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Posts Tagged ‘God’

Warning:  this post goes all over the place Please keep hands and feet inside the vehicle.

What a wonderful, sweet boy my Boo was yesterday.

Andy had picked him up the night before so when my mom and I arrived, Jonah was already there. Andy told us Jonah asked for both of us about 10,000 times that morning.  When I walked in, Boo immediately sought out the goodies I carried (one bag with natural potato chips and another full of birthday presents from my friend K). After capitulating warmly to hugs and kisses from my mom and me, he tore into the goodies..tune-fish sandwich…bath with new toys….more kiss?

His perch while eating is atop a white garbage container which sits next to Andy’s kitchen counter. It is Jonah’s dry bar  – and the garbage can, his bar stool. He tucks his legs under him, mama-style, and chows down to his content. Good thing Andy is very clean, but then again, no reason to be a germaphobe when your kid takes 5 baths a day.

only my kid

This is so Jonah

Nearly immediately thereafter (and sometimes during) his meal, Jonah decides it is time for bath. On this day, I help (usually Andy does), and we had fun splashing around in the bubbles with his new, courtesy-of-K, colored straws.

Colored straws!

Colored straws!

Here I must pause to reassert I am a lucky parent in several ways; for instance, it’s exceedingly inexpensive to bring him joy in the form of play. He is 11 and other children his age have lots and lots of expensive things. I don’t even know what. A gaming station, for certain. Hell, even I had one of those by age 12 or 13. (Mine was called Telstar Colortron and played pong). Anyway, I get off cheap. My mom used to buy him all kinds of electronic games and learning gadgets but he just didn’t really like anything unless it played music. Now he just bops along like a playah, listening to hip hop in the back of dad’s car.

cool as a cucumber

cool as a cucumber, pimpin’ the Gs

Then we played blowing raspberries (I have been watching All in the Family a lot).  Boo thought this was great – and, as usual, ended this very slobbery game by sucking his thumb.

He’s got a couple of new teeth (molars?) coming in, too, so he decided to use grandma’s hand to try them out:

he thinks grandma's hand is a teether

he thinks grandma’s hand is a teether

Jonah was happy to have grandma along in the backseat, something he has not tolerated lately. Grandma stay here? he usually says, and my mom stays at Andy’s apartment watching Fox News. But this day he was tolerant, even sweet and lovey. I love taking these pictures of Jonah with his adoring grandma.

o smiley boo

o smiley boo

Oh, it was a good day. A day of grace. A gift to all of us.

At that doctor appointment…the one I didn’t want to talk about anymore last post…Jonah was so very very good, I’d said. So good that the retina specialist could see both his Reticert implant and his optic nerve very well. So well that she turned away from Jonah and spoke to me in a low, controlled, serious voice: I’m very concerned. Jonah and J left the room while E and I stayed to talk to the doc.

The pressure in his left eye is at least 30, and she suspects higher. The optic nerve has thinned considerably, drastically more so than when she saw him a few months ago.  With his left eye, he could barely read the giant E on the chart.

little boo is better at the eye doctor than most adults are, including me

little boo is better at the eye doctor than most adults are, including me

From what I could understand, we are out of options but for one: do what Dr. S (the glaucoma doctor) has wanted to do all along – take the Reticert implant out. It isn’t as if Dr. F (the retina doc) has come to agree with him – it’s that she doesn’t know what else to try.  If we opt not to operate to take the damn thing out, his sight will eventually disappear altogether in that eye. If we opt to operate, the Reticert comes out but it might not do any good at all.  It’s a shot, though doc’s confidence is not high.

I keep remembering how much pain he experienced after they put the Reticert in his eye 3 years ago. It was the first time in his life, at age 8, that he verbally expressed pain. Eye hurt? he cried, hanging his head in despair-like desperation, cradling his forehead with one hand, pain pulling the words out of him.

Since the Reticert isn’t supposed to be dispensing meds anymore, it could just be left there, according to Dr. F.  But now she wants to try taking it out. E asked questions. I asked questions. Of course I forgot to ask a lot of questions. I scheduled the operation for May 14th, figuring there was plenty of time to change our minds, to research, to ask other people.  To think.  Absorb.

There is a doctor who comes from Boston to see patients at Dr. F’s office. I want her to get him over here to see Jonah before we do all this. I need a second opinion, a different perspective. It isn’t that I don’t really love and respect Dr. F.  I do think she maybe has difficulty dumbing things down for we lay-folk.  I didn’t understand well, for instance, that the eye pressure would in turn put pressure on the optic nerve, which is why it’s thinning out.

When I left her office with E, I was in a daze. I think E was, too. Poor peanut butter, she said, her loving nature holding all these children’s hearts to her bosom; her sharp mind keeping track of them, protecting them, listening, keeping on top of appointments, trusting her instincts. She and J are amazing. I have said it before and I’ll likely say it again.

When I got to the van, I was almost openly weeping, fearing the worst — total blindness — ready to curse God pre-emptively for a nightmare scenario which hasn’t yet occurred. Keeping it together for a moment, I kissed Boo soundly and turned away. Then E hugged me and J as well, and I got in my car and cried, allowing a fog to descend on everything. I can’t fight the aggression and the blindness and the 6% proposed fucking budget cut to the Office of People with Developmental Disabilities all at once.

And so I called Andy, my dad, my mom. Told M and a few close friends. A few people at work. People with autism are usually visual learners. The irony would be funny if it weren’t so maddening.  I called Dr. F’s office and asked for her e-mail address. I am not an orator and if I speak with her on the phone, I will forget half of what I want to ask her and most of she tells me.  If I can e-mail her, I can take my time to gather my thoughts and formulate my questions.

When my mother arrived yesterday, we hugged one another and I held on to her tighter and longer than usual. She loves Boo more than anything on this planet, I believe, and that is why she can know my feelings perhaps better than anyone except Andy. We only talked about it a little. We both said we would give him an eye if we could, and then we had an “argument” about which of us should hypothetically give him an eye, and she declared it should be her eye – which sees very well, she’ll have me know. Besides, I need my eye for work, she asserted. It was a ridiculous conversation but it kept the focus (pun intended) away from the fear.

And then the beautiful scent-of-spring Rhinebeck cold and a wonderful day of grace.

If you know me at all you will probably be surprised to hear me say this but I would love to take Jonah to see Pope Francis.  How cool if he were even to be blessed by this man who wants us all to be humble, to protect the weak, the environment, the poor.  I love Francis’ humility and his gentle spirit.  I smile when I read about what he says and does.

I would maybe take Jonah to Lourdes, or a faith healer I believe in (is there any such human?)  I am buying him essential oils. I’m becoming more willing to try anything innocuous as long as it is not downright ridiculous. And fewer and fewer things are sounding ridiculous. You can’t understand how desperate you can get until you walk a mile in the moccasins.

This is why I love working with prospective adoptive parents. I understand their emotions, if not their exact situations. I get it. I know what is like to want something so badly, to have all this love and all kinds of questions like when is this going to happen and is this going to happen and my God who can I trust who really cares who has a heart? I understand what it is like to be part of a vulnerable population.  Plus I am adopted and it gives me a special connection to them all.

Divinity is prodding at me. My faith is so weak. A fucking mustard seed. I am the atheist in the foxhole (though I never was an atheist) in the sense that I find it easier to reach out to God when knocked to my knees, even to a God I don’t understand or can wrap my mind around. It makes sense that there would be a Jesus son of God in order for we humans to wrap our minds around it all.  A human you can relate to – even one who tells puzzling stories and heals people left and right. Why do I struggle so with the concept of God and accepting Jesus into my heart?  Is it all the truths I see in other religions?  Can’t I love and pray to Jesus and still believe others will go to heaven too?

Do I have to believe in what I can’t help seeing as a “special club” mentality of I’m going to heaven and you’re not?

I would rather follow Jesus through actions, evangelize through deeds. I would rather listen and act upon the wisdom of Buddha as well. I would rather believe there is a chance for us all to experience an afterlife, a rebirth, something other than nothing.

At any rate now I am praying. And in my old Catholic way. Praying to the Mother, to Mary, to help us, to intercede on our behalf. The Protestants don’t understand why we pray to some saint to intercede when you can just go straight to God, and I’m not sure I’ve got an answer for them, but I know St. Anthony comes through for me when I lose something important, and I feel Mary listening, empathizing as a mother who raised a difficult son of her own. Sometimes when I pray to Jesus it is more like Guster’s song Empire State:

“I’ve been talkin’ to Jesus, but he’s not talkin’ to me…”

It is difficult to “give it to God,” and it is a fine line. Do you throw up your hands? Are you supposed to step completely out of the way?

Please feel free to chime in.  These are not hypothetical questions, and I am seeking…

He conquers who endures. ~Persius

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Everyone in my office felt it, even way up here in Albany, NY.   I thought of Jonah and wondered if he was feeling it too –  the wavy, hula-hoop, on-a-boat feeling I’d never felt so strongly before, not ever having been a California girl.  They’re already selling t-shirts about it.  One picture I saw depicted the D.C. “earthquake devastation” – that one made me laugh out loud.

Yesterday was also Andy’s birthday.  I  made him a photo frame set with a bunch of pictures of he and Jonah.  He’s moved down to an apartment in Rhinebeck already; yesterday I called a bank and locked in a 3.5% interest refinance on a mortgage so I can keep the house and give Andy his share.  I am glad, and a little jealous, that he is so close to Boo. 

My mom and I and Andy are all going to go to Jonah’s school on Saturday and visit him for the first time since he was admitted on the 16th.  I hope it goes okay and he doesn’t want to come home with us.  Either Andy or I call every day to ask questions about how he’s doing.  If he’s crying for daddy or mama they do not tell me, and I don’t ask.  They generally tell me about aggressions, if there were any (yesterday he had none at all) and what he ate, and how he ate, and what he did.

Most of the direct care workers sound almost nonchalant when they tell me about his day, which is both comforting and unsettling.  I guess he is blending in well and yesterday I even asked “do you guys like him?”  They say yes, we do – he’s a great little boy.  I want so much for them to like him, hug him, teach him, nurture him.  I want warmer weather so he can swim, diving deep to undulate along at the bottom of the pool like he does so expertly.  I want them to cover his face in kisses, chase him on the playground, play music for him, and put lots of bubbles in his bath.  I want them to grow to love him.

There are no new pictures today so I’ll dig into his babyhood to post two cute ones:

Pissed off Boo

Charmer Boo

Everything remains surreal.  I am, for all intents and purposes, abruptly unmarried and childless.  I know I am still Jonah’s mother but no longer am I involved in his daily care at all.  It takes an enormous amount of trust to remain calm and collected about the placement of his little body, mind, and soul to a group of strangers, albeit professionals in the field of autism.  I trust and hope and believe this is right, this is the right thing, he will get better there, he will thrive.

There are no atheists in foxholes, and this is mine.  Not that I was an atheist before, but I’m sure praying more and calling on my peeps gone before me – all those hawks and deer, my grandparents, God, Mary, “and all the angels and saints,” as we Catholics say, to watch over Boo and keep him safe and happy.

Please.

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I’m at the point where I just want it to be Tuesday.  I want to go, get it over with – to do it instead of dread it.  I’m tired of being sapped of life and joy, breath and motivation.  It’s starting to feel like I’ve chosen this misery.

Today was Jonah’s last day of school at Wildwood. Thank you so much, Wildwood.  No words can express our appreciation that there is such a wonderful school; Jonah was so lucky to be there for 6 years.

I have so much to be grateful for – there are so many people who care.  Yesterday I got a package from a business networking guy I know.  Inside was a card from him and a beautiful hand-crocheted twilight-blue stole from volunteers at his church.  My hands shook as I read his card and the church’s handmade card and message.  Feeling something almost like shame, I clutched the stole and cried into it.

Then, a lady I am in contact with only by phone and e-mail sent me a long letter about how her son has autism too – something I’d never known.  The letter was full of encouraging, positive sentiments and suggestions for Bible verses for me to read.

My friend H continues to generously offer her pool, and friend K gave me hope – and e-mails me SNL skits to make me laugh.  M encourages me with loving words, and today he also e-mailed me a verse:  Jeremiah 29:11:  “For I know the plans I have for you,” says the Lord. “They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope.”  My aunt texts me messages telling me how much she loves me, to call her anytime, that she is praying for me.  New online friends and past acquaintances, family, friends, everyone envelops me in love and light.

Seems like Divinity is yelling at me from all directions:  Have faith!  Have hope!  I’ll take care of everything.  There is no denying the push of the divine – it’s all around me.  I’m grateful for it.  Every morning I wake and cry, my throat so tight I am almost gasping to breathe –and as the day progresses I become calmer.  I can smell the rose and blow out the candle, and there are long moments of peace.

The push of the divine is gentle but firm, like a tight hug.  I am hugging back, hanging on.

A few more pictures:

happy boo

chillin’ in the pool

water boy

…baby boo,

Mama loves you.

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Please forgive me if I don’t answer every comment individually; the truth is I have two jobs now, a full-time gig and an assortment of writing gigs to complete when I get home from visiting with Jonah.  It doesn’t leave a lot of time to write back to all of you, though I want to.  But I hear you all and value and embrace everything you say to me.  And I thank you for reading…for not judging…for standing behind me and holding me up like supports to a shaky building.

Thank you.

My annual work convention went smoothly, exhausting as it always is, and I met lots of great people there.

Jonah and Andy managed well, considering Jonah’s aggressions at school on Thursday and Friday.  My cousin D was there to help, like an heroine/saint.  And Jonah did well yesterday – only one aggression at school – so when I got out of work, Andy and I gave him a ride to the train (something he’s been requesting a lot again lately, as well as peanut butter roll from Stewart’s) and we talked about the whole Springbrook vs. Tradewinds problem.

I think we’re both on board with the bird in the hand, with sending him to Tradewinds, rather than risk losing any placement at all if Springbrook can’t get him in their program.  But we still like Springbrook too and are hoping they’ll advocate for us.  I don’t think this is a pressing decision because neither place has an opening now – I may call Tradewinds today to see if they know how soon Jonah might be able to get in.

We’re both just so tired.  Especially Andy, I’m sure, though he seems stoic, brave, and resigned.  Now that spring is here Jonah asks for parks we can’t take him to for fear he’ll attack another child.  The waterfall is a possibility but it’s 40 minutes away and there’s no guarantee the snow isn’t gone yet.  And his left leg is bad.  He limps markedly every morning and after we give him a wagon ride, another thing he loves lately.  I called his pediatrician on Monday, e-mailed him on Tuesday, and have yet to hear anything.  You can’t tell me they can’t give him an MRI/x-ray/blood test right here in Albany without having to drive to Boston – a near impossibility considering his aggressions.  WTF.  I’m going to call back today.

Maybe he’s aggressing more because he’s in pain.  He can’t tell us when something hurts – he seems to consider everything about his life and his environment as something he must bear, and he does so with aplomb, except for when he is violent, of course.  Is it his only voice, the screaming and the scratching, the biting and the kicking?

My poor little boo.  Andy and I both think the placement will help all of this.  They have doctors and psychiatrists there, professionals and people who are trained to work 24/7 with these children.  We’re now reconciled not only to the inevitability of placement but to its necessity as well.  And we’re banking on its helping our son, bringing out the best in him – the smiles, his ability to learn and grow and be as independent as possible – to allow him to reach his fullest potential, even at the cost of “giving him up.”  If you’d told me 10 years ago that this would be my life, I would not have believed you.

But as they say, if you want to make God laugh, just tell him/her your plans.

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Oh, the irony.

I write a monthly column (also named Normal is a Dryer Setting) for the Capital District Parent Pages, which is distributed for free on the first of the month at several locations in and around Albany.  This means I have to write the columns nearly a month ahead of time.  My column for the February issue was devoted exclusively to how much Jonah loves one of the big malls here in Albany and how he has developed a specific route through the halls and stores.  For those of you who don’t read the Parent Pages, here it is:

Normal is a Dryer Setting – February 2011

Jonah’s been asking for “mall” a lot lately.  As I’ve mentioned before, we used to visit a lifeless mall with the singular purpose of escalator riding.  But now his version of “going to the mall” involves a different, specific shopping center and a highly specialized course that cannot under any circumstances be altered in even the slightest way. 

I think he has lain awake nights craftily planning this path, for it is a winding trail through stores and hallways that’s as random as it is precise.  Yes, the escalator is still a huge piece of the puzzle.  However, unlike most children for whom a toy or music store is the desired goal, Jonah’s all about the expedition.  In his little Zen-like brain of autism, the journey is the destination.  The upswing is that he doesn’t want anything that costs money; the downside is that if I want something that costs money, I’m out of luck, for there is no stopping – it’s a one-way express trip paced by Jonah’s caprice.

The trip to this mall means we must park near the side of a certain magnet store and go in through an exact entrance.  We have to pass certain racks of clothing so he can reach out and touch the soft sweaters and scarves, then walk behind a checkout station, around a store mannequin, and make a sharp left toward the venerated escalator.  Up we go, Jonah’s attention divided between the store lights and the sensory input from the movement of the ride;  at no point does he look down or pay any attention to where he is in the progression of the ride, yet he never fails to step off the escalator with perfect timing.  At the top is a vast array of huge-screen TVs, something I always expect to capture his attention, but no – he is already seeking the down escalator, leading us with confidence toward its return trip to the first floor.

Here we travel along another wall and enter the mall itself, where he skirts closely by a play area, mildly interested but not curious enough to enter, for there is another escalator at hand and that’s far more compelling.  We journey once again to the second floor, and here Jonah travels along the railing, up on its little step, holding onto it and sliding his hand along its smoothness.  God forbid someone is leaning on the railing or has paused to rest; there was a time he considered people mere obstacles to try to walk right through, but we’ve taught him to “go around,” so now he’ll let go of the railing just long enough to skirt by the bystander and grab hold of it again on the other side. 

After this, we reach his favorite store where, to reach its escalator, we have to evade such obstacles as cosmetics counters and perfume displays.  At the top, the path to the down escalator is tricky, involving an ungainly passageway of pushing through racks of coats, moving around men’s suits, and a risky bull-in-a-china-shop course past an exhibit of crystal wine glasses and dinnerware.  Unfortunately, and for some reason known only to Jonah, the intricate trail from this particular up escalator to down escalator is the one he desires to tour repeatedly, so we usually allow him three or four trips before store clerks begin to regard us suspiciously and we declare an end to this particular bit of fun.

Having survived the most challenging portion of our route, the rest is comparatively easy.  One more trip up the mall’s main escalator leads us right past a large toy store (something most kids would be unable to resist) and into another large magnet store – this one, though, possessing not one but two sets of escalators, allowing for three full floors of up and down excitement.  We inevitably exit the store on the second floor, where Jonah leads us directly past all the previously enjoyed meanderings, down one last escalator, and back into the original store, lovingly giving the same sweaters and scarves one last caress before heading unswervingly back to the original door where we entered perhaps 45 minutes ago.

It is a journey fraught with meaninglessness, but no more so, I think to myself, than your average shopping trip.  So off we go, having done nothing more than seeing the mall through Jonah’s unique eyes…which turns out to be doing quite a bit, if you think about it, after all.

I share this particular column for a reason.  There’s not a whole lot Andy or I can do with Jonah anymore that he enjoys, especially in winter (unless you include sledding, and even that has its bad days, like last time Andy took Jonah and he only went down the hill one time because some people with an unleashed dog were there, and the dog scared Jonah so he wanted to leave).  Jonah’s list of requests for “outside” activities have been narrowed down to car rides/train, the grocery store, going to see grandma, and the mall.  That’s about it. 

And now the activities have been further limited. 

Sunday afternoon, after I came over to play with Jonah for a while, Andy took him to the mall.  Nothing seemed different and Jonah was enjoying his route as usual, until they approached the children’s play area — and like a striking snake Jonah shot away from Andy and launched himself at a toddler, attacking for no reason, going right for the kid’s face.  Andy had no time to stop him; he could only intervene.  Thankfully the parents were calm and relatively understanding, saying their child wasn’t hurt, while Andy had no chance to even explain because he was busy wrestling Jonah to the ground and restraining him, then doing an about-face and getting the hell out of the mall as fast as he could.

When I stopped by yesterday after work, Jonah was just getting out of time in his room for attacking Andy. 

“We can’t take him to public places anymore,” Andy said to me with a look of defeat that hasn’t left his face in months.  I asked if there was anything I could do, but really all I can do is visit my boy as much as possible, play with him “downstairs” (our heated basement which he requests quite a bit), and soak up the time I have left to see him at a moment’s notice before he lives full time two hours or so away.

The child psychiatrist’s appointment we’d scheduled for the 2nd of February was canceled (due to that “huge storm” that never really materialized), so we’re going back this coming Monday to see if we can adjust his meds or whatever.  Then Andy and I have an appointment to tour Tradewinds in Rome on the 17th – if we like it, we’ll bring Jonah back so they can assess him.  Still waiting to hear from Springbrook

Last week we toured a respite home (Heldeberg House) on Western Avenue in Guilderland – they provide between 30 and 40 days a year for day or overnight care – but Andy has so little confidence in their ability to handle Jonah that we’re not even going to try it. 

The car, too, has become increasingly unsafe because Jonah can (relatively easily) unhook himself from that expensive 5-point harness I bought.  We’re looking into buying the harness that he uses everyday on the bus.  We need something he can’t get out of before he hurts one of us or makes us crash the damn car.

If I were the type of person who believed in a God with human-like attributes, a God who gives and takes and picks and chooses who to mess with, I’d yell at Him/Her:  What the living hell?  Why do you have to take everything away from our little boy?  Why do you have to keep piling on the shit?   When will we have had enough?

But I’m not that type.  I think Divinity is uncomprehensible and inconceivable by mere humans, and I like it better that way.  It’s the only way I can continue to believe in any kind of Divinity at all.  Not to mention there are hundreds of thousands of people on this planet in worse shape than we are.

And yet I feel the resentment rise again, the familiar angry frustration, the envy, the anguish. 

Fuck.

I am, at least, thankful that Jonah has a wonderful father who takes care of him with unwavering strength, determination, love, and patience. 

Silver linings and all that.  Thank you, Andy.

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“Pinned down in this heaven
I’ll die a thousand times
Aware of the damage ahead
I’ll leave the pain behind

Another day, a perfect day
A twinge of pain, the sting of the needle
Staring at the walls provide
A brilliant sight through eyes of the needle

So warm at the bottom
Warm never felt so kind
And for a moment or two
I leave it all behind…”

Perfect by Guster

If I were a superstitious person I might refrain from the kind of optimism I’m embracing, but Jonah’s had two-going-on-three pretty damn good days and my relief is palpable.  The new dosage of Risperdal (along with weaning him off the Clonidine) seems to be both buoying his activity and decreasing his aggression.  He smiles and plays again, giggling at some silly musing.  He babbles to himself in the bath again, inventing songs, swishing the water around, singing snippets of Guster and the Beatles…

He’s the child I almost forgot was in there somewhere.

We went to my mom’s today, where he greeted her with a big smile and she damn near broke down crying with joy.  “Oh thank God,” she said.  “Thank you God.”  He played on her stairs and requested “outside,” where he sat on her brick steps, smiling at the sun.

I’m a little cautious to enjoy this too much for fear of it all crumbling, but I can’t help it.  I know it leaves me more vulnerable to an emotional crash if he builds up a tolerance to the new dosage and gets all aggressive again.

I know he still has two attacks a day or so at school, and I know he is still mostly riding around on the scooter there, wearing a weighted blanket.  I know the triumphs of participation and breakthroughs of smiles are still few, but they’re seeing them at school every day.

I allow hope to prevail, risk of disappointment be damned.

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Most mornings, Jonah wakes up and loiters near his bedroom doorway, making little noises until Andy or I extend an invitation for him to come in our room.  We didn’t teach him this; it’s not like with the potty, where we dangle the ‘black soda carrot’ to elicit a desired behavior.  I have no idea what makes him wait at the threshold of his room when he clearly wants to jump in bed with us (and when this kind of self-regulation appears to be lacking entirely in every other instance of his life).  But wait he does.  This morning:

“Where’s my bunny?” I call out to him.  It’s 7:15am, kind of late for Jonah to be first waking and uttering his jabberwocky.  He comes running in and around to my side of the bed, where I pull back the sheet so he can get under the covers.  It’s awfully early but I’m an early bird by nature, and the truth is I love this time with Jonah, when I get to hug him close and kiss the top of his little almost-blonde head, when I get to squeeze him tight and sing “he’s the best little boy in the –”

–and hear Jonah’s little voice finishing the phrase: “– whole wide world!”

Today, though, I am particularly tired when he comes bounding in.  “Let’s go back to sleepy bye,” I whisper in a not-so-convincing excited voice.  For a while he cuddles but then gets restless and begins his daily litany of requests, repetitions, rituals…

Sighing, I mutter a phrase we say jokingly at work all the time: “Dear God and little baby Jesus help me.”

Reliably, Jonah repeats what he thinks he has heard.  “Help me, baby Jason!”

Laughing, I sit up.  “Wanna go see train?” I ask, figuring he’s going to ask me anyway so I’ll beat him to the punch.

Moneycoin?” he asks.  So it’s going to be a moneycoin kind of day. I get him a Tupperware container with maybe an inch or two of moneycoin inside; he is delighted.  “Moneycoin!” he shouts in gleeful agreement.  Then:  “train?” he asks.  “Yes, boo, we can go see the train too,” I generously concede.

On the way, we turn Guster up loud – and Jonah’s Tupperware container of moneycoin is a fine percussion instrument.  “So go… on!  If it’ll make you happier!” he sing-shouts, shaking his moneycoin around to the beat.  During the next song, a quieter tune, he gently swishes the moneycoin inside the container with his hand. Never let it be said my boy can’t break it down.

We even see two trainssomething spectacularly fortuitous. Later, we go with Grandma Jane to the park and Jonah brings his moneycoin along; for a while he just sits on a picnic bench and lets it run through his fingers in a miserly fashion.


Then he carries it to the top of the slide and dumps it down, a great rain of moneycoin falling into a shiny scattered pile at the bottom. A couple of two-or-three-year-old kids try to talk to Jonah at one point.

“Hi!” the little girl says brightly.  I prompt Jonah, who is so engrossed in the world of moneycoin, he probably doesn’t even hear the kid.

“Say hi, boo,” I tell him.

“Hi,” he says without looking up.  The precocious girl is indignant. “I”m over here,” she insists.

“He’s not much of a talker,” I explain.  My mother-in-law has already told the parents that Jonah has autism.  The little kids quickly lose interest and run off, laughing at some shared tidbit.  They’re awfully cute, those kids.

My boy, on the other hand, is completely grimy, dirt coating his hands, his grubby clothes, most of his face, and of course, his bare feet.  Jonah hears a train horn and goes tearing off toward the car.  We spring into action and actually catch the damn thing at the tracks.  Sweet.

After the park and the bonus-train, we visit Grandma Jane and Grandpa Jim’s house, where Jonah dumps the remaining moneycoin, this time in their driveway.

We got home a little while ago.  Now he’s in the bath, washing off round one of what will likely be two or three rounds-worth of dirt he’ll acquire today.

Dear God and little baby Jason help us.

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