It still haunts me… the moment when our son ran into the house, tears streaming down his face, screaming as his scratched at his face furiously. It paralyzed me. I found a way to move toward him and try to comfort him, but it required following him for a matter of 10 minutes trying to calm him down.

I had watched the scene that sent him spiraling before he entered the house. The neighbors had a small fire going, about 15 to 20 feet from our yard. Although Luca stood in his “trees” which are really just large weeds that have grown to create this super cool path for the kids to play in, I thought he was a safe enough distance. The wind that day, proved me so very wrong. He watched the fire intently, trying to understand it, listening to it crackle. But then a large gust of wind took the smoke at him, and as he watched it like a rushing wave on the sea shore, it’s current taking him under with out warning, the smoke attacked his small body, with sensory over load. He couldn’t breath, and you could tell it stung his eyes, as he raced inside in a panic.

I wet a facecloth and held it over his tear stained face to try to stop the burning. I sang quietly and held him, rocking back and forth, hoping to calm him down. My wife was outside mowing the lawn, some where in the front where I couldn’t reach her. I wasn’t sure if he was allergic to the smoke or whatever was burning, or if he was simply scared and just couldn’t tell me.

That’s one of the hardest challenges we face, while Luca is still finding his words. He isn’t able to communicate what he needs as well as Jack, and it requires an elimination game of sorts. As I was parenting solo, I did the only thing I could think of to find answers that might help. I hopped on Facebook, posted about the situation, and hoped someone in my network could give me the words to explain how he was feeling when Luca couldn’t. There was instant support and things to consider, and it helped me triage faster than I ever expected.

Luca calmed down, his eyes relaxed and the puffiness and redness faded. He drank water and calmed his body on the couch. The tenseness in his muscles subsided, but the fear in his face remained. We kept a close eye on him all night, as he flinched at certain sounds, his eyes always searching the outside with caution, clearly traumatized.

I think, as parents, we’re always watching out for what could potentially harm them, trying to either shield as best we can, or hope we’ve given them the tools to face it head on, feeling prepared and capable. One of the most challenging parts of Autism with littles, when they have a sensory processing disorder, is that many of the things that could trigger them are foreign to us parents. The way they also process trauma, without the ability to talk through it, can seem equally foreign.

Luca stayed inside for three weeks. Our boy, who I imagined living in the mountains one day, due to his need to be in free open space as often as possible, had now trapped himself in the walls of his home, rushing to close any door when open, and crying in fear anytime you asked if he wanted to go outside. He would watch from the windows for any glimpse of smoke, and studying our neighbor has he continued to chop wood in the same place he had for months. About a week after the experience, he had some how found a video on youtube of a crackling fire, and had started to play it repeatedly for comfort. I kept expecting enough time to pass where he would eventually just go outside. But after three weeks, I was starting to get really worried.

I couldn’t understand it. I couldn’t find a way to help him. I asked his teachers for help, and had even reached out to a friend who is a psychiatrist for a referral to someone local who could help us.

We took a chance of bringing him to an open field with his siblings, as I had hoped to take their annual photo with the apple blossoms. Although we weren’t able to get any image to be compiled in photoshop of the three kids, we were able to get Luca to run outside again, after parking in two different areas before he was interested in exiting the car. His feet hit the ground, the sun shined on his face, and you could see his body breath a sigh of relief. It was such a win for us. We let him run until exhausted, packing the kids back in the car with renewed hope.

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We had opened the pool the last week of April, but decided to turn the heater on earlier than planned, just to see if he would go through our backyard to get to it. I went swimming first, sending him a video through my wife who was inside with him. He giggled, but still refused to go outside. The second day, we decided to just bring him out to the pool. My wife carried him, reassuring him he was safe, until he was in the fenced in area with 30,000 gallons of heated delightful water. That boy’s smile lit up ear to ear, he stripped out of his clothes, asked for his puddle jumpers, and jumped in with glee. It’s been 5 days now, and there hasn’t been one he hasn’t spent hours swimming.

The thing is, unless he’s swimming, he still won’t go outside. I still can’t understand it. A swing set that was donated by another family, and stained by my wife’s team, is sitting in our yard. I’ve worked, with the help of an amazing friend, to clear the area, removing hundreds of large obnoxious weeds, and level the ground. I enlisted my sister to help me pick up all the large, heavy, half-assembled pieces from my wife’s shop when the stain was dry, to get them to our back yard. (We did have to ask for muscles outside our own to get two crazy pieces- thank you friends who lifted those!) I even have 50ft of turf rolled beside it, ready to be laid out. Today I’ll spread a few yards of loam to finally level it, roll the turf out and hope we can start building the swing set this afternoon.

What worries me is I don’t even know if that will be enough to get him to play outside again. And what if it isn’t?

As a parent, I feel like I ask myself what-if’s so often, I miss being present, or at least as present as I want to be. I’m so worried about the potential, that I forget to live in the what is. I feel like lately, I’m always worried about what I can’t control, and now that I’ve found myself in a situation with real trauma, it’s testing my ability to show up and be the parent our child needs.

I’m working every possible answer I can control, by giving him highly preferred tasks in the hopes he can rebuild his muscle memory of feeling safe outside. If that doesn’t work, we’ll most likely need professional help, which may not be the easiest thing to obtain during these crazy pandemic times. Anything to shape the fears he has of going outside to be saved as a single memory, not the current reality of what being outside really is.

If you have any ideas, please share. I don’t typically ask questions here, but as I’ve connected with so many incredible parents who have walked in these shoes, or are on the journey as we speak, as well as phenomenal teens and young adults with autism, I am hoping someone might have something I haven’t thought of. Some way to understand what may click for him and make him feel safe again. Because if this swing set doesn’t work, I’m not sure what to do next. Thanks in advance. XO

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