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Posts Tagged ‘Jesus’

“Never be afraid to trust an unknown future to a known God.”
~ Corrie Ten Boom

On Saturday Boo was his reliable, predictable self, and yet he never ceases to amaze me.  Andy had taken him overnight and so he was there when we arrived.  He had been asking for “grandma” and “mama” all morning, yet when we arrived he was more interested in the food my mother had brought him.  This time she’d added a new item:  a small container of mini-Oreos.  Jonah’s not the type to eat things in what others might consider a “logical order” – food, then dessert.  His banquet must be presented all at once, and though he did eat most of his sandwich, the Oreos were a big attraction.

Jonah enjoys the stuff in the middle — the meat and cheese inside the bread, his fingers first tap-tap-tapping against the sandwich and then, usually, discarding the bread altogether to get to whatever is the middle.  It was no different with the Oreos.  He held each mini Oreo carefully in his little hands and pulled it apart, scraping the creamy white stuffing out of the middle, then discarding the two outer cookie pieces.

cookie fun

cookie fun

He gleefully attacked his lunch with fervor.

cookie mouth

cookie mouth
YAY!

YAY!

We are waiting for warmer weather but offered to take him to the park anyway, or the train, or the Poet’s Walk.  When we asked him if he wanted to do any of these things he answered “no,” sweetly but firmly, to each one.  “Transfer station?” he asked, which is a recycling facility where Andy takes his paper and cans, etc. every Saturday.  It is car ride Jonah wants, and he almost always says “grandma stay here.”  I think it’s because he wants the whole backseat to himself.  So my poor mother is stuck watching QVC and Fox News on Andy’s TV until we return for a bath and then another request for car ride.

I found out about an open swimming program at Bard College on the weekends, but Andy seems reluctant to take him, lest he throw a fit.  I want to try, though.  Perhaps M will come down with me some Sunday and we can take him.  Jonah loves the water so much!  I was ready to book a 3-night stay in Cape Cod this summer, to take him to the ocean with Andy, to watch him frolic in the waves, to hear his little voice cry gleefully for ocean!  It is a word we do not use, for if we cannot take him it would be mean to plant the idea in his head.  Now it looks like I may be hard-pressed to take him at all.  I will find a way, for I am a determined mom and want to give the gift of ocean to my Boo.

I would like to end this post with some quotes and passages upon which I have been reflecting.  There are discoveries to make, and self-improvements to make, and faith to build.  There is self-awareness and I am attempting to step away from myself and see myself as others see me.  I am looking deep into a metaphorical mirror to ensure I can remain true to myself and to everything I have ever wanted to be…a great mother, a loyal friend, a good person.  Most of all I am seeking to be kind to all I encounter, to forgive, to understand (and not only to be understood),  as in the prayer of St. Francis, perhaps my favorite prayer/hymn.  I am praying it with everything inside me and turning things over to the certain God in which I believe.

Lord, make me an instrument of your peace.
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury,pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.

Oh Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life. Amen.

– – –

“Experience: that most brutal of teachers. But you learn, my God do you learn.”

~C. S. Lewis

– – –

Matthew 5:44-45 says, “But I tell you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven. He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous.”  Thus, now go on your knees and pray for the person who has hurt you.
– – –

“To enjoy good health, to bring true happiness to one’s family, to bring peace to all, one must first discipline and control one’s own mind. If a man can control his mind he can find the way to Enlightenment, and all wisdom and virtue will naturally come to him.”

~ Buddha

– – –

“Silence is one of the great arts of conversation.”

~ Marcus Tullius Cicero

– – –

“To thine own self be true,
and it shall follow, as the night the day,
thou canst not then be false to any man.”

~Shakespeare

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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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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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