The Other Side

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There’s a darkness upon me that’s flooded in light
In the fine print they tell me what’s wrong and what’s right
There’s a darkness upon me that’s flooded in light
And I’m frightened by those that don’t see it

I never wanted to be a fighter. Swords get heavy, after all, and seldom match my outfit. There’s too much struggle, too much disappointment in war, too many enemies made. For the first half of my life I was happy to fly under the radar. Then a couple of things happened.

In school there was a group of students accused of cheating. One of them had been a friend of mine, but we’d grown apart. I felt personally betrayed by the rumours swirling around, the idea that people would take the easy way out while my ass warmed the same chair in the library every night. And if it were that simple, that honourable, it probably wouldn’t be worth writing about. But it’s always about more, isn’t it? In this case, my own struggle to maintain mediocrity in a class of fifty-something when I’d built my identity on being a star student up until then–that struggle eroded what little confidence I had. It undid me, really. Checking scores on the printout that was posted on the wall after every exam next to our secret codes, it became a test of self-worth. A measure of personal value. Oh, I was so deluded, but I was confused. Lonely. If I wasn’t “the smart one” then I didn’t know who I was.

So I became a crusader. I formed a bit of a militia, I testified in front of the honour council, I engaged in clandestine phone conversations and whispered meetings in said library. I plotted for justice. But justice wasn’t served. And as the well-founded accusations and testimony were eschewed in favour of conflict avoidance (and, possibly, some friendly negotiation between the accused students’ parents and the school), I looked around at the field. My focus was on all those who hadn’t bothered to show up for battle–they were now the betrayers. Why didn’t they care more? Wrong and right, black and white–these were ideals that must be preserved. Why weren’t they angry?

It should be noted that I spent the first half of my life (thus far) pretty angry.

Lately–this year, in fact, the one in which I’ve passed forty–I’ve noticed a shift. Social media has largely revealed it, this turn (descent?) into middle age, evidenced by photos of long-unseen contemporaries looking…old. Photos of their children exiting childhood and becoming teenagers. This march toward our parents’ ages, except they’ve evacuated those spots and left them to us to populate. We’re getting older, and it’s weird. It seems mean, too, how obvious it is. Surely I don’t look as worn as the others?

That was rhetorical.

And people are dying, good people whose lives represented decency, or at the very least represented my own youth, they’re leaving. More spaces vacated. More time gone. It feels like a crossing over, though I don’t remember a checkpoint.

But maybe…

When The Kid came along, and the doctor visits with him, I was called into a different kind of battle. Drafted, you might say, because I never enlisted for this particular fight (see also: The Society of I Didn’t Sign Up for this Shit). I became an advocate because I was made into one, planning sleep schedules while, deeper, bigger things brewed. Matters of identity, of diversity, of a different kind of justice. A justice that was no longer about me, but him.

The calls into battle have been sporadic since his earlier years, but they don’t disappear. Too bad, because I’d really love to trade the sword in for something more portable and trendy. But here we are, time after time, and the sword is really more ornamental than anything at this point, could be left at home really, because the battles we fight for our children are more nuanced than that, require more of a deft touch than that of a blade. They require school visits, speaking to classes of kids about how different is not only beautiful but everywhere, even within them. They require conversations sometimes whispered, but always fraught, because on this side of life, at our age, we know that things are rarely black and white. They are complicated. People aren’t characters. Everyone has a story, and it’s so annoying to have to honour that when it would be easier to write them off.

Some show up for battle and some don’t, and they have stories too. Personally, I’d rather stay home. I love my couch. I like books, not hard conversations with real people. And most serious meetings don’t have wine.

But I know if I had the kind of kid that made flying under the radar easy, I’d go back to not knowing who I was, to trying to forge an identity for myself, and that never worked out all that well for me. I am a mother, and I was issued a fighting spirit at the hospital, though the nurses never mentioned it. I have two boys who will learn from me what it looks like to stand up for what’s right, and the truth is, it looks so much different than I expected back in the honour council. It looks less like blind anger and power than tears and frustration. It looks like a head on the steering wheel and deep sighs and occasional wins mixed in with losses. It looks like no longer worrying so much about what people think, even when I desperately want them to like me. It looks like tolerating pain long before there’s a payoff. It looks like friendships made deeper by a common cause. It looks like second-guessing and anxiety.

It looks like two little boys in the backseat, listening intently as I tell them what it is NOT okay for people to do, even if those people are grownups. And it looks like them being so, so worth it all.

Will Write for Attention

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I turned forty-one last week, and to be honest, it was a total crock. I woke up that morning and nothing had changed. Actually, I woke up at 4:55 that morning because that’s when my six-year-old lumbered into the room, ready to begin his day. My husband Jason was already downstairs in the boys’ room with our youngest, who–like his dad–prefers to sleep in. But our oldest, like me, has a body clock that runs on a cocktail of circadian rhythm and anxiety, and he was certain that the day should begin early.

I confess that, in my early-morning exhaustion, I wasn’t very nice to him. I explained, through gritted teeth and eventually a raised voice, that he must go back to sleep. That no he could not look at the iPad this early. He cried, I sighed, and we eventually fell asleep beside each other in our respective bad moods. Happy birthday to me. My first gift was, apparently, regret.

Read the rest over at Mockingbird!

Almost (Never) Normal

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You can’t keep safe what wants to break.

“This must be killing you,” she said.

We were standing in the kitchen with our husbands, glasses of champagne in our hands. The boys played steps away with their sitter, and the men…well, the men had placed their beers on the countertop so that they could take a look inside the hood above the stove. To see if a dead animal was there. Also, we were all in costume.

It went like this: days before, I had noticed a burning smell coming from the kitchen even though I wasn’t cooking. A few days after that (on my birthday, no less), I had stumbled downstairs in dire need of coffee and was greeted by the smell of death wafting from…where? The trash can? We emptied it. The flowers wilting on the countertop? We chucked them. The toaster? We cleaned it. Candles were burned, surfaces were wiped, and still it remained.

Until that evening, the costumed champagne evening, when I was making dinner for the boys and saw it. It was a dot on the counter, then it wiggled. I yelled up the stairs to The Husband.

IT WAS A FUCKING MAGGOT, Y’ALL.

And as I shrunk from its writhing body, I scanned the area around it and noticed more. A half-dozen of them lurking in the crack between the backsplash and the counter, mocking my attempts at cleanliness and order. Which is why she was right, when she said it must be killing me: “I know you love things to be clean.” Endless bottles of spray, countless nights of wiping, a possible Swiffer addiction, all leading to this: what would later be discovered (by TH, as I got the hell out of there while he looked) as a dead rat all up in that hood.

Jesus help us.

It’s embarrassing, really, to know that that rodent sat decaying up in our wall for a good week before we (he) disposed of him; that despite my daily and nightly efforts, something was still rotten in the state of New South Wales. That there is no amount of scrubbing that can get rid of the hidden skeletons.

There’s a metaphor here, I just know it.

Earlier that day, I’d gotten a text: The Kid’s therapist was ill and couldn’t make it into school. Neither of them could, actually, and this year not being last year (i.e. this year’s teacher not being last year’s teacher, and Year One’s grammar not being Kindy’s play), a quick chat with TK and his educators wasn’t going to cut it. Little Brother and I had plans with one of his many “best friends” and his mum, one of mine, involving a ride into the city and an art gallery, and the three of them waited patiently on the playground while I tried to sort it all out. Once TK was, against all odds, settled, I made motions to leave. That’s when I heard the sobs. And our plan changed.

The four of us went to the beach instead, to the playground there and its coffee kiosk, and for an hour endured the sunshine and water views (and my anxiety, nonetheless) of Plan B. I wanted to salvage what I could, so I took TK back to school while LB and our friends went to their house. I watched gymnastics class. I helped with some grammar. I situated him into music class. And then I left and headed for my friend’s place, where LB and his mate were engaged in Nerf wars. I sat on the grass in the sun and told the truth: how hard it is sometimes, when you see that things aren’t what you were maybe telling yourself they were.

She displayed her typical more masterful grasp of objective reality, tempering my purely emotional-based one with some truth of her own, and I was once again pulled off the ledge by love, which is a nice little recurring theme in my life. And when I picked TK up a short while later, he was better than fine, despite my frayed nerves and sore heart. We do this: our family, and our friends-as-family, we survive the spectrum and dead rats and maggots, because this is what we do, this is our story. Even when I try to hide or deny the parts that make it ours.

Sometimes the challenges that TK faces feel like a direct punch in my heart. My fears for my children’s feelings, for their being loved and enjoyed and never ever made fun of, for my deep-seated and insecure need to never fly above the radar despite that being where I’ve found the most grace–they are targeted by the spectrum, laid waste and left to die and be eaten by maggots.

Is the metaphor working?

What I’m saying is this: autism and changed plans and anxiety, they are killing me, and my fears alongside them. And they, because of how grace infuses them, are also bringing me back to life.

It’s messy, and it often smells, and there is so much struggling and searching to find where the rotten parts are, but then there is the morning after, when it smells and feels like home again because I’m not trying to cover up or deny what was meant to die and be carted off, and what was meant to be there in the first place.

We saw Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire Saturday night at the Opera House, where it was accompanied by an orchestra playing its score, and I had forgotten so much of it: how this is the one where Voldemort comes back to life, how somehow this is also (consequently?) the one where it starts getting good, how this is the one where Hermione says tearfully, at the end, that “everything’s changed now, hasn’t it?” And Harry responds, matter-of-factly, “Yes.”

Afterward, we came home to two sleeping boys, and I climbed in bed between them, and thought of all the ways they’ve changed me. All the boundary lines, the Before and the After of their existences, the deaths and the resurrections. I listened later to the truth: that “difference is a teacher.” How my sporadic and flailing and fearful efforts to make TK “like everyone else” would rob the world of so much, of him–one of my favourite teachers.

The Long Way Home (or: Hello Anxiety, My Old Friend)

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In the depths of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer. –Albert Camus

It starts within seconds of my waking up.

There is the initial stirring, the feeling of being warm and protected, and then it shifts. My consciousness peaks, and the load lowers: the weight of the day, week, month ahead, coming to rest squarely on my shoulders, heavy yet raising them to my neck. My muscles tense–the tension always comes with it, this tightening I’ve only recently learned to become aware of, to attend to, to intentionally release. Lower the shoulders; open the palms; breathe.

This is anxiety.

For so much of my life I’ve felt alone, yet this companion has always been constant. Now, I’m not alone in any way, the prayers of my youth answered in the form of a man and two boys, at least one of whom is typically beside me when I wake up, this forever sharing of space. And this, this wonderful blessing, it also can undo me, this coming to the surface struggling to breathe with a foot in my belly or hands on my legs, my body no longer my own, and there is the focused reinterpretation of it: not as violence, but as love. This sounds crazy to some people.

All of this will sound crazy to some people. Buckle up.

Adrenaline powers me out of bed, a list of tasks already forming in my mind: make the bed. Make breakfast. Clean breakfast. Vacuum the floor from breakfast. What if there’s traffic?! Make lunches. Pack backpacks. What if other kids are mean to them?! Get three people dressed. Lay out their clothes for tomorrow. Get everyone everywhere on time. What if we’re late?! It all arrives at once, along with some attendant fears thrown in for fun. This is how anxiety works.

Breathe.

Some of the tasks sound unnecessary: why not just cross a few out? Who needs a made bed, after all?

I do. I need the made beds, the wiped counters, the clean floors. I need the toys put away and the shoes lined up. I need the order because it smacks away at the anxiety. Simply put, it makes me feel better. I need straight lines and uncluttered surfaces and I see this need in The Kid and I don’t always receive it, living with others. More anxiety. Breathe again.

There are things that help, besides the order. There is classical music. Prayer and meditation. Exercise. Time alone, oh blessed time alone. (“Is there anything better than time alone in your own house?” The Sis wondered recently. “It’s like therapy.” She is an ally.) There is the beach, two minutes away and a gift I still can’t believe to be our daily reality. There are water views in between beach visits. There is medication. There is wine–but not too much wine (this is tricky).

There is grace. There are the unexpected reminders that, contrary to what anxiety tells me, everything does not hinge upon my orchestrations, my performance. There is the car that backs out of its driveway three seconds after TK has already run past, mere feet ahead of me and under my watchful eye yet–I am reminded–ultimately protected by someone else. There is Little Brother, safely clinging to the side of the pool and bringing himself back to more shallow water as I watch, breath bated and heart stopped, knowing this is how he will learn yet hating it all the same. There is running into a friend and her girls one morning when we take the back entrance to school, walking and talking together, my self-imposed rush slowing down. There is the manic joy of TK’s morning time before the bell, the smiles he brings to people’s faces. There is the self-aware goofiness of Little Brother that he knows will make me laugh–and it does. There is the way The Husband bends to my craziness because he knows it will help–the handheld vacuum now part of his routine too.

All my life, I’ve had this companion, this anxiety that I thought was something everyone dealt with, but now I realise it is the other, the extra, the thing that doesn’t belong but is here anyway and not likely to disappear. So, yes, there are strategies, but there is also this:

I don’t know that I want it to disappear. Because it is part of me now, for better and worse. And if there is this companion that has never left, somehow that is what makes it easier to believe in another companion that never leaves, in a mystical balance that grace provides. In the moments at the beach that I feel forced to fill, to produce–how can I put this into words?!–as an unheard but felt voice tells me to just be. That in this place, staring at this water, warmed by this sun, is where I am allowed to let go and just be.

Know this, when you see me, when you see any of us who are afflicted and accompanied: we are constantly doing battle.

But there is this: that somehow it makes my life richer. There is TK, demanding the way we took yesterday, the back way into school that leads us to our friends, the long way. Yes, I prayed for this, and I also prayed for patience, and I saw Evan Almighty too, and I learned that we are given situations that make us patient, but the scooter he had to ride to school is now swinging around, tripping me up as he drags it, and I’d like to change my request for patience into one for a bottle of wine and a desert island. Maybe some Xanax on the side wouldn’t hurt either. But we walk together, and I see that the long way, though it can feel crushing, is filled with more: more scenery. More “chance” encounters. More moments together. More talking, and more quiet.

And I know that this God-forsaken anxiety, this long way home, it is not God-forsaken. It is somehow given, and it is where I am met. It is how, and where, I am taught to breathe.

Always the Good Guys Win

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I remember the preliminary visit in the receiving of The Kid’s diagnosis; the prelude to the bomb that later dropped. The doctor, accustomed to a range of reactions after years of thirty-minute appointments spent barely observing a child before slapping a label on him (#notbitter), had fine-tuned his process so that his nurse/assistant/social worker spent the bulk of time with the families first: asking questions, dispensing surveys, and this: mentioning all the celebs who were likely on the spectrum.

Albert Einstein, Bill Gates, Bob Dylan…the list was varied and esteemed, and designed, I suppose, to soothe us before the sucker punch. I took it in, nodded obediently, feigned being impressed. Acted like we were receiving a gift from them rather than getting the air knocked out.

It was only later, midway through the denial and grief, months down the road, that I received the phone call that was everything that visit had tried to be: a friend of a friend with a kid like The Kid who had actually been there; the effort of putting a brave face to it didn’t ooze off him because there wasn’t any effort, only truth: One day you will realise you’ve been given a gift.

The words fell so much differently, later. They always do, on a heart that has been softened by time and tears rather than toughened by defence. Later is when it usually all happens.

We went to a birthday party on Sunday, and when I recapped it to a friend later, I explained how much easier birthday parties are now. How hard they used to be: first with just The Kid, who would circle the perimeter and study the goings-on from afar; I’d have to follow him closely but not too closely while fear and anxiety followed me, swirling around in a cocktail of frustration. Then Little Brother came along and I’d run interference between the two of them, exhausted physically in addition to the former emotional drain.

Not to be melodramatic.

Now, though? Well it was a bowling party. I assumed we’d give the lanes a shot then retire to the arcade, the three of us separate as usual. Instead, both the boys bowled alongside their peers, their friends, and each turn was a mini-celebration. TK decided, after LB scored a strike (with maternal aid), that “X’s are bad. You don’t want to knock down all the pins because X’s mean you’re wrong.” So we cheered for his partial removal of the pins too. Later, they sat at the table and scarfed down nuggets and cake and I was there, watching them and talking to friends. It felt like a Carnival cruise–and only because of the years prior.

LB has his own way of seeing and saying things too, the way he replaces B‘s with V‘s, refers to the villain Two-Face as Toothpaste, calls computers pa-yooters. They’re both into superheroes now, but especially LB, who lines up his Marvel and DC squishies in an impressive array of costumed powers. They are defined mainly according to the Good vs Bad distinction, and when they fight each other, the result is predictable: “Always the good guys win, Mommy.” I listen and agree, this oversimplification (and often non-truth) resounding in my brain with the follow-up, Eh, we’ll get into it more later before I let him knock out the villain I’m holding. (Always he gets to be the good guy.)

Because it seems like it should always be true, this idea that karma holds; that we do the right thing and are rewarded without fail; that the good guys always win. It feels like it should always be true, but it also feels like it isn’t. People get sick or in accidents; you look out for the kids in your kid’s class and still get angry parent emails; Netflix stops working (these grievances may not carry the same weight).

But underneath it all, I know it to be true because I believe it is. I know that just as anxiety has dogged me relentlessly all my life, something else has pursued me not only equally but harder. More unfailingly. Beyond karma, and fairness, and predictable outcomes, I believe that there is a later that changes the now. That sometimes things have to feel wrong before we see they’re right. Grace deserves the fullness of time to reveal its beauty.

The other day we found a new playground and trail and the four of us, our family, followed it down to the water. Awhile ago TK would have faltered, rejecting the unknown. On this day he went ahead of us all, declaring himself the leader. The birds–the ones who startled us all when we first arrived with their scream-like sounds–squawked above us on their own path, and we barely noticed, their voices a part of our normal, our later that is now.

Will Write for Attention

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“Reality is an ally of God.”
— Richard Rohr

When I was in dental school, I spent most afternoons with the rest of my class in the lab, where we’d toil over fake teeth for three hours. It was just as fun as it sounds, which led to filling the time with wandering conversations over diverse topics. Religion often came up, as this was Alabama—the buckle of the Bible belt—and one afternoon a friend of mine laughed over an idea he’d had: did Jesus and the disciples ever fart in front of each other?

I was horrified. My friend was going off the rails, I was sure, and needed to be contained. At the time, I was in my early twenties and therefore knew everything while having no sense of humor about anything. I glared at him, saying he was being disrespectful (I’m sure the words Our Lord and Savior figured in heavily to my tirade). He maintained his opinion that Jesus and the disciples were comfortable enough with each other for wind to have broken; I maintained mine that the mere thought was blasphemy. We never did resolve the issue.

Read the rest over at Mockingbird!

50 Ways to Say It

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Hiking…is walking.

I don’t remember when or if I put it this way, but the other afternoon as the boys and I drove the twenty-something minutes across suburbs to The Kid’s therapy, he told me from the backseat: “The Lizard Centre is where I go to learn how to be a grownup.”

Well. Kind of? For all my effort to talk about everything, to make sure The Feelings Train is always stocked with snacks and ready for passengers, I’m learning that there are…interpretations. Their little minds whir all the time, creating realities that must be bolstered or deconstructed, like the other one TK announced into the darkness the other night as I lay beside him and Little Brother:

“Will’s not smart.”

“Excuse me? He most certainly is!”

“No, he’s not smart because he doesn’t have an apple brain.”

Cut to me laughing quietly and ruefully over my own overcompensation, or was it his misinterpretation, of my efforts to lay the foundation for TK’s confidence in light of his strengths and challenges. Which is to say…we got some work to do. Always.

I explained to him and LB, who lay unworried beside me and announced that he has a Goofy and HP brain, are both smart in different ways–and will both need help in different areas, too. “But I’m smart,” TK clarified when I finished talking. I sighed and smiled at the same time, my standard response these days to most everything. “Yes. You are very smart.”

TK has a new kid in his class who doesn’t speak a word of English. The other day when we took LB inside his classroom I noticed a sign on the wall: 50 Ways to Say Hello. I beckoned the boys over. “Hey look, James! They have Mandarin on here! You can tell your new friend ‘hello’ in his own language!”

He was vaguely interested, preferring to build a quick Lego tower instead. I’ve maybe been harping on the new kid too much lately, telling TK how important it is to be kind–“Remember when we were new? How it could be scary at first? You’re being a good friend, right? You’re being kind?”–while he responds, “YES, Mom! You already said that! I AM KIND!”

He is a language I am constantly learning. So is LB. There are a million answers to each of their questions–and that doesn’t even count the ones that don’t get asked. Meanwhile I fumble for answers, overanalyse my responses, and wonder if I’m doing any of it right.

The Husband and I went last weekend to see “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time,” and from the opening cacophony of sounds that sent me jumping and TH laughing at me, I was moved. Discomfited. Reassured. Validated. Unsettled. No two kids on the spectrum are the same–hell, no two kids are the same–and there is no manual (I’ve spoken to Management about this and the fact remains annoyingly unchanged). But as I watched the story unfold before us–the parents’ love and frustration, the boy’s anxiety and outsider-y-ness–I felt less alone. There are fifty ways to say it–autism, spectrum, special need, apple brain–but there is only one James. One Will. And they are ours. And, somehow, they are happy. More than that, they are loved. Imperfectly, and well. This is all we get to know right now–Management also remains frustratingly tight-lipped on all the questions I have about their futures.

“That means I can do anything, right?” the boy asks at the end of the show, and there is no response from the adults around him. My own apple-brained boy has started to both cling and fly, jumping onto me for the walk to school, laughing as he tells me he’s making me stronger, then running when we arrive to climb the rocks–he never used to do that. “I’m good at climbing,” he says, later claiming to climb a tree while placing one foot on the lowest branch, and I applaud because he never used to do that either. Can he do anything?

No. Can anyone?

While the boys are at school, I decide to take a rare walk around our area–usually I’m attempting to run it, or just walking the distance between our house and his school with them in tow. On this outing I scale the hills that define our streets. It feels less like a walk than a vigorous hike, which was not what I signed up for, but it’s starting to feel natural. Like it’s the same thing anyway.

The Sad and Private Bits

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And out of all these things I’ve done, I think I love you better now

Every Monday afternoon, the boys and I head to a suburb twenty minutes away for The Kid’s two hours of therapy. Little Brother and I sit in the waiting room where he yells profanity or plays games with me while TK works in the back. One Monday each month, LB and I come to the back too, to a separate room from TK’s, where LB alternately plays with the toys and seeks our attention while TK’s team of therapists and I discuss his progress and challenges.

These meetings have run the spectrum (see what I did there?) between awful and poignant, terrible and magical. When they first began, I more often felt like I was being called to the principal’s office to discuss what was shittiest about my parenting out of all the shitty things I do. It’s possible that I was a bit defensive and over-sensitive, but it’s also possible that the meetings were run in a bit of a condescending fashion. Since those early days there has been a handover to a new leader, a few changes on the team, and, not for nothing, some growth in TK, and myself, and between us and the people who sit in that room.

So yesterday was a bit magical. Both inside and outside that room.

LB started back to school yesterday, but TK’s term started a day after–so he and I got one of those rarities to share: time together that wasn’t just about therapy. We went to the playground with some friends, then through the McDonald’s drive-thru (I did not have any confrontations this time!), then back to Ant-Man and the Wasp for another go. We made it through the whole thing this time. If sitting through a two-hour film could be considered a life skill (I SAY IT IS), then I am an expert–but up to this point it has been unheard of for TK, until now. I think the handcuffs helped. J/K! He was just as mesmerised as I was by the story, and watching a woman don a suit (that wasn’t cut to expose every inch of her skin) and kick all kinds of ass? YEAH, THAT HAPPENED TOO.

Once we got to the therapy centre and TK went to his room, LB and I settled in to ours and I talked about TK. I recounted progress from the last month and mentioned weaknesses. I saw nodding heads. I heard quotes from his sessions (in one, he got upset about something and he told the therapist he was going to have her fired.) I listened to moments of understanding and plans geared toward his well-being.

It was a good day.

Not every day is, of course. There are the tough ones, the sad ones. TK has had trouble with those lately–specifically, the “sad bits” he doesn’t want to discuss. He runs from conversations about difficult things, which for him includes cuts and scrapes, accidents and such. His anxiety extends to a fear of getting in trouble I think, even about things that aren’t offences, and he’ll say it when we bring such topics up: “ONLY HAPPY THINGS! We don’t talk about the sad things!” And we tell him, again, that we have to talk about the happy and sad things. That we talk about all the things here.

I get it, though. We live in a filtered world, in a place where images are curated and narratives are chosen. I guess that could extend into some homes, where hard topics are avoided and difficult conversations aren’t had? Well I’ll be damned if that happens here. We’re back on the Feelings Train, that space in the dark at the end of the day when all the feelings are discussed (don’t tell The Husband; he’s still at the station acting like he forgot his wallet; also, LB is getting a bit too freestyle with his, bringing up shit that happened eons ago. We’ll deal with that later).

We went to the mountains last weekend, where we celebrated Christmas in July at a family-friendly hotel that boasted a cinema, game room, ball pit, car and train and pony rides, indoor pool, and Santa at a shitty buffet dinner that cost a month’s car payment. The kids were in heaven. TH and I were…fine. At breakfast one morning–a repeated scene of meltdowns and chaos–the little girl at the table next to us took off her shirt in the middle of eating her eggs and sat, bare-chested, while her dad begged her to put it back on. I sat drinking my coffee and pretending it was wine. TK turned to me and pointed at her (ha. I remember when he couldn’t point). “She’s showing her private bits,” he stage-whispered to me multiple times, his observation the product of a recent health course at school. What he called private bits is something that, at home, is called a belly shirt. At home, where we’ve recently had to relegate all talk of farts and butts and wieners. At home, where we can talk about anything.

At home, where we have an incredible view that we could never afford were we not shipped here by God and a credit bureau who pays for it (for now), a view that prompted one of my friends to semi-jokingly say, “If I had this view I think my problems would disappear.” I get that too. It feels silly to worry about a leak in the roof when we’re surrounded by gorgeous water. It feels silly to think anything could be sad.

Yet I still take Lexapro and we still go to therapy every Monday and we (I) still worry, and this is our life: the good days and the hard, the sad bits and happy, the mountains and the beaches. We settle back into our routine, missing pieces of ourselves that had to travel back across the Pacific, navigating changes and differences, and the boys sit at their LEGO table, across from (fighting) and next to (befriending) each other, these waves and their ups and downs not interrupting our life, but filling it.

The Beautiful Damage

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“But sometimes the orchestra plays something in swelling chords of luck and joy, and all I can hear is that one violin sawing out a thin melody of grief.”–Catherine Newman (again)

The other day the thought broke through the daily monotony and stood out amidst the minutiae: how far would I go to protect my children?

It sounds like the tagline to a Lifetime movie, and it was likely born of one too many true-crime podcast listenings, but cue the dramatic irony anyway, because this afternoon I was given one answer, at least, in the McDonald’s parking lot.

The truck cut across a lane (my lane) of traffic after I had already begrudgingly let one car over, and he nearly hit me, the boys in the backseat oblivious. I laid on the horn for a good five seconds, at which point he pulled to a stop and opened his door.

Oh NO YOU DIDN’T, I thought, and watched as he spotted me, then hesitated before stepping forward. I think his goal was just to intimidate me, but I opened my window. “What were you doing?” he griped, to my utter astonishment, as though he were the one wronged, and I fired back, “YOU NEARLY HIT ME!”

“I didn’t even see you,” he downplayed, as if it were a defence, then added the piece de resistance loved by females around the world: “You need to calm the fuck down.” He began to walk away, shaking his head at my ridiculousness.

“YOU CALM THE FUCK DOWN, YOU FUCKING ASSHOLE! I’M PROTECTING MY CHILDREN,” I bellowed from the driver’s seat, the boys no longer oblivious behind me, and the mansplaining driver whipped back around, so I sealed my point with a middle finger. If we were in America (thank God we’re not), he likely would have reached for his firearm next. Instead, he returned my salute and angrily climbed back into his car.

Well that’s ONE thing I’d do to protect them I thought, as the boys in the backseat fired questions at me about what had just happened. They were squarely on my side, calling the man “not nice” and “mean” and graciously telling me that he needed to learn to drive. I agreed, telling them that it was my job to keep them safe (“and love us,” clarified Little Brother, citing the even more fraught of the two tasks), and, upon repeated postmortem analysis of the event, not regretting my reaction at all. If my children are to see me lose my shit about anything, I want it to be their safety.

But. It’s easy to tell that story. It makes me feel like a firebrand, a bit of a warrior, a Mama Bear (I hate that phrase) who is not to be f-ed with (like that one better). I felt justified, not exactly Jesus-turning-tables-level, because let’s be honest, that illustration is about as mis- and overused as it gets, but nonetheless…I felt strong.

I am so not strong.

I realise how easy it is to be lulled into a rhythm of safety, of sameness, of “I can do this” mentality when routine is in place and waters are smooth. Then a displacing event occurs and I look around to remember that at best, I am docked not in a harbour of calm waters but at sea between storms. That life is not a matter of “arriving” courtesy of my own wits but of being swept around by the same hands that save me.

Or something? It’s just that sometimes I feel the “reset” button has been pushed and I’m left feeling barren of hope and I’m starting over just when it felt like things were evening out.

Last week we were at a playground with The Niece, who immediately made friends because she inherited only her paternal grandfather’s genes, and she told her new friends, “That’s my cousin James. He has an apple brain.” She was stating it as fact, but I searched nonetheless for a mean edge to her voice, wondered at the harmless laughter from her new friends if they were looking for a beatdown. She was echoing what I’d told her the week before, after we’d dropped The Kid off at school and I’d gingerly approached the topic with her, of his different ways of learning and behaving. She’d remained quiet, which made me think she was getting it, until she proclaimed, “All this talk of apples is making me hungry!” Turned out, though, that she had been listening. And was ready to repeat what she’d heard. And there, on the playground, the reset button was pressed and I felt it: the hopelessness, the fear, the worry over how he’ll be seen and treated, which often doesn’t touch the bubble where we live out our usual days, among people who know him. There are the moments that pierce that bubble, though: the mention of high schools, or the pull-up at night (LB right there with him, but three years behind) that precludes sleepovers elsewhere (or at least complicates them), the quirks that can be beloved while inducing an urge for to me walk that line of explaining without sounding to others–or him–like I’m apologising.

And then there’s just the everyday shit, like LB interrupting a peaceful moment at the beach with diarrhoea. Oh, and I tried to take them to see Ant-Man and the Wasp, which was…less than successful. (Loved the first half, tho!)

We are different. He is different. I am different, skewed as I am by the winds of anxiety and depression, an island of belief among people who are fine without it, a writer of words who hasn’t mastered them in person.

I DON’T KNOW WHAT I’M DOING, is what I’m saying. In case I had fooled anyone into thinking I do by showing up here and writing something every week, or yelling at men in parking lots (though that could have gone either way, let’s be honest), or because sometimes I actually do my hair. I am a mess, a ship tossed on the waves: my shins will always hurt because I don’t run right or stretch enough; I overcompensate for social anxiety (and stress) with wine; every time my doctor refills my anti-anxiety meds and reminds me to check in if I ever want to wean off them I laugh because LIFE; and whenever the hard realities of that life encroach, I want to curl up in a ball and run from the responsibility of, for example, navigating my and my children’s emotional (and otherwise) health.

Also, LB is a little too obsessed with Thanos for someone who can’t even sit through Ant-Man.

But my boat always has space for the other people who don’t have it figured out–and plenty of wine.

The other night I decided I was sick of depending on the ear plugs I’ve worn for years to sleep and went without them. What followed was a restless night. The next night, I wondered why I’d tried to be such a hero. We all need help. I stuck those effers back in (that’s what she said) and drifted off.

To close: the boys and I have been going back to the beach, to the rocks where they’ve been identifying several “hideouts.” (Hiding is their latest favourite activity. I relate.) As the three of us crouched into a crevice and watched the water pound the rocks around us, I thought about how all these divets and hidden places have been worn by thousands of years of water pounding at them. How what looks to be the victim of ruthless waves, of storms and weather, can end up looking like design: the very spot where a person can find safety.

I Knew You When

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“…but to me it’s the timeless and universal concept of shelter. And so, finally, I am home.”

I’m writing this from our dining table, my laptop the lone technology amidst a sea of play-doh and tiny boy hands, classical music in the background because I’m fancy.* Little Brother turns to me occasionally and says, “I’m sad,” while The Kid keeps his feelings internalised for now, and I sit between them on the emotional spectrum, each of us dealing with the grief present in the empty space, the area vacated yesterday by The Sis and The Niece.

*it helps my anxiety

I am not one to mourn visitors’ leaving. I am of one mind regarding their exits: relief. The ability to fully inhabit our own space again, to function independently of others’ questions and need for entertaining and meals. But this was different. This was the closest to not having visitors that a visit can be. I have not a memory without either my sister in it, or at the very least inhabiting my universe. We were born twelve months and three weeks apart, and I often think we share a brain (and she got the bigger half). To have her here was to have my own reactions to life reflected back to me, validated. It was as though this Australian adventure wasn’t completely real until she saw it too.

They became a part of our routine, the first to repeatedly join us on school drop-offs and collections, the first to sit around our table with friends as part of Champagne Fridays, to play with the other kids who have become my kids’ friends. There’s something about having your present witnessed by someone who knows your past. It’s all-encompassing and whole. It’s comforting, but more–it’s healing.

I thought about it as we ice-skated around the rink on their penultimate night here: how much time and experience we were covering just by being together. I remembered the days of our own youth, when we’d join our friends on the ice rink at the mall and slide around inexpertly but freely (as freely as a child with the pangs of anxiety can). I watched as our own kids struggled through their learning experiences: how LB spent fifteen seconds on the ice before declaring his displeasure; how The Niece raced around with more confidence than skill but totally free; how TK gripped my and The Sis’s hands tightly, talking through his anxiety, tiny and cautious movements defining his laps around the rink. I watched as LB exited the rink with The Husband’s help and they took off for wild rides while we continued our loops. And I thought about how long I’d known them all, am still knowing them.

This Sis: how I knew you when we wondered whether we’d have our own kids and family. I knew you when surprises jumped out on our paths and the conflict and pettiness that defined our youth gave way to what was lying underneath the whole time: a kinship that defines definition, an unwavering support for each other even as we do things differently, as our lives–husband, two kids, home–look alike yet, ten thousand miles apart, can veer apart drastically while remaining tied together.

Little Brother: how I knew you when you showed up in the middle of the night, explosions accompanying your arrival; when your days and nights were reversed and I thought I’d go insane; when your skin was soft and you loved the word “butt” more than anything; when you said “hold me” everywhere we went; when you grinned at me with a mixture of mischief and delight in perfect proportion; when you challenged my ideas of how much I had to give and showed me reserves I didn’t know existed; when you were TK’s biggest cheerleader and confidence-builder.

The Kid: how I knew you when you were shuttled between waiting rooms and from doctors’ offices to hospital rooms; when the ignorant psychologist declared you, at three years, to have the intelligence of a three-month-old; when you choked after a feed one of your first nights home and I was hurtled into a world of fear and love like I’d never known; when you faced down a cross-world move with triumph after triumph after only just beginning to utter words; when you crawled into bed with me every night and woke me with your feet even morning.

The Niece: how I knew you when you were the first of your generation and we toasted your arrival with contraband champagne in the hospital; when news of your days and nights, related by your mom, was the first honest assessment of motherhood I’d been given; when you grew from baby into girl, your limbs lengthening and your vocabulary growing and your sassiness knowing no bounds; when you proved that it’s not just boys who make unending physical demands of parents; when you cried upon our leaving, then yours.

The Husband: how I knew you when we both looked young in photos; when we rode with the top down in spring on a smaller island toward a future we had no way of predicting; when nights in hotels were trips, then escapes; when we texted to check in on each other, then on kids; when we were two, then four. When we were more than we had planned, and it was hard and wonderful.

How I knew love when it was a feeling, then a choice, and grace when it was a word, then a breath that saved me and kept me alive. When it all came down to this: that we were together, and we are, and we will be, and this sticking around, it is the hardest and the easiest and the everything.

They left yesterday morning, tears in their wake, and the boys and I ventured back to the beaches we had shown them, and pushed even further, into empty inlets and caves that we then filled with our voices and bodies. We came back home and there were flowers waiting, from a friend I know now and knew then: when we were strangers in the schoolyard, when we bonded over wine, when our kids’ friendship mirrored and extended our own. All of these surrounding us, answering the prayer I prayed on a teary track of my own two years ago: that there would be people here for us, our people. These people meeting and knowing our already-people, so that the hellos grow as frequent as the goodbyes and the empty spaces never stay that way for long.