Tuesday, January 06, 2009

All We Ask is a Little Understanding

Transitions are hard for Alex. He needs fair warning if we are to leave the house, if it's time to take down the Christmas tree, or if it's almost time to turn off the movie and take a bath. Autistic children prefer order and routine. They don't like you to spring a new plan on them without plenty of advance notice. And for an autistic child of divorce, the change in households, routine, expectations, and rules can be terribly disorienting.

Alex spends every other weekend with his mother in Indianapolis (and usually one night of that with her parents in town) and those Sunday nights when he comes home can be so frustrating for him. Last Sunday evening, he was a little fired up when he came home from his visit so I put "Bee Movie" in the DVD player in his room so that he could watch and just chill out for the 30 minutes before bed which he watched for a bit before asking for Tim. I explained and signed to him that Tim was at work but that we could call him on the phone so Alex could talk to him. While the phone was ringing, Alex signed "boat" (meaning that he wanted to watch PT109). We only have that movie on the DVD hard drive located out in the living room where Mac was reading and it was only 10 minutes before bed, so I told Alex that we could not watch it tonight but that we could watch it tomorrow. This information was more than he could handle and his little mouth opened up and he closed his eyes and just started bawling. (Of course at this moment, Tim answered the phone and wondered what the hell was going on. I quickly explained and told him we would have to call him back.) Alex came to me and put his arms around me, soaking my shoulder with his ginormous crocodile tears and I took him to his room and lay down with him, chattering all the while, trying to take his mind off of his Enormous Sad. I ended up the speaking voice for Mr. Crabs - a half French, half Spanish accent - and within 5 minutes he had forgotten all about his boat movie disappointment and was cracking up at The Silly. He talked to Tim for a few minutes before nearly passing out from exhaustion.

Last night was a similar scenario. He was still transitioning from his mom's house, add in the transition from a 2 week break, and the poor boy spent the hours between school and bed just moments away from tears and finally - I don't even remember what it was - but something tipped him just over the edge. Tim was home and took him to lie down at which point Alex fell asleep almost immediately. The first day back at school wore him out.

I hate that he has to deal with this change every 2 weeks. I hate the enormous disappointment that comes from not being able to expect the same rules and routine in each household he frequents. If all 3 households could work together to have and enforce the same rules, this problem would be lessened, but I think it's too much to ask 2 sets of parents and 1 set of grandparents to agree on what the rules are and how they will be enforced. I tell myself that on some level the frequent transition is good for him - it keeps him from becoming too much of a homebody keeping the same repetitive routine. But on nights like Sunday and Monday, we want to never let him leave our sight again. We want to form a protective cocoon around him and let him know exactly what he can expect from one moment to the next. He was better tonight. There wasn't a single tear and he was engaged and playing with Mackenzie and I.

While at my daily de-briefing with his teacher this afternoon, she said that Alex had been experiencing some behaviors (a few tears, slight aggression) but she just thought that it was just a "transition thing" unlike his last teacher, who would have put him in an extended time out, perpetuating the behaviors. We love his new teacher. She is smart and she understands Alex.

7 comments:

bethany actually said...

I'm so thankful Alex has so many people in his life who love him and want the best for him!

Annie, The Evil Queen said...

I think you are probably right that some forced transitions are good for him. As much as you guys would love to cocoon him from teh crazy world, that world is always out there. The best part is that he knows he has a safe haven with you. I'm so glad he's with a teacher now that is looking at the situation and not just the behaviors. All of this love and good will are what will keep him in the right track.

Tim & Paige said...

And drugs. Don't forget the drugs...

(Except for the new one, which we fear may be making him more aggressive. Ugh.)

sarah doow said...

Absolutely everything that Annie said.
Plus a comment along the lines of "yay for good drugs" so that I beat her and am perfect.

Anything is Possible said...

Tim, Paige and Alex- I can only slightly relate. Bug isn't autistic but has been termed 'high spirited' by his dogger (doctor), add in apraxia (frustrating speech issues for both of us) and there we are. He used to throw tantrums every time we had to transition to something new; going from play time to nap time or leaving the house for any period of time. We do the same thing you guys do for Alex. Lots of explaining and preparing him for the transition and we even do some sign language to help with the speech problems. I can't imagine tossing in two other homes with different rules and schedules. Thank goodness he has you and Tim in his life to pave the way! We try to surround Bug with people who 'understand' him instead of labeling him a wild child (or worse). It's not just black and white is it??? Why can't everyone else see that?

Anonymous said...

You and Tim rock as parents. Amazing the path all of you had to take to find each other, but it was the right one in order to create this awesome family.

Anonymous said...

Rach - We've wanted to get Alex a t-shirt for him to wear in public that says, "I'm Autistic. Deal with it."

But you're right. It's not that easy. Tim's even had family members ask if can't control Alex. Um....no, but be my guest if you think you can do a better job!

I firmly believe that special children go to those who can love them best and Bug is so lucky to have landed in your lives.

Thank you, Bec. And AAAAA-MEN