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parentship

Next Mother’s Day

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Next Mother’s Day

Next year, for Mother’s Day, my kids will sleep in, letting us sleep in, and when they finally get up, will play together nicely, working extra hard for calm hands and quiet voices because they know it’s their moms’ day. They will take baths after breakfast, and get dressed in whatever matching spring outfits I found at Jcrew weeks earlier, so that I can take their annual photo in the Apple Orchard where the blossoms that have just begun to bloom make the perfect setting of white gorgeousness.

Next year, for Mother’s Day, when we get back from taking photos, we will put tables out on the lawn, decorated with gorgeous colored clothes, and have flowers everywhere. The kids will have made cards and gifts, and will be on their very best behavior, playing in the yard while we set up for our guests.

Next year, for Mother’s Day, I want to host a big brunch outside in our back yard. I want my mom to drive up and feel spoiled for making the trip, because all her children and grand babies are there to be with her. And when she and my mother-in-law sit together, laughing and watching their grand babies shower them with love, they will get along like old friends, without any awkward conversations or family drama that holiday gatherings typically endure, because we will all just be grateful to be together.

Next year, for Mother’s Day, we will grill deliciously marinated meats, paired with roasted vegetables, and pasta salads. We will make fruity drinks, and have an array of desserts that inevitably the kids will want to eat before dinner, and because it’s a happy day of celebration- we will let them. We will eat too much, take a break, and then eat again, while still having more than enough tasty treats to send each of my siblings home with some for the next day.

Next year, for Mother’s Day, I will sit on my deck after an amazing meal, and watch those same siblings teach their niece and nephews how to play croquet, and bocce in the yard, making memories that will last the lifetime of my children until they are old enough, and fortunate enough, to have littles of their own to teach as well. 

Next year, for Mother’s Day, after the day is done, and the kids have been bathed and put to bed, I want to be able to give my wife a card that enclosed in it, tells her I have booked us a weekend away, where there are no children, and we can just be us for a night again.

This year, for Mother’s Day, it will feel like every other day lately, and that’s OK. We will laze in our pajamas during the morning, and only change into clothes (or a clean set of pajamas-don’t judge) when we are ready. As soon as Luca finally goes back to bed, since he has been up since 2am, I will too, and we will both rest our bodies for a couple of hours before officially starting the day.

This year, for Mother’s Day, we will get take-out from our favorite local breakfast place, and our pup, Piper, and I will enjoy the ten minutes of silence the car ride there takes us, while we wait for curbside pick-up, without anyone else in the car. It’s the only quiet we find since schools closed and the house no longer holds that solace for either of us.

This year, for Mother’s Day, my siblings and I will hop on a Zoom Call with my mother, to send her our love virtually, and safely, in this new normal, because she is of the at risk, who has done everything she possibly can to stay safe during this pandemic. As a breast cancer survivor, and someone who knows first hand what it means to fight for her life, she values every day since, and is taking every precaution to not have to fight again for a very long time.

This year, for Mother’s Day, the second virtual FaceTime call we will make will be to my father. First, to wish my step-mom a Happy Mother’s Day, but second, to see how he is doing on his the first one without his mom, who we lost to this pandemic less than a month ago.

This year, for Mother’s Day, as the day goes on, we will watch movies, and play indoors, because oddly enough, it snowed yesterday, and not conducive for yard games, or a photoshoot. We will most likely have to make up some of the school work we have missed this week, because sleepless nights with autism have made it hard to do much more than survive- working to keep all the kids happy, and safe from aggressive behaviors, let alone meet the homeschool requirements.

This year, for Mother’s Day, we will eat something from the crock pot or air fryer, or some sheet pan recipe, like we do on most days during quarantine when it’s not warm enough to grill. If we take a ride anywhere for take-out or drive-thru, we will make sure to bring happy Mother’s Day cards with the kids scribble drawings on them, to give to any mothers working on a day they should be home with their families, giving them with extra heartfelt thanks for everything they are doing to make sure our families can get what we need. Particularly because like many kids with autism, there are days our twins rely on nuggets and a happy meal to get any protein for full bellies. 

This year, for Mother’s Day, when my in-laws makes it over for dinner, I will have a glass of Chardonnay waiting for Granny, and two open arms for a hug, because as she is in our immediate circle, and someone we see every day helping with child care, she is someone we do not have to social distance from, and such an important lifeline I will be grateful to celebrate the important day with. We will makes sure to overly thank both her, and Pop-Pop, because without them during this pandemic, I am not sure we would be making it through with the grace and patience they make possible through their support.

This year, for Mother’s Day, when the kids are bathed and finally in bed, I will give my wife a hand-picked card, with as much love that I can write in it, telling her that whenever this is over, we will get time for us again. With the card will be boxes of her favorite movie candy, and an invitation for date night, where we rent a movie and put away our phones for the duration of it, pretending for two hours that no one needs us so we can just enjoy each other.

Mama, if you are like us, and preparing to spend this Mother’s Day in an unusual way, I hope my dreams of next year’s Mother’s Day help to inspire you to think of yours, in any of the moments when this years don’t feel like enough. Because there will be next year if we all do what we can to stay safe, continue to social distance, wash hands, and slow the curve.

And to all the incredible mamas who have to work this year, whether it be on the front lines in our hospitals and ERs, or as first-responders, and fire and police woman... to all the incredible mamas who are essential workers, and required to work in order to get that paycheck to feed their families, as delivery workers, mail service carriers, grocery store employees, pharmacy staff, gas station employees, and restaurant employees- thank you. THANK YOU from the bottom of our hearts for all that you do. Happy Mother’s Day to all the mamas out there- whether you birthed your children, or earned the title with every diaper change, life lesson taught, tear-stained cheek wiped, and open-armed hug- if you hold the title and meaning for someone today- may your day be filled with as much love as you have given to those who made you a mama. Until next year... XO

PS: I’d be remiss if I didn’t send a special Happy Mother’s Day to two additional women who shaped my life in ways that are instrumental to my ability to be a present, happy, and respectful mother. To Ma, up in heaven, who always gave me a home away from home, without question or expectation, I hope one day to have the house all my children’s friends want to be at every weekend. And to Anna, who continues to teach me about the mother I want to be, I’m so grateful to be able to ask the question: what would Anna do, and instinctually know the answer.

And to my love, my children’s Mama, and to the only reason I knew I could be a mom in the first place, because you promised to always be by my side… our parentship is the thing I will always be most proud of - despite that COVID19 is challenging it on a regular basis, forcing us to grow and be better every hour of every day for our children. Thank you for helping to leave a legacy where the best is still yet to come. Happy Mother’s Day. xo

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Parentship

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Parentship

A few weeks back, on maybe day two of no school, life is over/*cough*/on pause, my wife had come home from work later than usual, after the first of many long days of adjustment for our new normal at home.

She was fried. As a small business owner, she hadn’t slept much, as her brain was feverishly trying to strategically rearrange the life of her business to make sure her team was protected, could continue to provide for their families from their Pro Image livelihood, and that what she built over the last two decades could survive this. She didn’t have capacity for much else by the time she made it home that night. But I didn’t have capacity for much patience or grace, because every ounce of it I had left had been spent trying to reassure our children things were fine, and the lives they just lost wouldn’t be gone forever. 

Inevitably, our lack of capacity that night lead to a heated conversation, and going to bed angry. Something we work really hard to not do. But the next day, when some of the feelings had settled, we took a few minutes to sit in the uncomfortable, and be honest about how we were feeling. She shared how scared she was for her team, her company, and how to provide for us, and I shared how for the first time in a long time, I felt invisible. That because all her capacity was being spent on her team and her clients, she had none left to see us, her family. That I was looking at really long and hard days ahead with three young children, two of which needed skills and structure that I didn’t know if I was capable of, that they were used to getting for 6 hours a day, that I was pretty sure I was going to fail miserably at. If the one person I chose to be my partner couldn’t find space to see me, I was worried I wouldn’t matter. She shared that she had a team of 10+ who could become invisible if she didn’t have space to think about them, and that if the team failed, she couldn’t provide for our family either.

We sat in that uncomfortable for a good 45 minutes. There were tears from both of us, but once we were completely honest, we were able to talk through a plan that got us both to what we needed. One that could be flexible and could pivot as needed. We understood that with only so much capacity at this time, and with both the business and our family having needs that had us at capacity level, we would need to own our roles but make sure to leave room for whatever else might come up by relying on open communication with each other on what we could handle, and when we needed help. 

That plan has been working pretty well for the last four or five weeks. But this week, after two really long sleepless nights with autism, I failed at holding up my end of the deal yesterday. The boys schedules are totally off, so emotions are high, bodies can’t stay calm, hands are not staying to themselves, and they are super quick and short to react. My reactions weren’t as patient or kind as they needed to be yesterday either. My wife had to call me out twice on the way I responded to Jack.

When she had had enough, she finally looked at me and said “what do you need?” I responded defensively, because I knew my actions weren’t attractive- but I was TIRED. She stayed patient, and asked me again- “what do you need?” After a minute, I cried. I was so tired. At 4am that morning, while Luca and Jack were up, I had been working on quotes we didn’t finish the night before for her work, so that we could keep up with making sure the team’s schedule was full. I had been patient and played with the boys at 5am, even though I just wanted to nap on the couch. And when Luca threw all of his toys at me, including a heavy-duty microwave, I was so tired I didn’t pay attention to my surroundings when I chased after him before he could throw something at Jack- I ran into the baby gate, scoring a solid bruise that still hurts. I cried because even though I napped for an hour while Alli took her morning nap, it wasn’t enough. I cried because I knew I wasn’t holding up my end of the bargain. I wasn’t proud of my behavior either, and was ashamed my wife had to call me out.

She looked at me and said, “this isn’t you, or the parent you want to be, so you need to tell me what you need, or snap out of it.” 

I could have fought back. I could have been nasty, but weeks before I promised to be honest, so I simply said “I am tired”.

She goes, “Ok, to to bed. I will put Jack to sleep by myself” as it was after 8pm and both Luca and Alex were already asleep.

I don’t ever not put the kids to bed. Jack usually needs to hold my hand to fall asleep, and ridiculously, it’s my 2 minutes with him at the end of the day that feels worth all his emotional roller coasters that come before it.

But I had just told my wife what I needed, and I needed to listen to myself, and let her show up while she was willing to.

So I went to bed.

And the kids slept through. Jack got up at 4:30 am, but he was willing to play in his fort (our master closet - don’t judge- it gives me an extra 45 minutes later to snooze which I NEVER get so I am letting it work as long as it can). 

I slept from 8:30pm, woke up at 1:30am to find everyone was sleeping so I went back to it, until 4:30am and didn’t get out of bed until 5:15am. 

I am two cappuccinos in as I sit in the playroom and type this up on my phone watching Alex and Jack play with legos at 6:30am. My wife is still asleep, and Luca is hanging under his sensory sheet, content enough he isn’t quite ready to get up yet.

I share this in case anyone else is struggling as a parent navigating the new normal, not just with their kids, but with their relationship as well.

Our parentship, aka parent-relationship, is one we put a lot of effort into. But while pregnant with the twins, we agreed to make sure she and I, outside of being just parents, always came first. If we couldn’t take care of each other, how could we possibly take care of our kids effectively. 

Sitting in the uncomfortable was a theme my therapist encouraged, that scared the crap out me. She said that if I always thought the worst was going to happen, I needed to find a way to let the facts debunk my fears. By sitting in the uncomfortable, and doing the work to be honest about how I was feeling in a situation and let others do so as well, I would learn that the worst that could happen, wasn’t really the natural outcome, slowly helping to build muscle memory in facing uncomfortable situations for what they are - momentarily decisions that need to be made, not monumental in size or life altering. 

As you face another week of this pandemic, ready to parent, teach, show up as a spouse, and get some work done to pay the bills on top of it, I just want to say- you can do this. You CAN do this. It looks to be that the country will slowly open up again, and although the newest form of normal may still not be the totally preferred one, hopefully it will continue to provide options that make things better able to meet everyone’s needs. 

If you find any of this helpful, what has worked for me is remembering to be present in our parentship, keeping open lines of communication, asking each other for what we need, and letting my partner show up when I ask her to. Nothing about the last couple of months has been normal and we have all had to adjust in some way. If you can sit in the uncomfortable long enough to find what’s comfortable, maybe the solution can be something you never knew you needed, but gets you to be better than you knew possible before.

XO

Oh and PS: if anyone has any tactics on getting a certain 4 year-old to have a calm body and a quiet voice- I am all ears! My sanity is at stake. Thanks in advance.

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When your kids don't feel well...

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When your kids don't feel well...

One of the hardest things I have found through this journey, is watching one of our children in pain while feeling helpless to figure out how to help.

Luca woke up last night after being asleep for about an hour - screaming in pain, and it wasn’t until after five or six very long minutes of our trying to get him to tell us what was wrong, trying to give him words like “it hurts” or “owie” to differentiate if he woke up with a nightmare or if he was in excruciating pain; showing him his “what hurts picture chart”, begging he show us what hurts, to simply work to calm him down enough that his actions began to focus on his ear, tugging and pulling and screaming as he refused to let me let him go. 

Luca was so upset but refused to take pain medication, so we did what tends to happen when the twins are in that much pain- a Tylenol suppository- which is equally awful for both the child receiving it and the parent providing it.

After about ten minutes, the medicine kicked in and his shrieks became cries, that began to subside to whimpers. We held him as long as he needed until he was ready to go back to bed, truly exhausted but still in steady pain.

Thinking our boy would finally be ready to rest, we went back to bed, only to hear his level 10 pain screams again. We took him from his room so he would not wake his brother and walked him around the kitchen, holding him close and trying to comfort him while we checked with our doctor. After being advised to try Motrin- which inconveniently does not come in a suppository, we had to hold him tight and work to get him to take the Motrin (majority of which he spit all over us). 

This is when his fight/flight mentality kicked in, and he ran for the basement door to leave the house. After trying to distract him in numerous ways, and calm him down so that he wouldn’t wake his siblings, I decided to put him in the car and drive towards the ER in case he couldn’t calm down. I grabbed warm clothes, socks and shoes, and both our jackets, and we headed out the door.

Two minutes in the car he was at peace- still holding his ear, but the movement and being strapped in tightly in his car seat, upright where the pressure would subside. 

Great, I thought, some peace for the poor kid. But then, as I was driving with instrumental pop on Spotify to sooth him, I realized that it was nearly 10:30pm at night… and I was tired. I don’t mean the kind of tired where you’re annoyed to still be up… I mean the kind of tired that was dangerous to be driving. So I text my wife and said I was going to bring him back. He was content after all, right? 

The moment we got back to the house and I brought him upstairs, hoping we could cuddle together to a movie until he passed out, he started screaming again. Loudly! I tried bringing him to my bed, where he refused to stay, clearly determined to wake the whole house up. I ended up snapping at my wife when she asked why I didn’t just bring him to the ER like we planned- because she was saying it from her position tucked in bed where she’d been sleeping while I had worried about driving off the road with our son in the back of the car. 

When Luca tried to escape again, still screaming, I realized we very well may need to be in the ER all night. So I grabbed our things again, put him back in the car, and headed to the hospital. About 15 minutes into the drive, he began to fall asleep. I thought about the ER during flu season, and how many joked the hospital I was headed to was where people went to die. I thought about the hospital bill that would come from a potentially long evening with a screaming autistic child where I could be told there was nothing they could do, while exposing Luca to something much worse. So I decided to take a left and head home instead of continuing on to the destination. I got home and it was just before midnight, but this time Luca was so exhausted he let me cuddle him in the guest room until he passed out. 

I crawled back into my bed after midnight, drifted off to sleep, and felt a jolt a few hours later when Jack crawled into bed with us at 4:30am. Oh the #sleeplessnights of parenting children with autism. You’ll hear so much in regards to the lack of sleep I’ve gotten since pregnant with the twins, which will better support the fact that the one blessing in disguise last night was that Jack actually slept through the night so that I wasn’t juggling two sleepless toddlers. There truly is always something to be grateful for if you can keep the right perspective. 

I brought Luca in to the doctor today expecting without a doubt in my mind that he would have a nasty ear infection. But after a quick examination from the best doctor I know, she declared his #eartubes were in tact and clear, there was a little drainage, but otherwise, he would persevere. The direction was to try Flonase and continue with the tylenol/motrin. Although I did not get the diagnosis that would give him a shot of antibiotics and magically cure everything for him, I did watch Luca get on the scale by himself, and then ask the nurse to check his height but standing under the measuring tape anxiously looking up at her; I listed to him say hello to the doctor, and let her listen to his heart beat without fuss; and I watched him proudly grab my hand when it was time to leave and say “see you soon.” All important moments that didn’t happen at our last visit less than 3 months ago.

And yet, I sit here as I type this, and I anxiously await the day that Luca can say to me, “Mommy, my ear really hurts”, or “yes, the medicine helped”, or even, “I’m so sad”. I know for so many parents of amazing nonverbal children, they’ve navigated the other opportunities for communicating with their children beautifully, and this is an area in which I should find patience and excitement for those days, versus the anxious frustration I feel in the moments when I cannot help my son. But I am human, and I am forever grateful to have a partner in this #parentship (parent partnership), so that I do not have to navigate it alone. 

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