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autismmommy

THE IMAGE

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THE IMAGE

Photography was always something I was drawn to. 

First in college when I walked the walls of my alma mater and learned that one could take an extra curricular and learn how to capture an image, expose it to the world as how you viewed that moment, and then look to that world on their opinion of your vision.

As someone who was already enrolled in too many courses, working on a double major with a minor, the class just never rose as priority enough to make it on my schedule.

As social media became the way we expressed ourselves and sites like MySpace and Facebook brought opportunities for creative expression and communication, I learned how images could show connection, importance, and participation in activity that gave an appearance of being part of something. If you were in a group photo showcasing smiling faces and the capture of a good time, then you must be someone others wished to be around… aka worthy of others' time.

But then, when my cousin died unexpectedly my senior year of college, and I found myself lacking any photographic evidence of our time together, I learned that photographs did more than just suggest moments in time… they froze moments in time to remind you what they felt like when memory begins to fail you decades later.

It wasn’t until my wife and I arranged to have our engagement photos taken, in the most serene New Hampshire setting, that I learned that photography could also teach someone in a way that words could not. Those photos, where my heart was undeniable, and I stood in my truth for all to see, showed me that there was a way to explain to my family who had never truly known the women they were about to see in those photos, could and would believe my truth without question.

When I started this blog, I believed that the years I spent practicing photography and working to capture others' memories as they hoped to remember them would provide my readers insight in a way a blog without photos could not. I believed that as I shared our journey with autism, I could show the connection, love and empathy each of our children have, while discussing the struggles we were working through as a family, in the hopes that any misconception someone may have about autism could be challenged by a photo showing a child who is loved and not only knows how to love, but chooses to love in return.

For the last two weeks, I have written incomplete drafts on where to start on catching readers up on our last year, and where we are currently, that simply could t find traction. Although I hope I am able to use them at one point, my stream of thought simply keeps returning to photography- and my why around it.

There is a reason why over the last two years, images of parents struggling, looking worn and distraught, near the edge of no return, have gone viral on the internet, sharing stories of just how hard parenting has been since COVID began. 

Sure, I have shared a number of them on my own social accounts, and even written many of my own, that were shared on my behalf as well. But I am going to say what every parent/caregiver already knows about why they’ve gone viral, but never wanted to admit. Ya’ll parenting has always been hard. 

True, COVID took down any escape one had from parenting when child care of any kind was no longer an option, an escaping to a workday with coworkers who felt like family was no longer such a relief of a retreat… but there have always been laundry rooms overflowing with laundry that is lucky if it gets cleaned forget folded and put away to be easily accessible when a family member needs to get dressed… there have always been (and will always be) houses where voices bellow from every nook and cranny as they work through whatever hard they are going through, that neighbors can hear without any privy to what the hard is causing such a racket… There have always been (and always will be) individuals keeping the group of humans under one roof going, without ever feeling seen or appreciated.

What COVID did was take away the space to breathe and reset in between all the hard, forcing us all to operate at full capacity, without any space to have “life’s hard things''that we would once have capacity to bear, feel unbearable. As someone who was handed what feels to be a never-ending unnecessarily level of hard nearly six-weeks ago, I can tell you first hand why no photos have come from our last month as a unit showcasing the less-than-hot mess we are functioning at. I can tell you the snapshot of a human I have looked like at morning drop-off in front of so many of my children’s peers and their parents that initiated check-in calls and faces of concern and pity. 

But just as I was trying to figure out what on earth I could share lately that could be of any value to someone else on this journey, I found myself chatting with another mom I admire greatly, about something as silly as fresh pasta I found at Market Basket. What had felt like such a selfish treat for myself, as it was not something anyone else in my family would eat, and would take easily 30-45 minutes of my attention away from a chaotic evening hour on a school night, had felt like a moment where I had put myself first in a way I hadn’t since my wife had her injury two weeks before Christmas.

As that mom had shared her excitement I had discovered what she and I both felt to be such a luxury, I swallowed my guilt around what something so simple felt like, and then continued our small talk like usual… until I found myself admitting why I was so excited about the meal that had made me feel like I could breath for the first time in weeks. 

Thankfully, I didn’t list out the number of lunches I had made, laundry I had done, rooms that I had picked-up, emails that I had returned, parent-teacher phone calls that I had taken, meals that I had cooked, or dishes that I had cleaned. I didn’t confess that I had begun to resent the sound of “mommy” because all I felt I heard lately was, “Cinderella” which is why I was losing my cool so often and had become this martyr version of myself that I didn’t even recognize, or that everytime someone asked me how my wife was feeling through recovery, I wanted to scream “she’s enjoying every moment of my dream of getting to watch netflix all day with meals served to her and no kids around!” 

Instead, I thought it best to ask for advice, because just that day I had spent an hour in therapy and despite that I felt good after leaving, found my presence at home to have not improved, and started to worry if I could really keep going. Here was the perfect insider to ask, so in the attempt to put my own life jacket on so that I’d be able to save others, I went ahead and asked some exhausted and full of self-pity version of the question no captain of the ship wants to be asked: “How do you do it all?”

As the words were sent though the digital atmosphere, and I was able to breathe again remembering the meal, feeling less guilty with the confession, I found myself stewing in a different kind of guilt. 

This mom I admired and was so fond of, I had had similar conversations when COVID first started about how impossible parenting during a pandemic was. I had applauded her each time she had posted an activity with her boys that seemed just so FUN and intentionally present for kids, in easy that I wasn’t able to when I was overwhelmed with my anxiety of how to make it through another hour before bedtime when our kids seem to be at their peak of exhausted energy and chaos. I wondered why I couldn’t seem to be that kind of present for our kids, and often wondered what it would be like to parent neurotypicals.

This mom had been someone that when I had the chance to take her family photos, I shouted publicly from the rooftops how truly amazing she was in each share of each photograph of her smiling boys that gazed with such love and appreciation up at her. I only knew of her what she shared through her social channels, and what she shared with me in conversation but she was someone I believed deserved every glowing review one could give her.

I believed that because the first time I had met her, was as a brand new mom, in her home, to take newborn photographs of her first son. She had been a friend of my wife, who had seen my work online, and liked it enough to hire me (and pay me her hard earned dollars as a self-taught photographer) to capture her beautiful family in their first days together.

When I took those family photos a better half of a decade later, skills vastly improved from the first go around, she was still holding closely to two of her men that loved her. The difference was, that in our last shoot, the mom stood proudly with two sons, and in the first, she sat with her husband gazing adoringly at their first born. 

This mom that I felt so guilty confessing my selfish reclaim of some “self-care” as I tried to survive what felt like single-parenting and then some, had been doing it for years, not weeks. In that moment of entirely selfish guilt, when I asked her unfairly how she did it every day, she humbly shared some tips and tricks that did make it easier. She said that although she tried to post what was fun or funny about their chaos, they were only moments of the real thing. And that often, she felt everything I was currently feeling. She confessed that on days that the unnecessary hard felt unbearable, she held onto the reminders that her kids think “the world is a really pretty place” as her son had told her one the car that afternoon. 

Her humility in that moment gave me the strength the next day to say all the things to my wife, who is still here, that felt unnecessarily hard since her accident, without concern for how it could hurt her, because I had been walking through the last six weeks bottling it up inside like I was alone, and needed to realize I was not. 

In what was definitely an emotionally charged discussion, she ironically brought up that we were not that family in the photos we hung on our wall, or that I shared in my blog with you. That what we were in currently didn’t feel like those smiles of love and connection and empathy, implying that those felt dishonest and a coverup to what we show to the world.

In that moment I was able to say clearly, what photos like those mean to me, and why photography has been all I can think about for the last two weeks as I try to find something to share about our journey that could mean enough for someone else to be worth a share.

I don’t believe we take the photos to tell a lie to the world. Photographers, like myself, don’t take ten times the amount of snapshots at a photo shoot, to then spend hours culling those images to find just the right ones to hopefully edit (and sometimes even combine) to showcase a lie of smiling faces of children who look up adoringly at their parents with love. The final result of photos that are shared with the world, that we keep with us over time, as we age, change, grow, and sometimes don’t always stay as the same humans in that photography are taken for one reason: to remind us of the truth as to why this life can feel so unnecessarily hard.

As Glennon Doyle has made so catchy (and a mantra I hold tightly to) from her book Untamed, when we choose to: “we can do hard things.”

We take those photos and have a professional spend hours getting a chosen few just right so that we can look at them during the unnecessarily hard to remember why we are here in the first place, and why it’s important to continually remind us that we can do hard things.

We take those photos in the hope that our kids will remember the moments we show on social media and display them on our walls so that they have something to show to their kids in the years when we are gone. 

Through what felt like a never-ending river of tears that had been barged up for six weeks and finally busted through that dam, I told my wife that we take those photos so that when they try to remember this chapter she and I are navigating so poorly, that we figured out how to do it together, and that when you are in a marriage it will not always be easy, and that it will take work and effort, and choosing each other each day to keep going.

We don’t share the hard with the world every day because it’s not what people want to read when they’re scrolling their feeds. They want to think you are who you are in those photos so that there is something to work towards, not just sit in when you have to make the choice to do the hard or not.

But we can, and we are, every day, doing the hard things. 

Focusing on the photos that remind us why it’s all worthwhile, and hoping the work put in now, provides so many moments for photos for decades to come. 

To the mom who shared with me that every moment isn’t fun and intentional, but it is possible and I am able to choose to do the hard things, you are my everyday hero, and your boys are so lucky to have you. 

To all the parents out there, who know what I mean by covid didn’t make parenting hard, remind yourself that what’s hard is when we feel like we are losing ourselves without any time to breathe in between the hard things we choose to do every day.

To the friends and family members who have helped our family over the last six weeks, and particularly to my sister, Granny & Pop-pop, most amazing nanny, and dear C family for continuing to make sure we remember this is temporary - we are forever grateful. 

And to our incredible kids, when you read this one day, remember that your moms love you, and are real people trying their best to get through what can feel unnecessarily hard because you three are worth every second of it. The easiest part of all of this is loving each of you. Don’t believe us? Look at all the photos… xo.

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Fight or Flight

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Fight or Flight

I can’t say that I truly understood the concept of fight or flight, until we met Autism through Luca’s eyes.

However simply explained, the weight and severity of it cannot be captured in words except when experienced first hand.

For many on the spectrum, they experience “fight or flight” as their immediate reaction to anything overwhelming. Whether it be anxiety driven, unexpectedly scared, or passionately emotive (mad, sad, happy, doesn’t matter), similarly to when a switch board blows a fuse, their neuro-wiring lets them know they anticipate they are in danger, and they either turn to fight or flight mode.

For Luca, we’ve learned that when he’s feeling any emotion intensely that’s driven by feeling dishonored, dismissed, or worst, negatively to someone he cares about, he enters fight mode. Our peanut of a six year old, can tackle, tame, or target anyone who he believes to be the cause of this emotive sensory overload. We’ve learned to trim his nails at least once a week, to avoid life long scars, and watch how he intently watches someone with purpose, in the hopes to anticipate anything he may be feeling without the words to express it.

During the last year, we’ve worked closely with his teachers to help him name his feelings, in the hope the words will continue to gain momentum and power so he communicate verbally, instead of physically about how he is feeling. This takes patience and diligence that can feel exhausting, both for those working with him, but particularly for Luca.

We’ve battled his fight mode for nearly 3+ years, and there are days where we can’t imagine what our neighbors must be thinking from the shrieks and cries of whoever he’s come across, because the audio of it must sound awful.

Our poor Luca, afterwards, always feels remorse, confusion, and regret. He is the sweetest boy you could ever meet, and loves so fiercely that you know his wish is not to hurt anyone. It’s simply in the way he is wired, and how he processes his feelings.

As hard as I’m sure that sounds, I can deal with fight mode all day compared to flight mode. I can take the scars and the bruises it takes to keep him safe, and believe working with him continually in the ways that our village is doing so, will give him the muscle memory to change how he processes those feelings before he is old/strong/big enough to cause real harm.

It’s when he is anxious, nervous, or scared, and his default is to hit flight mode, that I’m at a loss.

We are fortunate to live at the end of a very long driveway, one which I’ve had to sprint down too many times to keep him from running into the main road. Although I’ve been a runner for years, there have more times than I like to admit that I worried I wouldn’t catch him, and even though his speed will serve him athletically in whatever sports he finds solace in as he gets older, it can send my anxiety to a place that only a parent’s desperation to be able to protect her children could understand.

There’s something that’s causing him extreme anxiety lately, and on Friday, it took a turn for the worst. It could be that solar eclipse that happened last week, or that yet another mercury retrograde has all of us out of wack until next week. It could be that he’s growing, and feeling everything intensely, or the heat wave last week has him out of sorts. But where he cannot tell us, we’re left observing, trying to narrow down the possibilities, and keep him safe however we can.

Unfortunately, our really loving and well behaved new puppy is teething, and on Thursday had been playing with Luca, but she took it too far, and nipped and scratched at him unexpectedly. He couldn’t anticipate it, which meant he couldn’t prepare for it. He also couldn’t understand that she was playing, and not trying to cause hurt, as all he felt was the actual pain from it.

When the bus doors opened on Friday afternoon, and Jack got off the bus, Luca’s eyes fixated on our puppy who I had brought down the end of the driveway to greet them, and he froze - refusing to exit.

I watched as the cars began to pile up in line, waiting for the bus to remove their stop signs. Strangers who have often honked horns, and vocally expressed their impatient before, continued to join the elongated traffic line.

My anxiety was rising, realizing Luca was not going to get off with out help, so I swept our puppy up in my right arm, and used my left hand to reach into the bus to guide him off.

Once I got him off the bus, I turned to the right to put the puppy down, and I felt Luca’s fingers escape from my grasp. In under 3 seconds, my boy let go of my hand, and jetted into the main road.

Our bus driver, both in the afternoon and the morning, is educated, attuned, and always watching. She hadn’t taken the stop signs down, as she always waits until we are safely a few feet down our driveway and headed in the opposite direction of the traffic.

As Luca’s name escaped my lips in the most desperate of screams, his feet did not stop, so I willed my own to find his pace and stop him.

Tears rolling down my cheeks, I picked up his wriggling and escaping body, and tucked him like a football underneath my arm, my right hand still firmly holding the puppy’s leash, and I dragged them both safely another twenty feet down our driveway.

Once far enough away from the now moving traffic, I let Luca back to his feet, which fiercely moved as soon as they found the ground, towards the direction of our home.

That afternoon, once the boys, I, and both our dogs were settled back safely in the house, I received a call from our amazing bus driver, letting me know she’d plan on coming by the house shortly, to take photos and video of our driveway to use to convince her boss that we could accommodate the small bus’s ability to turn around at the end of, which would allow our boys to be picked up right at our door step.

She did, in fact, come by an hour or so later. She took the photos and the videos, and sent them to her boss. She advocated for our children over the phone with him, refusing to take no for an answer.

This morning, their yellow chariot found its way down our driveway, and my wife and I waited with the twins safely tucked back near our garage doors.

This morning, when our tired Luca (who hasn’t slept well all weekend, still completely anxiety ridden) got on the bus, we could take a few extra minutes to reassure him he was safe and ok while he was strapped in.

This morning, when we waved goodbye as they drove safely down our long driveway toward the street, the tears flowed as quickly as they had on Friday afternoon, but this time in relief, and gratitude.

This morning, we are extra grateful for the incredible humans who play such an important role in our children’s academic success, but often go without acknowledgement or attribution.

Should you ever experience a child on the spectrum in fight or flight mode, I beg you to believe whatever their behavior shows you. If you see them dart toward danger, ignore the instinct that you think yelling their name, or stop/freeze etc, will be enough to stop them. If they move, you move, period. It’s a simple and unbelievable as that.

I cannot imagine what could have happened on Friday afternoon if someone other than a human like Ms. N. had been driving, who didn’t know the severity of Luca’s fear, and believed the danger to be real until safely down our driveway.

Ms. N, Ms. K, and Ms. D. - you are our heroes. We are truly indebted. Thank you.

To all the incredible humans who go above and beyond to love children who cross their paths for whatever reason, as if they were their own, you deserve every acknowledgement out there.

To all the parents raising littles that experience fight or flight like we are, I pray your feet are swift, and safety is in your favor, like it has been for ours. We see you. You are not alone. Xo

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10 Things We Wish You Knew When We Tell You Our Child Has Autism

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10 Things We Wish You Knew When We Tell You Our Child Has Autism

There’s this look that people get when you tell them your child is on the spectrum.

This pity/sympathy look (depending on the authenticity of the heart of the human you are telling) that always shows up the second that label is attached to the ones you are responsible for.

In fairness… It's a look that my wife and I both felt when we were told our twins were on the spectrum.

It’s a look that I believe comes from a misunderstanding of what autism actually is, because despite the fact that it's held a significant definition in our world for the last four years, it’s not one that we had any experience with before we met it face-to-face, times two.

So in the hopes that the following may help you, dear reader, the next time you hear a certain label of diagnosis, here are the 10 things we wish you knew when we tell you that our child has autism…

  1. Autism is not the worst thing in the world. Autism does not mean our child is dying. Please save the gravity of that look for those who are bearing tragic diagnosis’ and dealing with children who are facing far more severe labels like cancer, and leukemia. 

  2. Autism is not just one thing… Autism is a spectrum - an incredibly large and unique and diverse spectrum that can mean a million different things for each and every child. No two children on the spectrum are exactly alike, just like no two humans out there are, so please avoid assumptions and classifications that you’ve typically jumped to beforehand.

  3. Autism is not an epidemic. It did not just show up over the last two decades. Yes, maybe the research and resources made available because of that research have been more prominent over the last two decades, but it did not just show up. It’s been studied for more than 80 years, and the results of that research are merely starting to make a notable difference for those with the diagnosis. 

  4. Autism is not because of how I, or my wife, have parented our children. In the 1950’s, when society got many things wrong, might I add, they had the audacity to propose the “refrigerator mother hypothesis” suggesting that autism is caused by mothers who weren't “emotionally warm.”  I promise you that our children have been loved, with the most “emotionally warm” hearts, not by just one - but TWO mothers, since before they were even conceived. 

  5. Autism does not mean our children are not engaging, loving, or able to connect with others. Yes, autism has been defined as a group of developmental disabilities that can cause significant social, communication and behavioral challenges - but it does not mean that it always does, has, or will for every child on the spectrum. Many children on the spectrum are the sweetest, most loving, and engaging with those who they trust, feel safe with, and let into their world. While we are so often working with those on the spectrum on how to form relationships with those outside the spectrum, we should be spending equal amounts of time encouraging those not on the spectrum to work on forming relationships with children like ours. 

  6. Autism does not mean a lack of or inability to have empathy. In fact, those on the spectrum experience extreme empathy. Our son can often feel crippled with empathy when he bears witness to someone he cares about being harmed in anyway, even if only emotionally. 

  7. Autism does not mean that someone is incapable, has a low IQ and/or significant learning delays. Although for some there are learning delays, and lower IQs, many on the spectrum are actually brilliant. But on the flip side, Autism does not mean that someone has a special gift either. Yes, many on the spectrum, because they are differently wired, have a special skill or ability that makes them a savant in a certain area of interest, but this is not necessarily true for all on the spectrum.

  8. Autism does not always appear in physical stims, or heightened aggression. Yes, although some children on the spectrum do indeed physically stim and display heightened aggression, where others can go through what we’ve discovered is more of an internal stimming where their emotions are what run rampant versus their physicalities, and then some don’t experience it at all. 

  9. Autism can not be outgrown. Autism is not something that a child is diagnosed with as a child, that the outgrow like an allergy or a bad habit. As children are worked with at a young age, because of the incredible resources out there for those with the diagnosis, they develop the strategies to adapt as expected in social and educational settings. They are taught about their place on the spectrum, and worked closely with to help them build their awareness around where their strengths are they can rely on, and the areas in which they will need to apply extra energy throughout life so that those delays/deficits do not keep them from finding success.

  10. Autism is rarely found in girls. Statistically, 1 in 68 school children are on the spectrum, but 4 out of every 5 of those are boys. It’s not that autism is rarely found in girls, it’s rarely diagnosed because it often goes undetected. For girls on the spectrum, it’s found to be an internal battle, versus the external one for the male counterparts. We are taught from a young age about the importance of “being a good girl” and “acting like a lady” along with so many other scripts that are fed to females in ways that males are not. If the awareness and education of what autism can look like internally, throughout the spectrum, was taught, but also supported and understood, perhaps girls would feel comfortable sharing how they were actually feeling, thinking, and coping from a young age, where their voice would be allowed and heard. If this social shift were to occur, I feel in heart that those numbers of 1 in 68 would not only shift, but the 4 out of 5 would as well.

I find it fascinating that we create our first impressions about someone within the first ten seconds of meeting them, but it can take weeks, months and even years of time to reshape how that initial feeling created so quickly. 

It is my hope that for those who don’t have experience with autism, sharing our story helps to shift the standard information opinions are fed with, versus some of the incorrect stereotypes that can provide such negative connotations. 

Because the thing is… we don’t know what we don’t know. None of us do.

I know we didn’t the first time around, and it took months with it staring us in the face day in and day out to see what we were missing. I’d give anything to get that time back.

So maybe, just maybe, this can help you feel more informed the next time you hear about someone with the diagnosis of autism. 

Because there is a lot of amazingness that can be missed if you’re stuck in an uninformed decision you made in 10 seconds, during the year it could take you to learn otherwise.

XO

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