readers
of an important phrase PiMP read somewhere, the source of which PiMP cannot
find, but the sentiment of which PiMP heartily endorses: “Blood means nothing.
Family is who we love.” Here’s a link that discusses this most beautifully: http://toluidowu.blogspot.com/2012/12/blood-makes-you-related-loyalty-makes.html.
Now that TCD has brought you this cathartic and
responsive-ish list, TCD is, once again, closed. As with last year, TCD will
re-open on the 32nd of Nevruary.
Sincerely,
Partial/incomplete Monochrome Persona
Factotum, THE COMPLAINT DEPARTMENT
Guest writer/Troubleshooter @ Full Spectrum Mama
This was fantastic and touching. Made me laugh out loud, tear up, fill with rage -- the whole gamut. You are so insightful. And damn witty.
ReplyDeleteAnd you, dear Anonymous, look Amazing in that jacket ;)
DeleteThank you so much, and thanks to the complainers too!
Love,
FSM
am enjoying so much that i won't let myself finish it all at once.
ReplyDeletesavoring like a great meal
Dear Anonymous,
DeleteIsn't COMPLAINING cathartic? We must do it more often!
Love,
FSM