Monday, 16 November 2009
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The Funk
When I was in college, my roommates and I hosted a P-Funk party that people still talk about. We dressed up and wore wigs. We played records (yes, records) and really got down. But that’s not the kind of funk I’m into now. A few months ago, my two teen boys invited some friends over (more teen boys) for a sleepover, and the next morning, as they slept and I walked into the game room to survey the damage (almost as wild as my P-Funk party), I was hit with a wall of funk. Teenage-boy funk. Sweat, dirty socks, and (um, how to put this delicately?) expelled-air kind of funk. But that’s not the kind of funk I’m in now. You know the kind, I’m sure - things are going mostly okay, you’re working, taking care of the kids and the household, but something doesn’t feel right. And in spite of all that’s good in your life, in spite of counting your blessings, it’s still hard. Right - nobody said life was supposed to be easy. But is it supposed to be hard?
No, I tell myself. I’m just in a funk. I’m at a crossroads with my finished-but-still-unpublished book, unfulfilled with my day job, feeling like I’m between treading water and sometimes barely keeping my head above it. So when Nigel, who turns 15 next week, told me last night that his case manager at school said to ask me if he’s going to be getting his driver’s permit (what?!), I felt like I’d been hit by a wall of water.
I didn’t know this was coming, although really, I did. I just didn’t know it would be this week. But what shocks me more is that I was just talking about this with my good friend Carrie less than a week ago. (Got Carrie? If not, head on over there immediately. You’ll be glad you did.) I was telling her how I didn’t know how to tell my son that he’s not ready to drive yet, in spite of how much he wants to. I told her how I’ve been putting it off, not sure how to approach it, foolishly thinking I still had some time. And then, something amazing happened, as it usually does when we’re with someone who listens and understands. Out of my mouth tumbled, “Maybe he just needs to hear it from me” or something along those lines. And I knew that I had to have the talk with him soon. I just didn’t get it together quick enough. So, I copped out. Last night, as I had three different dinners cooking at once while he stood there expectantly, I said, ”Maybe in a few months.” I just couldn’t do it right then.
Because last night my other son needed me more. Last night Aidan was still recuperating from a vaccine reaction. Yes, I said it. I’m going there. He had his 13-year physical two days ago (a couple months late, but oh well), and the nurse spouted off at least four different vaccinations or boosters that he “needed.” We decided to go with one - the meningitis. It was the one that I felt strongest about, so we took it. Then I dropped him back off at school and I went back to work. In less than an hour, Aidan told me later, his arm was numb, and he had a headache and abdominal pains. My poor sweet boy didn’t want to disturb me at work, so he suffered through it at school and told me when he got home. He slept badly that night, still experiencing the same problems. He stayed home from school the next day, and by that evening (last night), he was feeling better (although his arm still felt strange).
I went in Aidan’s room to talk to him before he went to sleep, as I do every night. I’d had an epiphany, and I wanted to share it with him. My younger son has sensory processing disorder - gustatory, olfactory, tactile, proprioceptive, and vestibular (worse than Nigel in all of these areas). And when Aidan was a baby, he cried almost constantly - but it didn’t start until he was two months old. That was when he received his first round of what turned out to be no less than 16 vaccinations by the age of 18 months. (By comparison, I’d received 6 vaccinations by the time I was 18 months. I guess I should consider myself lucky to be alive, as undervaccinated as I was.) Aidan knows that he was a crier. He’s heard the war stories. But, as I told him last night, now we know why. I think that it took months for his little body to assimilate the vaccines, and by the time he got through one round, it was time for another, and then another. His body was flooded, overwhelmed. And I believe that experience contributed to his sensory processing disorder.
Maybe I’m reaching. Maybe it’s my funk. I don’t think vaccines are bad. But once I made that connection with Aidan’s babyhood, I felt like I’d solved a 13-year mystery. And Aidan agreed with me; both of us achieved some closure. As I left his room, I blew him kisses from the doorway, as I do every night. Often he blows them back to me. Last night, I shut the door and stood in the hallway a moment. I heard him continue to blow kisses to me even after the door was shut.
I can only hope that when I approach Nigel about the driving issue that I can word it in such a way that he can understand. I don’t want him to see it as a punishment, as a wall of water crashing down on him. I hope that what I discussed with Carrie turns out to be right - that he just needs me to tell him. Maybe once I talk with him and get it all out on the table, I’ll feel better. Free, even. Free of the funk.
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Comments (3)
I got my first learner's permit when I was 16, but didn't get my driver's license until I was 20. Having the permit does not mean that he'll have his license right away. It just means that he'd have permission to start practicing with an adult in the car, during daylight hours. I spent a lot of time driving in circles around our neighborhood. We lived in Levittown, PA. If you look it up, you'll see how it is divided into sections with a drive around each set of streets... it was like having a built in test track with a 25 mph speed limit and stop signs every other block.
I don't know how severe your son's challenges are, but if you have a safe place like that to let him practice... it might be a good idea to let him. It might build up his confidence to a point where when he IS ready for a license he'll be an established driver. It took me a long time to learn how to control a car. We started in the church parking lot when it was empty, before we moved to letting me drive it around the neighborhood. Drive from this parking space to that one and stop. Do it in reverse, stop. No need for turn signals at that point... added them in later, in the parking lot. Practiced parking in a parking space. Four years of practice like that, six weeks of on the road driving school, and I got my license on the first try.
Then I learned to drive my dad's stick shift. That was "fun." *rolls eyes* But I did it. Once I got the concept, it was all a matter of practice. I did get stuck in a very scary place once and kept stalling the car... but I managed to get home. I was 20 years old. Seven years later, I did the same thing to get my motorcycle license.
I'm 32 now and got my first driver's license Sept of 08. Yep. I waited that long. I've had my permit before and did some practice stuff with my step-father, mother, a neighbor lady I babysat for, my first husband, and I think that's about it. I wasn't ready for one. It was that simple... but I had the time of practice in parking lots, slow streets... that made me feel happier about being different than my friends who were already driving without their permits or licenses. Some things are just harder for us (with an ASD or other challenge) than those without them. I knew that then. Didn't need anyone to tell me, exactly.
I think when you do sit down with him, do your best with the right words (I'll be praying that you find them) and explain to him how you feel and why you don't think he's ready for even the permit yet. Then, separately, think about the permit idea yourself. Like the previous commentator said... just because he has a permit, doesn't mean he has to get his license and be "free" with it just yet. AND.... the benefit of that is, he just might surprise you about what he is or isn't capable of when it comes to driving. I have a friend who is severely autistic and I thought her mom was crazy to let her even think of driving. She doesn't know when a wall is in her way half the time because she shuts off her senses when they're overloaded, know what I mean? Well, this girl fooled me. She drives better than any NT person I know (except perhaps my father). Keep it in mind... there's still time.
Interesting.