Essays

The 439 Stages of Grief

by Tim on January 6, 2009

[Note from me: This is another draft installment of that collection of essays and reflections that I hope to someday compile into a book. The first one I posted was "What if he never talks?", though I plan for other posts here to someday appear in that collection too. As always, comments are welcome.]

The 439 Stages of Grief

Pretty much every parent who has ‘gotten the diagnosis’ goes through grief, even if they expected to hear the word ‘autism’. We have in our minds from the moment our children are born ideas and images of how we see the story of their lives unfolding. Sitting in a chair and hearing that word used for the first time about our child wasn’t part of that.

Every parent’s story begins with imagining first smiles and first steps and first words. We saw ourselves playing catch with them in the yard. We watched them chase with the other kids in the neighborhood. We saw them going to their first day at school. We heard our cheers mixing with the other parents’ as our children ran down the sports fields after school.

They went to middle school; they started having crushes and eventually – God forbid – their first girlfriends or boyfriends. They kept growing into tweens and teens. They learned to drive and went to prom and graduated, in our dreams always with honors as the valedictorian.

They’d leave home, and already we felt sad even with that still two decades away. They went to a top college and earned their degree with distinction, of course. They went on for more school or got an important job and made a lot of money, striking out on their own in this great big world.

We hoped they would find someone perfect for them who loved them and whom they loved equally in return. If they so chose, we hoped they’d bring children – our grandchildren – into the world. And we watched the dreams and the stories continue with our next generation, as they have for millennia before us and as they will for all our days on this world.

Almost fundamental to being a parent is our desire for our children to be free of all barriers to their potential so that even the sky itself isn’t a limit. We want the fairy tale for them. When we heard the word ‘autism’, that sky, and the story, fell in a blinding flash of fire, leaving only a blank page set against an empty horizon.

But this isn’t how the story really ends; it’s how a new one begins. The blank page waits for us to choose how to write our true story. But those of us who got the diagnosis know that at the beginning you cannot conceive of a single word to write because you just watched the whole thing burn up in front of you. You’re still holding the ashes of everything you thought was going to happen.

This is grief, pure and simple. You will have to sit with these fistfuls of ashes and this book full of blank pages for as long as it takes to grieve. You will let everything fall to the ground and sit in these ashes and feel like the world may end. You will be angry at everything and nothing. You will look for people to blame; you will look for anything at all to blame; you will blame yourself. You will promise anything, do anything, bargain with anyone to find a way to get your child – and yourself – out of this. You will just sit motionless on the floor and cry yourself down into a bottomless lake.

And at some point, you will come to a place where you have to decide what you’re going to do. You will stare down endless, featureless paths and have to decide which to take without having any idea what’s down them. You can keep bargaining and railing against the world and giving yourself and your child completely over to the next person who says they can help without caring how crazy they might be. You can drive yourself mad with guilt.

Or you can willingly choose to turn yourself directly into the fury of the storm, grit your teeth, and take one, single, determined step forward. You can sweep your arm behind you, cradle your child behind your leg, and block the wind for this perfect little child you love more than anything in this world.

And this is the way it begins for all of us, with one, single, determined step.

[click to continue…]

{ 7 comments }

“What if he never talks?”

by Tim on December 5, 2008

[Note from me: I'm slowly writing a collection of essays and reflections that I hope to someday compile into a book. Over the last however long it's been, I've posted on this blog a few drafts of pieces I'm considering including in the book without actually calling any attention to them, but this time I will. This is a first, rough draft of one I wrote a few weeks ago. Feel free to comment, praise, pan, etc. My plan is at some point - hopefully early next year - to spin these off into a new web site, which will focus on the 'collection-in-progress' (still feels weird thinking of it as a 'book'). Anyway, more on that later. On with the show.]

“What if he never talks?”

This is a question that for a long time we could not bring ourselves to ponder, but it is one that used to follow us everywhere we went. J-Man could do a syllable here and a syllable there, at least enough for us to think he would really talk someday. But as he got older and his peers’ vocabulary exploded, we became disheartened. Then when children many months younger than him started really talking, we became depressed and often despaired.

The worst was seeing toddlers saying “I love you” to their mommies and daddies. We’ve never doubted that J-Man has always loved us without condition. But just as parents need to say it to each other every day, we’d love to hear our kid say it to us too. We became jealous of the other parents. We’d close our eyes and imagine what his sweet little voice would sound like if he could say it to us. And all of our imaginings left us in tears.

For months, everything was “kuh-kuh”, but at least those things had a name. Eventually there came “muh” and “nuh” and a few more. He made up his own versions of one or two-syllable words and we came to understand the piecemeal language he had created for himself. Near age three, he tested almost two-thirds of his life behind ‘typically-developing’ children – barely at a 12-month level – but he was communicating, little by little.

A few days ago, I was talking to a mom whose son is nearing five. He’s completely non-verbal. He has never uttered a single sound that wasn’t a moan or a shriek or some other shapeless noise. She said the following words, and as I type them I can still feel freezing water creeping through my blood as painfully as when I heard her say them.

“What if he never talks?”

[click to continue…]

{ 10 comments }