Tuesday, June 13, 2017

DIFFERENT DIFFERENCES, DIFFERENTLY DIFFERING


Are you and/or your child(ren)…”different”???

As a child I didn’t see difference as significant. I think I noticed that people had different skin colors, genders, ages, spoke different languages, etc., but none of these distinctions held weight for me.  This was partly because I grew up in diverse environments (Panama and the Bronx, then Westport, CT), and partly because my brain has always been a tidge you-know-what.

I’ve been thinking lately about how the ways we and/or our families and/or loved ones differ from the “norm” actually change and have different repercussions and benefits over time and in different contexts. 

Those lists where people suggest “Things not to say to the parent of a Special Needs child” are a good example, because those things change. They change from parent/person/child to parent/person/child. And they change as children grow up and as people grow.

When my son G, who is on the autism spectrum, was little, “what not to say” would have been, well, just about anything since I personally - unlike, um, every teacher he ever had -  thought nothing was “different” about G; in elementary school, our biggest challenge was getting G the support he needed (and, at times, avoiding support he didn’t need). 

Now, I dread people telling me “So, G will be getting his Learner’s Permit soon.” Um, no? And could you not bring that up with him, please? I watch my friends with kids G’s age rejoice in their increasing freedom, knowing their children’s paths will differ in significant ways from my G’s, and I have mixed feelings: glad to have my dear child around longer, isolated, sad about that lost freedom, worried about his future, super proud of him just as he is…

(Please note, statements like, “Oh, every kid does that!” or “Every parent worries about their child’s future” - meant, probably, to be reassuring - are usually on the “not to say” list. It’s not the same. We know our kids, we know what their challenges are, we know the Full situation, so…) 

With my daughter Z, who has struggled with an attachment disorder, what has gotten me all along is when people judge my parenting (they tend not to judge HER because she is so. dang. charming). Therapeutic parenting for attachment disorders is super strong on boundaries in a way that is anathema to most of my crunchy, progressive community. For most of Z’s life, I’ve suffered when I’ve felt that people were blaming me for my daughter’s rages and tantrums. Now, I cringe when people indulge her when she is in fact testing and manipulating them.  I cringe when I have to intervene in ways that seem too strict to people who have not wrestled with attachment disordered behavior in their families…

And she - smart, tough cookie - totally knows both how to work it and why I act as I do. After she’s done being mad, she appreciates my efforts. But I know there are plenty of parents who think I’m a so-and-so. Now? I don’t care so much. Before? Yeah, that was hard. So that’s a change…

More changes: My son’s learning differences seemed to impact him most early on. They are still a major factor, as he is still in school (and they will remain something of a challenge his while life since his learning differences have non-academic implications as well), but as he moves out into the wider world his social and developmental differences may become more significant. My daughter no longer explodes in public, but she’s still contending with a need to control her environment that sometimes causes less-than-healthy behavior. As she grows up, I can see ways in which this may even become a strength, though I worry about anyone who tries to oppose her!

I guess what’s now really sinking in is that I thought once I knew there was something different about myself/G/Z, we would get a label and figure everything out and that would be it. No. And also? Labels change: Since G’s diagnosis with Asperger’s about seven years ago, Asperger’s has been officially folded into the Autism Spectrum Disorders (I say “Differences”!!) diagnosis. 

Even our understanding of labels changes as we see how individual ways of being, thinking, acting manifest over the days, weeks, months, years; as certain labels and conditions are added into the mix, and/or others are removed; as one issue that felt all-encompassing is replaced by another - or by a period of relative stability and ease…Over a lifetime, difference plays out differently. We learn and make mistakes as we go along. 

Sometimes we underestimate or limit people based on prior abilities, and it’s important to remember that we all - no matter our labels/diagnoses/challenges/disabilities/abilities - have the capacity to grow.




I wouldn’t trade either of my kids for any other, less-different child for all the world. Like most other parents, I happen to think they are the two bestest kids on this planet. At the same time,  they are not special snowflakes to be sheltered and protected from everything, especially now that their differences differ differently because they are growing up. We’ve learned that these differences make some things harder and some things easier for them, and, together, we are finding ways of both celebrating and scaffolding our differences in ways that allow for growth and change. 

Love,

Full Spectrum Mama


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ds bloggers hosted by The Sensory Spectrum and The Jenny Evolution. Click on the links below to read stories from other bloggers about having a special needs kiddo -- from Sensory Processing Disorder to ADHD, from Autism to Dyslexia! Want to join in on next month's Voices of Special Needs Hop? Click here!



14 comments:

  1. Your kids are lucky to have you, and you them. It's amazing how the list of "what not to say" has changed with both of my kids over the years, as they themselves have changed to much. Loved this!

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    Replies
    1. Awwwwwww-THANK YOU. Let's hope so!

      Right? it really hit me that some part of me thought things would be, you know, stable and comprehensible? lol.

      Thanks and love,
      FSM

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  2. Love this. It's so insightful. I definitely can see differences both in what could be said about my son -- the teen years are way different from the younger ones -- and also in what I would welcome to hear. Thanks for such a thoughtful perspective!
    mf

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, darling MF. For reading...for GETTING IT....

      Yours truly,
      FSM

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  3. Replies
    1. Also I wrote a recent post about autistic parenting to an autistic and I'd be curious about your input ...

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    2. Oh I would love to see that!!!
      Will check it out.
      Thanks and love,
      FSM

      Delete
  4. I visited a lot of website but I think this one has got something extra in it.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Howdy! This article could not be written any better! Going through this article
    reminds me of my previous roommate! He continually kept preaching about this.
    I will send this article to him. Pretty sure he will have a good read.

    Many thanks for sharing!

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  6. First of all - thanks for sharing the story.
    Second - I'm thinking about this topic, thinking it through all over. Stories like yours are material of it. So thanks again. And the conclusion I got is that "difference" makes sense in the context of the system - educational, career, economical etc. And this makes people seem normal or different.

    So the change has to be radical. Systemic. Am I right or am I wrong?

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    Replies
    1. Excellent points, though whether we attempt radical revision of the system(s) or to create our own mini-systems I do not know...

      Thanks and love,
      FSM

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    2. Yeah... have you heard of Los Horcones commune? Living by Walden-2-Skinner rules and they run a place for ppl with ASD diagnosis.

      never been, but it's a genuine alternative mini-system, U should google it if never heard bout it.


      peace!

      Delete
    3. Sounds fascinating. Possibly wonderful? Or terrifying? Will google - thanks!

      Delete

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