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amazing grace

How sweet the sound of Jonah’s laughter!  What a gift to us this Thanksgiving Day.

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Against all odds Andy was able to drive him up with just a minor incident of aggression – and once at grandma’s house, Jonah was gleeful and good.  I stood behind him and snapped selfies of us…photo after photo because he was allowing it, because he was so happy:

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In this one he's drinking a swallow of black soda right from the 2-liter bottle. We were so thrilled we gave him whatever he wanted this day.

In this one he’s drinking a swallow of black soda right from the 2-liter bottle. We were so thrilled we gave him whatever he wanted to eat and drink this day…

...which included hot dogs, a breakfast sandwich, and cheese cake

…which included hot dogs, a breakfast sandwich, and cheese cake.

Andy and I took him to the railroad crossing in Voorheesville, his favorite place aside from grandma’s house.  Just after we parked, one train came roaring by, speeding fast, while another crossed it going in the other direction on the next track.  The two trains briefly shared the two track space and then the second train continued on, slowly, burdoned by a double stack of cars.  Jonah opened his window halfway and stared, slack-jawed with wonder.

Everything fell into place on Thanksgiving 2015.  We found the day’s missing puzzle piece and placed it, with time to admire the completed picture and be thankful for its beauty.

Whatever lies ahead, I will always be thankful for its beauty.

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Every day since I last posted, I get something from Jonah’s school – maybe a phone call to tell me about an incident report and body check, complete with a listing of where and how bad his bruises are.  Then, most days, an e-mail as well — always phrased exactly the same but for the date and time:

Good Morning,

 This email is to notify you that Jonah was in a physical intervention on xx/xx/15 at x:xxam in the xxxxx and at x:xxpm in the xxxxxx office.  If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to contact us.  Thanks

 xxxxx

Education Administration

 Anderson Center for Autism

4885 Route 9, PO Box 367
Staatsburg, NY 12580
* Jxxxxx@ACenterforAutism.org

It’s a sickening feeling, waiting for the e-mails, knowing they’re coming, understanding I cannot stop them from coming, trying to accept I am helpless to cease the cycle of Jonah’s aggressions.  And I was just interrupted by a phone call from them now.  They tell me “Jonah is okay” first, which is important, because I’ve panicked from seeing the 845 area code come up on my caller ID.  But I’ve gone from a heart-pounding worry to a dull, almost numb acceptance of whatever it is they’re calling to tell me.

I wish I had something better to report.  Jonah’s psychiatrist spoke to Dr. Ankenman from my last post, and together they determined Jonah was not one of the individuals who could be helped with his adrenaline therapy; his pulse and blood pressure statistics did not indicate an appropriate match.  And so they have been using Thorazine while very slowly titrating down his other meds.  The dosage of Thorazine has been increased, little by little, and now he is taking 50mg 3 times a day.

It’s not working.

I spoke with a childhood friend of mine who has a daughter with autism.  She’s been doing chelation and mega dosing with supplements, and my notes from our conversation include:

Search Robin Goffe – YouTube videos/articles & on FB
Guggenheim and Robin Goffe – video
Autism One Conference – Every May in Chicago
Immune System Deficiency
 BioMed
ATEC test by Autism Research Institute ARI ATEC
Healing the Symptoms Known as Autismby Kerri Rivera, who started a protocol where kids recover entirely from autism

I’m grateful for her input, and I cannot say I’ve thoroughly investigated all of these things yet, but I noticed that the book (last item in the above notes) has a long list of reviewers who’ve rated it a 1 or a 5 (worst or best) and hardly any in between; people seem to regard the author as either a child abuser or a saint, which doesn’t bode well.  Plus I’m just not ready to climb on board with anyone or anything that has only anecdotal evidence.

Then, last week, I lost one of my best friends, DF, very suddenly.  She passed away after a hospital procedure led to complications. Today is her wake, tomorrow her funeral, and the awful finality of it is finally starting to sink in.  I’ve been sick to my stomach over Jonah, and now from my dear friend’s death, and I don’t feel like it’s the beginning of any kind of holiday season in which I’d like to participate.

I’m trying to stay optimistic, and I’m very grateful for the many blessings in my life.

Still, I feel stranded. Choked off.  Tired.  I’ve lost too many people too soon.  I’ve come to accept the deaths.  After all, at least our relationships were not lost, not really.  And I can even hope to accept the one relationship it seems I can’t fix.

But I can’t accept that nothing can help my son.

For those of you who left e-mail addresses, thank you.  I will write to you as soon as I can.  Thank you to my mother, always at my side visiting the grandson she loves enough to risk/incur injury and heartbreak every week just to spend a few minutes with him.  Thank you to my close friends (you know who you are) and to all of you out there who have expressed your support, left kind comments, assured me I am not alone, sent cards, never judged, and stayed with me through it all, good and bad.

We’re hanging on.

Jonah's daddy, holding him on the grass of the Anderson School campus during a recent aggression. Jonah's got his shirt tight in one hand. Eventually, Jonah calmed down. Once under control, Jonah got into the car and we started our visit.

Jonah’s daddy, holding him on the grass of the Anderson School campus during a recent aggression. Jonah’s got Andy’s shirt tight in one hand. Eventually, Jonah calmed down. Once under control, Jonah got into the car and we started our visit.  Jonah’s daddy is amazing – he keeps his son safe and loves him so very much.

 

Later that same day: Jonah has a calm moment and even, thank God, a smile.

Later that same day: Jonah has a calm moment and even, thank God, a smile.  My sweet, precious Boo.

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This is all I’ve got to say right now, damn it.

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.”

~ Theodore Roosevelt

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the artist

As is sometimes the case in the Capital District region of New York, it seems this year we’ve lept from winter to summer and are now slipping back to an uneasy spring, tulips & daffodils here and gone already.

Jonah doesn’t seem to mind what temperature the world throws at him, though maybe it would be worth noting if his aggressions happen more on days with certain weather.  He was so aggressive one day recently, ripping another child’s shirt during one of his tantrums/attacks/insert phrase of choice.   I frantically researched the web like I did when Jonah was first diagnosed with autism.  Then I texted an old doctor friend who called me 8 minutes later and listened to me.  He listened to me a lot and then he spoke a little and when I hung up, I felt calm.

Doc on the phone reminded me of many things.  That I have done the best possible thing for my child: placed him in the hands of the people who are learning the latest empirically tested teaching tools and medications for autism…and for Jonah’s kind of autism.  I know I need to stop panicking every time he has a Very Bad Day, and then not doing much of anything at all about it the rest of the time.  I ask myself what I should be doing about it.  I wonder if there is anything to do, anymore.

I did, however, also find in my research a new expression/phrase/diagnosis for what I believe Jonah has:  Explosive Aggressive Autism.  Trouble is, everything they postulate about EAA includes suggestions for steps we’ve taken years ago:  residential placement and treatment.  Risperdal.  Prozac.

Jonah has had 3 or 4 good days in a row now, including on Saturday when my mom and I drove down to see him.  He was happy, smiley, and about as calm as he gets.  Andy as always is the best daddy Jonah could want, always taking Jonah out for a visit, often overnight, any time he can.

The cool news is that I received a letter from the Anderson Center for Autism to announce they’d chosen Jonah’s artwork for an exhibit at the Ulster County Bank in Redhook, NY.  Here’s photographic evidence of said accomplishment:

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Mooncat by J. Russell Krebs, budding artist

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Proud mama comes in from the pouring rain and poses like a drowned purple cat beneath Jonah’s picture, thanking God and little baby Jason that Jonah himself has not been invited to the reception soiree.  I enjoyed coffee and cake, thanked the people at the bank, and hung out for a short while.

Jonah will never be in a school spelling bee.  He won’t be in the chorus of a high school musical, and he can’t run track, strong and windstorm-fast, to maybe even break a record.  Jonah will never have an award because his baseball team came in 2nd place in little league.  He won’t graduate from a “high school” – and his own yearbook, when he turns 21, will contain phrases that will make some people cringe.  Jonah has worked hard this year to complete his in-residence training and is excited to move into his new room at High Horizons, where he will ride the bus every day and work independently as a bagger at Stop ‘N’ Shop. 

That’s best case scenario.  More likely it will be a far simpler statement:

Jonah Krebs hopes to rule the world through violent intimidation.

I am laughing so I don’t cry.

I cry anyway.

I want to blog more, here or on the “new” site I never quite set up, but I’m working part time doing social media management, website copy, fundraising, etc. for nonprofits and other businesses, catch as catch can, and I’m busy.  Good-busy.  Helping others busy.  It seems to be something I can do and I’m getting along okay.

Here are some photos of the artist himself:

jonah and his bearclaw

 

 

 

 

 

 

…getting away with clapping his hands on a treat.

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Happy on a car ride…

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Sweet nature kid, wearing his purple peace shirt I made him.

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…and one of my paintings on a rock near a stream
where the artist dives in, swimming
and his mama comes to dream…

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I started working on a new blog.  Here’s a first glimpse.  I’ll be adding actual content, soonish, and I’ll continue to blog here as well.

My mom and I have been switching the days we drive down to visit Boo from Saturday to Sunday, based on Andy’s work schedule, which is fine except it sure doesn’t help me remember what day it is.

This past Saturday we’d planned to celebrate Jonah’s 13th birthday.  I bought him a few little things (flash cards and small fidget toys) and my mom got him big helium balloons and a chocolate cupcake-cake with a singing candle.  We left the cupcakes in the car so Boo wouldn’t go straight for them without eating his lunch.

I was tummysick but pushed through (bad choice of words, Amy) and we arrived unscathed.  We opened the door to see Jonah coming in the room on daddy’s shoulders, piggyback, all smiles in his pajamas.  He’d slept at Andy’s the night before.  I don’t know how Andy accomplishes overnights with Jonah, but he does – and I have to give him a whole ton of credit for it.

Pretty early on in our visit Jonah attacked me, snatching and mangling my glasses, yanking a fistful of hair, clawing at my face — with no warning, for no reason.   It’s been a while since he came at me like that.  Andy managed him in the bedroom while I wrangled my pliable glasses and tangled hair back into shape.

I’m remembering it in shards.  Hard to articulate how it felt, what with me being sick on top of it, and Andy so tired, and my mom trying her best to thread us all together – to patch the pieces.

I remember helping Jonah with his bath, playing our kiss eye? & kiss lips? game gently, even though he had attacked me less than an hour ago.  He’d eaten a cupcake on the side of the tub and there were crumbs in the bath.  He allowed me to hang out while he splashed around in the almost-too-hot-but-that’s-the-way-he-loves-it water.

And when he was all done, I remember he wanted a piggy back ride out of the bathroom, wrapped in a towel.  Sorry, kiddo.  Mama’s not Wonder Woman.

I remember Jonah wanted my mother on his car ride, no mama, which was okay with me because then I could lie down.  And when they returned my mom went back out to the car to get Boo’s cupcake-cake and candle, and she brought it in to fix it for him, but Andy was keeping him quiet in his room after more aggressions.

Mom stood ready to light the candle, uncertain.  I watched, sick and disappointed — almost disinterested — from the couch.

All done?  All done?  Jonah cried, craning his neck around daddy to see his treats.

After a few minutes Andy let him leave his room, and my mother lit the candle, but she was the only one with heart enough to sing Happy Birthday to 13-year-old Jonah Russell Krebs.  Andy and I just kind of mumbled it.

But my mother always has heart enough to sing for Jonah.

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“To tell you the truth, I’ve said it before
Tomorrow I start in a new direction
One last time these words from me
I’m never saying them again
and I shut the light
and listen as my watch unwinds…”

~ Guster, Come Downstairs and Say Hello

I started writing this blog with no real intention of using it as anything but a cathartic & necessary process.

Then people found it, and more people found it.  If it’s helped one person out there, this blog has been worth it.  Thank you, all of you who supported and encouraged me through my shitshow of life-pieces.

Jonah’s been well.  He’s got a great sense of humor with wonderful attempts at being sneaky, but he nearly always gives himself away, laughing aloud at his own inventive trick in the midst of its very execution.

Andy is his best buddy and the most amazing father around — more amazing than I can even comprehend or begin to explain.  I always knew he would be, though; even before I married him, I knew he would be, to any child.

My mom and I still see Boo on Saturdays or Sundays (depending on when Andy works) and he’s growing into a bright, happy, handsome boy with a lot of OCD and still some aggressions.  In my heart I know he is in the right place, and there is a humble hope there too that he’ll grow into a young man with some independence and a whole lot of happiness.

I want to find ways to contribute more to that happiness, maybe make him a music mix or two…talk to his teacher and residence head about his preferences.

Funny; they used to ask me.  It feels like it’s my own fault.  I could find more ways to try to insinuate my presence into his little life.  But he hates the visitor’s center (the on-campus place with really nice apartment-like settings for family visits) and there’s no “home base” for us nearby. They don’t allow visits to his own house, except to pick him up and drop him off.  Andy is kind enough to have my mom and I over once a week.  I could bring Jonah up to Albany, to this place – the house where he used to live.  He hasn’t been here since the day we brought him to Anderson.  We’ve made deliberate efforts to bring him no closer than the Stewart’s shop three blocks away.

I’m afraid to bring him here.

If he asked for home? or started to panic, cry/breakdown, it would damn near kill me.  And if he liked it here, I’d need help to watch over him.  I’d love for my boyfriend (who actually cares for individuals like Jonah) to live here and go with me to see Boo, but he lives 850 miles away.

He can’t leave his life there and I can’t leave mine.  And so we continue to visit when we are able — once every 4-6 weeks, which we happen to think is pretty damn good — and our love is strong and joyful despite such nonsense as physical distance.

Time is an *asterisk*, Tim knows (and I am learning).

We visited West Virginia in January & I learned to cross-country ski.

We visited West Virginia in January & I learned to cross-country ski.

Jonah’s going to be 13 on March 7th, and that’s awfully close to adulthood.

Some part of me thought he’d stay my little Boo.

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Because he’s so young inside, there’s something almost wrong about his body growing out of that innocence.  Those sweet, pre-school like curiosities and his uninhibited joys belong to a tiny little boy.  Jonah’s teenager-sized now.  It’s weird.

Valentine's Day Treats

Valentine’s Day Treats

The residents at Anderson stay until they’re 21, and then they enter whatever program and residence suits their abilities and independence level.  Sometimes it’s an adult residence much like his house now – and then the housing moves into more and more independent living situations.  I’m not so much worried about those possibilities as I am staring at them, as at a distant mountain’s terrain I know we’ve all got to climb, with time’s strange ticking toward our journey “up” that incline.

We guess.  Decisions about medications, therapies, music, motivation, behavior modifications.  I say autism’s a casino.  It’s dark inside no clocks no windows.  It’s random, and it’s messy, and you can hit it big – but mostly you keep going to the ATM, withdrawing more and more from your life your choices your options until all of it is gone and you’re walking out the door, blinking into the reality-light.  I say we’re in the infancy of understanding autism:  the diagnosis, treatment, identification of causes…the moral earthquake of words like cure.

Part of why I love Elizabeth Moon’s The Speed of Dark is how she approaches the topic of being ‘cured of autism.’  The bare honesty and objective approach surprised me; I’d assumed she’d be unable to break from a highly subjective viewpoint (her own son has autism).  But I was too quick to judge.  Her book kept me interested and engaged.  To me it’s an edification and an enchantment to see things from an altered angle, and this story was indeed from that kind of place – offering a glimpse into the thoughts and feelings of a man with autism (albeit high functioning) and why he is considering undergoing an experimental treatment to make him “normal.”

Still.

I feel like my time of talking about all of this is coming to an end.  A huge part of my life will always be about being Jonah’s mother.  I’d like, though, to write about other subjects and explore other journeys.  I’ll still update here, but I truly believe the most raw and helpful entries about Boo are from Fall 2010 – August 2011 (if you don’t want to feel alone or would just like to read what we went through).

Once I build my new blog, I’ll post it here.  Then I’ll continue to post here (perhaps once a month) and at the new blog as well.

One personal update: I was recently let go from Modest Needs because of a budget cut, and so I’m job hunting…exploring and considering many options.  The very ground is dancing with the buzz of uncertainty and choice.  I’m doing this, though.

Here’s a “Jonah’s Journey” of sorts, a collection of Jonah media for you to enjoy.  See you soon.

May empathy and understanding reign.

Jonah at the eye doctor.  He's knows the routine and is better behaved there than most adults.

Jonah at the eye doctor, January 2015. He’s knows the routine and is better behaved there than most adults.  His eyes look good!

Mama and her happy boo

Mama and her happy boo

Sporting his sweats and a smile

Sporting his sweats and a smile

Jonah in daddy's "big blue bed," sporting the "You Can Never Have Too Many Trains" t-shit his "aunt KP" for him for Christmas.

Jonah in daddy’s “big blue bed,” sporting the You Can Never Have Too Many Trains t-shit his “aunt KP” bought him for Christmas.

Happy, Handsome Boo

Happy, Handsome Boo

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Where Jonah is concerned, the best place to be — the most dreamed of, sought-after, wondrous, asked-for place — is Grandma’s House.

For a variety of reasons, it has remained thus since he was a baby.  (Of course the best part of Grandma’s House is grandma herself).

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Jonah’s sitting on grandma’s counter in this picture, taken Christmas Day. I was sick and kind of weak; I tried to get a good picture of them standing side by side, but to no avail.  I wanted to show how Boo’s only a few inches shorter than my mom now, which would make him about 5′ or 5’1″ at not-yet-thirteen.  His growth seems to be happening, somehow, more quickly than before, as if I’d looked away for months and finally turned around to see him.

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I’m kind of wan in this pic, but Jonah’s all smiles.

Here are a few great pics we took in December:

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I love the way that last one came out, with all things notJonah softened.  It’s almost as if I knew what I were doing when I took the picture; ’twas luck, alas, and nothing more.  (For kickass-quality photography you can visit my sistercousin DiAnna’s website).

Then a few weeks ago Jonah started in a new classroom.  He was aggressing regularly in the other one, even on days when all seemed fine at his house.  His teachers and therapists thought maybe he was bored or unchallenged.  So far he hasn’t had a major aggression in the new room, so they were probably right.  I know Jonah’s bright, but it’s hard to know how much of that light we’re going to be able to coax from behind the clouds.  So far so good.

He’s been a happy kid, mostly, at any rate.  He adores his daddy and got to spend two overnights in a row at his apartment recently, which is right up there with Grandma’s House on Jonah’s list of preferred places to visit.

Lately Jonah’s developed a keen interest in his wardrobe and, more recently, in others’ as well.  He’s got two pair of sneakers at daddy’s place – one blue, one green – and he’ll tell you in no uncertain terms which he wants.

The other night Andy put him on the phone with me.  Jonah’s definitely not one to dominate a conversation, so I asked him a lot of questions he could answer with “yes” or “no.”

Eventually I said bye bye, Boo; mama loves you.  Jonah answered byebyemama and handed the phone back to Andy.  I heard Jonah ask twice: mama comin’ in? to which Andy automatically replied: 13 hours.

It seems to satisfy Jonah to have a number – any number – I think so he feels like what he wants is comin’…and when.

Then, in the background, I heard Jonah say:  Light green shirt? Andy answered no, buddy, This shirt is good.  I guess Boo’s new thing is to decide upon not only his own clothes but his father’s as well.  Sometimes Andy capitulates, allowing Jonah a glimpse into one possible career path toward fashion or wardrobe design.

I can just see him in Hollywood, pulling at a “wrong-colored” costume donned by Jennifer Lawrence, insisting no! no!

A few weeks ago I traveled to Bloomington to see Tim perform in a holiday concert with the Quarryland Men’s Chorus, which was as awesome as it could be.  Tim had a short solo in one song, and after both performances, audience members sought him out to compliment him.  I stood at his side, grinning proudly as if I were the one responsible for Tim’s mellifluous bass.

Tim's in the middle of the back row, with the long blonde hair & awesomely full beard

Tim’s in the middle of the back row, with the long blonde hair & awesomely full beard

Tim also gifted me with the best Christmas present I’ve likely ever received – but for now it’s just between us (and, due to my uncontainable excitement, two friends whom I swore to secrecy).

* 12-29-14 * NOTE:  Now lots of folk are guessing Tim gave me an engagement ring, and I’ll put that rumor to rest.  We’ve been in a long distance relationship for just 5 months.  And this gift is better, presently, than the prospect of marriage — to anyone!

We are happy.

We are happy.

And so life is good.

I am getting used to being cold, bundling up with resignation and maybe even complacency against my chosen 55 degree home temperature.  The no lights thing is actually more difficult – I go through candles like boxes of Tagalongs at Girl Scout cookie time, and I now have an oil lamp.  Since the days are so short, I want to go to bed at around 6 or 7, like an old lady.

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I get out every day, when I can motivate, and I fight winter blues/being alone/stagnation, reminding myself that every day now, the days are lengthening. There is much to do and plenty to look forward to with the excitement of this new year coming – 2015 rising like a glorious dawn.

I know the journey truly is the destination, and this one feels really right.

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Holy cold.  The moment I announce my intent to go all winter without light or heat, I’m ready to drag out the space heater; it occurs to me I should ask a plumber just how low I can let my temperature get before I’m in danger of my pipes freezing.  The fact that this is all self-imposed hardly occurs to me.

It’s 50 degrees in my house right now and not even freezing temperatures outside yet.  My thermostat is still at 45 but I’m not sure that’s high enough.  I researched a little on the ‘Net but mostly there’s advice for people leaving their homes for the winter.  The fact that I run hot water to hand wash my dishes and take showers should count for something, right?  (That’s not a rhetorical question.  If you know, please tell me!)

I’m reading Laura Ingalls Wilder’s The Long Winter over and over, reminding myself of what she and her family survived through conditions far worse than my own.  I re-watch Alone in the Wilderness, a documentary about Dick Proenneke living alone for 30+ years in Twin Lakes Alaska, and hear his words echoing in my mind:  “It’s a toasty 40 degrees in the cabin today.”

I think to myself I can do this, I can manage.  I can “come out” of the cold to my car, or a friend’s house, or even the dreaded mall.  But it’s really hard to get out of my toasty bed in the mornings.  Manzo-kitty even has his own comfy blanket and snuggles next to me on the bed.

Yesterday my mom and I drove down to visit Boo.  On the way we listened to her new Barry Manilow “Dream Duets” CD, in which he has inserted himself into various deceased singers’ tunes – everyone from John Denver to Marilyn Monroe.  It’s kind of cool, in a slightly creepy way.  At least it wasn’t Sing Along With Mitch.

Oh, and it turns out they did find a train conductor costume for Boo to wear on Halloween, and he loved it.

Jonah, train conductor extraordinaire

Jonah, train conductor extraordinaire

One more reason to appreciate the folk at the Anderson Center for Autism.

I also found out they think his aggressions have increased in school due to some classroom staff changes; his aggressions at Birch House (where he lives) have stayed steady, which is to say mostly mitigated.

At least there is a reason, an antecedent.  It’s a huge thing for us…to be able to know why Jonah is upset.

At Andy’s apartment Jonah was overwhelmed, I think, by the variety & choices of items to eat.  Both my mother and I brought special items from Halloween with which to spoil Boo.  Usually he enjoys taking items we bring and putting them away – in the cabinet, refrigerator, or wherever else he deems they belong.  This day, though, he began to open up mini potato chip bags and chocolate cookie boxes and the silver-foil wrapped tuna fish sandwich, all before we could interfere and take most of the excess away.

Then he started scrolling through requests for things he didn’t have before him:  pot pie? pepperoni?  strawberry milk?  apple cider?

He was getting “squirrely,” as Andy and I call it, and so when I tried to calm him or help, Andy stopped me.  “Let me handle him,” he said firmly, as he often does.  Tears always spring to my eyes; while I know Andy is trying to protect me from a possible aggression, it is frustrating to have Jonah largely uninterested in me and at the same time be prevented from interacting with him – even if it is for my own safety.

On our car ride to get apple cider, I snapped one picture of him smiling and one of him imitating a strange skill I possess (of touching my tongue to the tip of my nose):

happy boo

happy boo

he's not as skilled as his mama but he tried

He’s not as skilled as his mama, but he tried…

And then a video of Jonah’s requested song:  Live for Love, by Prince…you can see his daddy handing him some lip balm for optimal comfort during Boo’s listening, rocking joy:

He’s got a new method and skill for selecting desired music.  He’ll say to daddy Wan take a picture? which actually means May I please have the case of CDs?

Then he announces the name (actual or self-invented) CD he wants, and selects it from the sleeves within the case.  Once he hands it up to daddy, he announces the number of the track he wishes to hear.  Sometimes it’s one simple request: number seven?  and other times Andy has to start at the CD’s beginning and Jonah will say number one? number two? etc. until he’s found (and will eventually memorize) the track number he really wants.

Although this new skill is impressive, it gets old when he wants one song from each CD, after having zipped up and handed the case back to Andy, requiring Andy to take it out and hand it over again – and eventually, inevitably, Andy simply suggests radio.  Usually this is cool with Jonah but once in a while he’ll confuse us with his rapid-fire requests:  Diamonds and Pearls?  – followed by  No Diamonds and Pearls?

And so once Andy suggests radio Jonah is usually resigned to his pop tunes by whomever-the-hell is cranking them out these days.  I’m a geezer with Top 40 and know barely any of the artists.   My tastes tend toward alternative (ex. The Pixies or The Elizabeth Kill), or classic (ex. The Beatles or Pink Floyd), or classical (ex. Mozart et al).  And of course, Guster, best of them all.

Suddenly I’m in a writing zone again.  Maybe November will be blog-heavy.  Who knows?  It keeps me warm, oddly enough – or at least is a distraction from the cold!

I did not end up going to see Boo today.  I am sneezing and stuffy, and yesterday I took my very first Boniva pill to stave off my osteoporosis.  I think I’m suffering a nasty-ass side effect of it with which I won’t gross you out.  At least I only have to take it once a month!

Hopefully the side effect goes away before the Jethro Tull show tonight my cousin B is treating me to experience.

Time to drink a hot beverage, do some jumping jacks, put in a movie and run in place, hold my hands over a candle, bake some cinnamon rolls (and open that beautiful oven door all the way afterward to release the heat), take a short drive with the heat blasted.  Anything besides sit still and f-f-f-f-freeze.

Hello from the hibernating hippie!

Hello from the hibernating hippie!

 

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Jonah’s doing really well, aside from his word perseveration (cycling through nonsensical requests and phrases with conflicting messages).  Sometimes I think we should wean him off his meds and see what happens.  And that’s just what it feels like it would be – a roll of the dice, the spin of a roulette wheel.  Jonah’s not a chip in a poker game.  We’ve got to be as sure as possible that we’re doing the right things with his meds, and there’s no surety in it whatsoever.

It just seems to me that the meds might be causing the perseveration.  I keep thinking someone somewhere has got to be close to developing some kind of brain surgery to repair or regrow affected parts of the brain.   Like in Elizabeth Moon’s The Speed of Dark:  Lou, the high functioning protagonist, must decide whether or not to undergo a procedure to make him “normal.”  Lou’s decision surprised me, and the whole book opened my eyes to the struggles that people with high functioning autism face.

Autism can bite me.

Andy and I got Jonah’s 4th quarter report card today.  He’s working on things like taking an object and following directions to bring it to a named individual (maybe down the hall and around a corner), first stopping to knock and say “here,” probably — that’s likely the most they’re going to get out of Jonah — and then return to the classroom, having delivered the item.  I guess this kind of thing is where Jonah shines.

He remembers building layouts, street patterns, directions, etc. very quickly with a seemingly innate sense of where he is in the world.  And he also learns and recalls names, so he’ll get an A in Interoffice Communications 101.  (Actually, there are no letter grades.  Just 1-4, indicating how far along the student has come to reaching his/her goal in all kinds of specific things).  So this is Jonah’s forte.

I see mail delivery of some sort in his future.  Probably not the U.S. mail, but maybe he’ll be some interoffice Übermensch mail sorter at Microsoft.

Who knows what skills and talents will emerge from our amazing boy?

Who knows what skills & talents are inside Boo?

I forgot my camera last Saturday, so no new pics to share.  Last week the guy who seal-coated my driveway came back to clean out rubble, wood, & junk from when this other dude built my porch and left me with all the scrap.  I hired him because he gave me a great deal on the driveway, didn’t charge a lot, and was cool besides.  So the guy arrives and I give him leave to go through my garage.

He comes to the door a little bit later and he’s got this strange look on his face.  “All set?” I ask him. Uhmmm…Welllll….he mutters, obviously not wanting to say.

Then he’s out with it:  “Do you, um, collect squirrels?  Or bones?”

I look at him like he’s crazy.  “Wait.  What?”

“There’s a pile of squirrels in your garage,” he tells me.

“Auuggghhhhh!” I yell like a Peanuts character, my whole body shuddering.  And then:  “You jerk!  You thought I was a squirrel collector?”  I start laughing, and so does he, and I explain that it’s my damned serial-killer cat, Almanzo.  My garage door is manual-only and since Manzo’s a nocturnal critter, I let him out at night and keep about a foot of the garage door open so he can take refuge as needed.  He must have been ~gag~ stockpiling squirrels,  for the love of God.

“How come I didn’t smell them?” I ask.

“Oh, these are waaaaay past smelling,” he says with confidence.

Finally I request he show me, feeling like I was going in close to look at a car wreck or a deer shot dead.  So he pushes aside a few lawn & leaf bags and sure enough I notice two, uh, pelts right away.  That’s all I needed to see.  They’re gone now so good riddance to my pile ‘o’ squirrels.

I’ve had killer cats before but not serial killer cats.  I named the damn cat after an incredibly innocuous historical figure, for God’s sake; Laura Ingalls Wilder’s husband, Almanzo.

this innocent looking kitty

this innocent looking kitty

I’m missing Boo a lot but I get to see him tomorrow and I’ll be sure to bring the camera.  In my pictures folder I found all these videos of Jonah.  Here’s one I don’t think I’ve ever shared:

I should mention my new boyfriend, T, who lives in Bloomington, Indiana – a city so cool I never thought it could possibly exist in the Midwest.   We went to high school together, were in a few musicals and in chorus together (though he was also in the elite “select chorus” of the most stellar voices), and had been chatting on Facebook for some time.  I decided to drive out, kind of on impulse, to see if what we were feeling would translate to reality, though I really had no doubt.

The week was amazing.  The city felt like home.  We fell even more in love.  So now I live alone with my long-distance man.  He’s coming to visit me in three weeks, and then I’ll fly out to him in early December.  In the meantime I swell with pride, as if I manifested him – for he is, among other things, a night shift direct care giver to adults with autism, those just like my Boo but older.  On more than one occasion T has had to hold a resident in his arms all night during seizure after seizure, keeping his composure and offering compassionate care, no matter how tired he is — and he’s often very tired, as he puts everything he’s got into everything he does.

He’s also a geography professor, a bass in the men’s choir (though he’s got more than a 4-octave range) and the lead singer in a (mostly 80s) cover band, Don’t Call Me Betty.

I was trying to describe T to someone the other day, and I wrote:

I feel as though every tiny decision I have ever made in my life has led me to this sweet, loving, poetic, vulnerable, forgiving, brilliant, dedicated, sacrificing, fun, kind, honorable, humble, handsome, trusting, tactile, silly, singing, strong, self-aware, magical rock star king of a man. I’m grateful beyond words to have found him.

I kept going back and adding adjectives until it turned into the overly effusive paragraph you see above.  I am of the ridiculous and I am in love!

– – –

“All great deeds and all great thoughts have a ridiculous beginning. Great works are often born on a street corner or in a restaurant’s revolving door.
~ Albert Camus
Mama's Indiana Love

Mama’s Indiana Love

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Sometimes blogging feels like tightrope-walking.  What to say, how to say it, what details to include.  There’s so much history here now.  Do I just tell a story, or maybe fill an entry with pictures?  What’s appropriate to put out there?  I usually just say what I’ve got to say, but sometimes it’s tricky.

If I’ve got an 8-second video of an 11-year-old Jonah with his wide, adorable smile, looking right at me and speaking clear-as-day:  fuck!  followed by my immediate response of laughter, is it cool for me to post that without seeming like I’m proud of it?  Hell, I laughed.  Sometimes you just gotta laugh.

The thing is I know (some of) who reads this blog, and I know if I say such-and-such it’ll get back to so-and-so, and then I have to decide how to tell my story or, sometimes, whether or not to tell it at all.

Andy and I have some unspoken tales of sadness and ennui that will likely never be told.  Macht nichts, I suppose.  Discretion, diplomacy.  I never was good with filters, so I err on the “sin of omission” side when necessary.  If I decide to tell a story I’m gonna tell the whole damn mess of it; I ain’t gonna sugarcoat it, so I better decide what I say with care.

Anyway.

On Saturday, somehow, Jonah managed to open (and set next to him) no fewer than three cans of white soda.  All this with three adults present.  Never underestimate Jonah’s quiet little conniving magic mind & abilities.

he's a quick little bugger

he’s a quick little bugger

It was Andy’s birthday, and my mom brought cupcakes.  Boo wasted no time in descending upon them.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Skittles and Chuckles too.  Somewhere in there is some actual food – a tune-fish sandwich – which he ate with near-equal fervor.

I was happy to get a few cool pictures with Jonah, which has become kind of rare:

Me & Boo

Me & Boo

Me & Boo, Number Two

Me & Boo, Number Two

When he is calm and affectionate, our son is a beacon of the purest lovejoy.

In one short video, though, you can actually see Jonah’s agitation ramping up…he shows it using his hands and then finally with a swatting motion.  You’ll hear his dad reassure him:  It’s all right, buddy. 

The triumph is that he did not swat at anything but the air, just that one time.  We were all talking, and he was being told no, and he had so many foods from which to choose.  The videos sometimes make it easier to discern what’s happening and why.  Hell, the videos could very well be part of the problem, even.  That’s why I take them without him seeing me, if I can help it.  Sometimes I take the time to watch them carefully, try to learn from them.

This one’s just fun – lighting the candles on the cupcakes and Jonah gets to blow them out after we all sing to Andy (shaky harmony compliments of mama).

It was a good visit.  I hope Andy had a wonderful birthday; he deserves it.  Jonah’s had this whole week off from school and I think Andy’s picked him up for a visit every other day.  I always knew he’d be a wonderful father, before his child was even a notion.  He and Jonah share such a special bond.

Also, endeavoring to remain self-aware and true to myself, I have broken off my new relationship with Jim.  The reasons are many but none of them call into question his goodness, strength of character, or warm heart.  Some part of me wishes he could have met Jonah, for I think Jonah would have loved him – and I know Jim loves children.

I also am examining what I say in general – and how, and to whom.   These things can have a lifelong impact for good or ill.  I’d like to encounter everyone I see with a smile, to behave in a positive manner, to think before I speak – and when I do speak of others, to always find the good to say.  It’s so easy to say you believe in something and then never bring it into reality.  What you think doesn’t mean anything at all unless your actions match your intentions.

“If wisdom’s ways you wisely seek, five things observe with care…to whom you speak, of whom you speak, and  how, and why, and where.”  ~ Caroline Ingalls

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