It’s been a minute, and I apologize. I’m back..
I see you, special needs Mama.
I see you, special needs Dad.
You hold your child’s hand or push their wheelchair and smile like the squiggly smile emoji at strangers who are gawking at your precious child. You may elect my favorite of mastering the art of the 1000 yard stare. This eliminates all but the most intrusive people, but it also deletes kind smiles. Sometimes the pity in those smiles is too much. You don’t want anyone to feel sorry for you or your child. Pity makes me collapse on the couch for days.
I recently read of a third option—if someone says anything disparaging about your child’s behavior, or clothing or whether they have a blanket, you look them in the eye and say, “Oh, look at that. An unsolicited opinion.” And walk on. If they are bold enough to call you out on what you know is the best parenting for a child with special needs, I bestow upon you the full right to return it.
Caleb was born when I was just 26 years old. His sister Sophie was 17 months old. People at the grocery store, the park, and the movie theater were often confused when they made a comparison. Due to their close age and the fact that Caleb physically outgrew his sister quickly, people didn’t know if they were twins and if so, why was one so developmentally appropriate and the other seemed like he was in his own world? In truth, all children develop on their own schedule, special needs or not, so the best advice I have to impart to the general public, who probably don’t read this blog, is move along.
Caleb is now 28, living in a group home nearby, and navigating his life the best he can. I’m now in my 50s and the decades of caring for him show up in me physically and mentally. I have advanced arthritis from caring for him, major skeletal issues from the same and the stress of decades of dealing with ignorance, unrelenting worry about every single thing, and the knowledge that that worry, like any parent of any child had, will never end. All of this has done a number on my nervous system. Mentally, I overreact easily, still fall into a puddle on the couch some days, and I struggle with insomnia and nightmares.
Remember, I abhor pity. My goal today is to let you know that you are not alone. You have a community you may not see surrounding you. If you can link up with others on the same road, I promise your journey will be much easier to trod.
Life with Caleb was incredibly similar to the lockdown with COVID. We were extremely limited to where we could go. He was high-fever sick for two weeks of every month for about 20 years. He had 55 doctor visits a year. When he was well, I was shut-in with him and I know that I didn’t develop in my own adulthood at the proper rate. I’m playing catchup now and it’s hard. There is no guidebook for delayed maturity, ether for Caleb or me.
I say this to let you know the cost of raising Caleb like I did, and perhaps to help you earlier on in your journey find better ways to cope.
I was fortunate to have my mom, aunts and Sophie help when I needed to be away. I didn’t trust anyone else and Caleb loved being with all of them. I tried a litany of babysitters (only dear Jamie, who knows who she is, succeeded). For a short while before we moved away, Caleb’s first grade teacher, who knows who she is, was so wonderful that I didn’t want to leave after she came over to babysit. I wanted to sit and watch how deftly she steered Caleb into doing what he needed to do. She also has the giggle of a child and it’s enchanting.
I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Ms. Mary, who knows who she is, for watching Caleb while I attended to my own potentially life-threatening event. And Mrs. Teresa, his teacher who came over after teaching special ed all day to tutor Caleb when he was out of school for three months. Caleb and I have angels all around us, for sure.
As Caleb grew older and taller and past the age where he should not but most definitely did need a sitter, new caretakers would come once and not return. He had become so dependent on me that he didn’t even try to interact with them. I tried state-provided care from eight different agencies, and with the exception of two, we were left aloft and began the quest for residential placement.
Here is where you come in. Don’t be me. I know your plate is so full of therapies and doctors and practicing what the therapists told you to replicate at home. I know your marriage is strained. I know your other children sigh deeply when their sibling sucks up all of the attention. I know.
I’m telling you to take care of yourself. I’m telling you to carve out some time to refill your tank. I’m telling you to create space between you and your child, slowly but steadily, for both of your sake. I’m telling you to exercise and sleep enough and eat well. I’m telling you to not seek out temporary vices like food or alcohol or drugs, desperately looking for an escape.
That was annoying, wasn’t it? How are you supposed to do any of that?
What’s more annoying is that I don’t have the answers. We each have to find our own way, but it is out there.
I haven’t written in over two years, because life (see, I handle it perfectly, ha). I don’t know if people read blogs anymore and I have a face and a voice for writing, not TikTok or YouTube.
I fiercely protect both of my children’s privacy so I have changed all of our names to be as anonymous as possible. But for all of you who have sent lovely comments and followed me, I want to give you an image of Caleb. I tried my hand at AI, so this picture really doesn’t look like either of us and I don’t know how we ended up with the Disney World filter, but it’s so appropriate because Caleb would happily live there, 24/7 for 365 days of every year.
Please drop me a line in the comments if you would like for me to keep posting blogs. It won’t hurt my feelings if not—that is the light at the end of the tortuous early life with your special needs child. Things might still hurt, stares will still sting, but you will have developed an inner skeleton of strength that allows you to move on, head held high, beaming at the young adult next to you who has flourished because of all that you and your squad of angels have poured into them.
I see you. And you’re doing a masterful job.