Category Archives: motherhood

That’s the way it is with him.

 

thewayitis2

An interesting thing happens every time I fill out a medical history, behavioral questionnaire, or sensory checklist for my younger son, which coincidentally happens a lot these days. I think about my other son. I think about how I would answer the same questions for him. My firstborn son will always be patient zero.

It’s not that I don’t lose sleep over my younger son. Believe me, I do. I worry about him a lot. I wish I’d intervened sooner, I’m concerned about how his anxiety and sensory challenges are affecting him socially and academically, and I’m anxious about what future therapies he might need, but at the end of each day, I’m confident in our path and my ability to advocate on his behalf.

There’s an ease with which I’ve handled his diagnosis that I suppose comes naturally from having been through it once before. As soon as his symptoms erupted last fall, I knew what to do, where to go, who to talk to, and what to expect.

With my older son – with patient zero – it’s different. Ease and confidence aren’t words I would ever use to describe the experience I’ve had with him. Fear and doubt are much more accurate. His sensory history has been like a never-ending game of whack-a-mole. As soon as we address one challenge, another one pops up, and each one must be faced with strong intuition and bold action, of which I have none. Not with him. With him, I never know if I’m doing the right thing.

I often have a recurring dream where I’m back in high school and I either have an exam for which I didn’t study or I don’t know how to find my classroom. I’m lost, unprepared, and bound to fall short. All my life – with school, jobs, dance, writing, family, and friends – I’ve been afraid to disappoint, and the stakes were never higher than when I became a mother, a journey that began long before I held a baby in my arms. I can’t think of more profound feeling of failure in my life than when my body proved incapable of making a baby. The eventual birth of my first son, after such a colossal loss and a difficult pregnancy to boot, was nothing short of miraculous. In exchange for the gift of his life, my offering in return was a promise to never fail him.

Motherhood is a daily practice that over time builds strength and self-assurance, but no matter how seasoned I’ve become, I’m always uncertain with him. He’s my patient zero and my ground zero. He’ll always have the honor of being the boy who made me a mommy and the burden of being the beneficiary of a pledge I’m terrified I can’t keep.

Today, he is the subject of paperwork I’m filling out in a waiting room, because there’s another mole to whack. As he disappears into a small room for a new evaluation, I’m keenly aware that I can’t catch my breath. It’s okay. I’m used to it now, because that’s the way it is with him.

SensoryBlogHopNew300

Welcome to the Sensory Blog Hop — a monthly gathering of posts from sensory bloggers hosted by The Sensory Spectrum and The Jenny Evolution. Click on the links below to read stories from other bloggers about what it’s like to have Sensory Processing Disorder and to raise a sensory kiddo!Want to join in on next month’s Sensory Blog Hop? Click here!

Want to read more amazing posts in the August Sensory Blog Hop? Just click on this adorable little frog…

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Filed under anxiety, motherhood, sensory processing disorder

Seven Signs Our House is Becoming a Home

homeiswhereyourmomis

Slowly but surely, we’re getting unpacked. Boxes still litter every room, the boys’ rooms need to be painted, our playroom/den reminds me of poop (the color, not the smell), there’s no TV in the kitchen (the horror!), and I have no bedroom furniture except for a bed and bedside table, but we’re making progress. Here are seven signs that our new house is finally starting to feel like home:

flowers

1. Fresh flowers. Fresh flowers on the kitchen table are evidence that (1) I have a kitchen table, (2) I’ve unpacked a vase, and (3) I’ve been to a grocery store that sells flowers, which means I’ve begun cooking instead of having food delivered every night.

brusselssproutsF

2. Roasted Brussels sprouts. It’s a true story that I’ve started cooking. Once Brussels sprouts have been roasted, order returns to the universe.

artworkfinal

3. Artwork on the walls. Almost! Hanging a picture on the wall suggests permanence in either wall color or furniture placement (or both). As soon as Mike finds his level, which is buried somewhere deep in the garage, this sucker is going up.

owls

4. Owls. An owl sighting means I’ve transitioned from opening boxes with items that meet immediate essential needs, such as bed sheets, Dylan’s Homer Simpson slippers, and wine glasses, to boxes that contain less vital but still indispensable items, including but not limited to chip clips and owls.

rileyart

5. Riley’s artwork. Glue sticks, pipe cleaners, stickers, markers, and popsicle sticks are within reach (and every Sharpie we own has been hidden), which means Riley has resumed his art regime. This (phallic) masterpiece is a dinosaur. Obviously.

camp

6. Camp arts & crap crafts projects. I’m no longer obsessed with whether or not I left my cookie sheets and cooling racks in the oven drawer in the house in Florida, but rather with how to make these arts & crap crafts projects made at camp disappear in the night.

legos

7. Effing Legos. Same mess, different zip code.

How did you know your new house was becoming a home?

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Filed under motherhood, moving