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Posts Tagged ‘easter’

Jonah April 2019

From Wikipedia: A legal guardian is a person who has the legal authority to care for the personal and property interests of another person, called a ward. Guardians are typically used in three situations: guardianship for an incapacitated senior, guardianship for a minor, and guardianship for developmentally disabled adults.

<– Here is Jonah’s most recent photo  He turned 17 on March 7th
(I can’t believe it either!), and so Andy and I started the process of obtaining legal guardianship of our Boo.  If we don’t do this, we lose the right to make decisions on his behalf once he turns 18.  As an adult in New York State, no other person is allowed to make a personal, medical or financial decision for you. 

You’d think it would be easy for parents to become guardians of their significantly developmentally disabled son.  It’s not like Jonah is on the borderline of normal intelligence or cognitive ability, and it’s not like we are distant relatives.  And yet they require all this paperwork, some notarized – addresses going back 28 freaking years for Andy, me, and anyone over 18 living with us.  No way I remember all the places I’ve lived since 1991, the year I graduated from college.  I had to guesstimate.  Hell, I lived in Thornwood, NY for a year and don’t even remember the name of my street.  

Then the lawyer tells me someone will most likely want to interview Jonah about it.  I felt equal parts surprised and amused.  “I highly encourage you to interview my son,” I told him.  I wish I could be there for that one.

Interviewer:  Jonah, do you think your parents should be able to make decisions for you?

Jonah:  Car ride?

Interviewer:  Now, Jonah, can you tell me what you would like to do when you leave the Anderson School for Autism?

Jonah: CAR RIDE!?

Maybe Jonah will kick his ass for good measure.

Just kidding.

Kinda.

The truth is Jonah still hasn’t even tried to kick anyone’s ass since I don’t know when.  Months.  Almost half a year, probably.  No hitting, no kicking, no head butts, no scratching, no hair pulling, no glasses snatching, no biting.

I didn’t know if I’d ever type those words.  I remember when we first brought Jonah to Anderson, a senior staff member told me sometimes these kids grow out of the aggression.  At the time I thought she was just being kind.  Now I think Jonah’s got a chance at more independence – or at least a less restrictive environment.

They even lowered Jonah’s dosage of Clozaril a little.

Of course he’s got a boatload of issues still.  He’s half blind, sluggish, and has warts & skin tags they’re in the process of removing.  He has some anxious days with crying jags punctuated by painful-sounding sobs.  Left to his own devices, he will sleep more often than not.  We can rarely decipher his words, and so we’ve memorized sounds he uses to indicate desires.  If he wants the radio station changed, for example, he used to say “other radio.”  This phrase has degenerated into “uhh-ay-oh.”  And so on.

Sometimes when we pick him up on Sunday he’ll have already gotten up to eat breakfast and gone back to bed again.  On these days, when we arrive we knock on his bedroom door.  Jonah sits up groggily and Andy or one of the house peeps helps him get dressed.   We pack him into the car, our sleepy-eyed Boo – complete with bedhead, all smelling like pancake syrup and body wash.  My heart swells with love for him.  I want to scoop him into my arms and rock him, but he’s no baby.  At 5’8″ he’s officially taller than me – bigger than me – and I don’t think he’s done growing.  I even wear his old sneakers.

I emailed his speech therapist about how we can’t understand him very well anymore.  She answered:

I have noticed that when Jonah is tired or unmotivated, his enunciation/intelligibility does go down. This does make it harder to understand what he is saying. Often times, I will ask him to either repeat what he said, ask him to speak louder, or to show me what he wants/needs. I will also tell him that I cannot understand him and that if he wants something, he needs to speak more clearly. This will often encourage him to speak up a bit. These are just different things that I have tried and that I have seen work with him. However, there are times when he’s not as motivated and does not care to communicate better- perhaps it’s the teenager in him.

Otherwise, Jonah is doing well and again I truly enjoy working with him. I am proud to see how far along he has come these past few years!

“It’s the teenager in him”  I loved that.  

And we’ll try her suggestions.  I know we are guilty of not asking enough of Boo.  We’re working on that.

It was a good Easter.  Andy drove Boo up to grandma’s house, where he sat at the table for a while (eating pizza, a chocolate bunny, and a piece of ham) – I couldn’t watch – and then we drove to the train tracks and saw a train – all successfully and without incident.

Jonah’s hair is the longest it’s ever been in his life.  He’s got thick, wavy brown locks I’d love to have on my own head.  My mom thinks it’s too long (when actually it isn’t much longer than the Beatles in 1964) and says he won’t comb it.  She’s probably right, but I think he looks handsome.

I show people this picture I took of him on Easter and they say I’m a great photographer.  What they don’t know, but I think should be obvious, is that I took 80 million photos of him to get a good one.

Doesn’t everyone do this?

Today when my mom and I drove down for our visit, Jonah was happy and hungry.  He asked for donut so we got him his favorite, sugared jelly, from the Dunkin’ Donuts drive thru.   All the while Andy’s scrolling through Sirius radio station by station and Jonah’s telling us uhh-ay-oh or on (if he wants it louder).  He has a fickle taste in music these days; just when you think you’ve got his preferences nailed, he’ll surprise you.

Today he disdained Public Enemy, his usual favorite, in favor of a funky disco tune.  Andy claims he even was digging some polka one day.  I wish I could find that hard to believe, but I know my son has picked some seriously weird songs for favorites.  I’m happy he likes music without the slightest care whether his choices are in any way cool, socially acceptable, or based on anything but caprice.  He just likes what he likes.

He wanted to nap at Andy’s apartment but when I asked if I could lie down with him the answer was no.  He did bestow a kiss and hug on both grandma and me, which was enough to make my day.

For those of you waiting for a boot update:

I found it.

Divinity made my missing boot re-appear, praise little baby Jason!

Actually, by then I’d already bought another pair I liked more, so the whole thing was a little anticlimactic.  The other boot was on my back porch, in the verrrrry bottom of a verrrrry big, tall box stuffed with Styrofoam and packaging paper.  I was breaking boxes down for recycling when I found it.

“Well I’ll be damned,” I said aloud, more to the boot than about it.

The Universe is Puck, playing games with us all.

Happy Sunday.

Spring is here!

 

 

<—  Me, Easter 1973.  Age 3 1/2

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Andy drove Jonah up to the glaucoma doc this morning and I met them there.  The good part of that is I got to sleep an extra half hour and I got to see my Boo.  The bad part was the damned operation they’ve scheduled to take the Reticert implant out of Jonah’s eye on the off chance that it’s still emitting steroids, in which case we need that to stop.  Jonah, as usual, was very good through all the exams and procedures, the eye drops and pressure gauge.  But his left eye is 20/400 (20/200 is legally blind).  And so May 14th he’ll have his 5th? 6th? eye operation.

After today’s appointment Andy brought Jonah outside and I stayed behind to talk to the doc and do the paperwork.

“Is there anything we can do to treat that eye…to improve the vision?”  I ask doc S.

“Well, if he were a normal boy…”  he starts.

That’s all I hear.  Yeah.  If he were a ‘normal’ boy he could wear glasses that he wouldn’t throw and smash, and he could have the permanent operation to redirect the drainage in his eye, but he can’t…he’d rub his eyes and crush the whole mechanism before it healed. 

Why can’t this doctor just answer the question?

He gives me a brochure about glaucoma.  It’s the brochure I read months (a year?) ago – the one that says glaucoma is an eye disease that gradually steals your vision and glaucoma usually occurs in both eyes, but extra fluid pressure often starts to build up in one eye first.

I tell him I have read the brochure.  I ask him about that first sentence – the steals your vision part.  He smiles at me, answers “if left untreated,” and is already out of the room before I can respond.

If left untreated. 

Well you just told me we can’t treat it, I want to yell after his retreating figure.

I realize I’m painting an unfairly poor picture of Dr. S. here, but what I want is the bedside manner of that rare, wonderful doctor who will sit, listen, and speak to you as though you are an intelligent human being (instead of aiming medical terms over your head then ushering you out the door).  But people rave about this guy.  He has “Best Doctor” awards all over his office.  (Today I noticed he’d re-arranged them). I’m sure he is a fantastic glaucoma specialist who’s great with the demographic of the majority of his patients:  an aging, docile population of ‘normal’ people.   He is kind to Jonah in an off-hand way but never learns that Boo does not converse and is never going to answer his questions about whether or not Santa came or what kind of Easter he had.  It isn’t like Jonah hadn’t been there 10 times or so before.

Grandma?  Jonah answers when the doc asks him one of these questions – and where can the doctor go from there?  I smirk, turn my head.  Way to shut him down, Boo.

And so after the doc appointment Andy brought Jonah to see grandma.  They all drove to the train in grey car and my mom told me later that Boo was good; they saw a very long train which pleased him very much.

Easter was kind of a blur.  Andy drove Jonah up and I met them at grandma’s.

Easter Boo
                        Easter Boo

My mom made delicious food but now it is always pre-packaged up, one for Andy, one for M and me.   There is no pretense of sitting down to eat and there hasn’t been for some time.  It’s better this way.  I love my mom for making the delicious food anyway and for getting Boo a beautiful Easter basket anyway, but I also fight to stay grateful – especially, for some reason, on Easter.  I see little kids all dressed up and going to church after their Easter Egg hunts…I am jealous of that whole piece.

I didn’t even go to church on Easter myself.  My favorite priest is retired and gone, and I wanted his Easter homily only.  I am a one-priest-Catholic, I guess. And now, I love Pope Francis.  His humility and simplicity – his gentle ways, his appeal for peace, for the poor, for the helpless.  It’s not as if I am a good Catholic – or a good anything, for that matter.  But this pope makes me want to identify myself with Catholicism more than any pope before him that I can remember.  I like to keep abreast of what he’s doing and I’m so happy that, whether people are Catholic or not, what he says and does will be a big influence on the world.  We could all use a leader with a little humility, if you ask me.

Anyway.  I don’t really like holidays anymore.  My favorite holiday is sleep.

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