NOW He Gets It

ALL the supplements my four younger children are on. One is SleepVance to help my one four year old sleep. She will stay up till 1am, or wake up at 3am. So I have been buying that for her, and what I didn’t add in the picture was my nine year old’s melatonin. She is on 5mg after the paed suggested the original dose was too low for her and she perhaps needed 4mg. I can only find 5mg. Works ok!

One was chewable zinc, but my non- talking twin hates that specific gummy so I bought the syrup for her. Right NOW (the picture was taken two months ago.) they are all on the liquid one anyway, as it contains more zinc per teaspoon at a lower price, than the chewable gummies. It’s less pain on my back to dispense tablets than it is to bend down to each child and feed them a spoon of syrup. But yeah, the magnesium and zinc are cheaper in syrup form.

So, these are all supplements that research claims help with certain aspects of ADHD and autism. There are also essential oils but it…I don’t even know if THESE are helping, to add extra is just pointless. Mood, ability to think, reasoning, calming…You’re meant to ‘overdose’ them as it has been seen that most of these children lack these nutrients in the amounts non neurodivergent people have, but that would be even MORE expensive. And three are on prescription meds too. And even with these supplements, I don’t give every single one every day, to try slow down the usage. I DO give Omega 3 every day. But again, not in the huge amounts they state.

Why buy them?

Desperation. I struggle with the symptoms more than the children do. It’s emotionally taxing, and now that my husband has been on leave, he FINALLY gets it. He finally sees the pain of raising our non- speaking four year old who can’t communicate in a way we understand and wants/takes things that she shouldn’t have, and wants things done that are impossible to do, leading to mega tantrums. (Like wanting to balance an orange on top of a pen and acting as if WE are refusing to even when we show her the things she wants are physically impossible.)

He finally understands the non-stop heartbreak of watching your precious child not able to put you in her world. And it is breaking his heart. I downloaded a playlist of specific classical songs that research has shown helps with brain development. I call it “Brain music.” I play it when the children are eating. Research claims 20 minutes a day would be perfect. I don’t always get that because the very angel worrying us the most is extremely mobile, getting up during meal times and going all over the place.

But I AM thankful that both twins love it! Classical music isn’t always lovely sounding! But my talking twin (A) will start making her constantly present bunny dance, and shouts, “ It’s brain music!” And my non- talking twin stops chewing, and gets this look on her face as if she’s digesting the tunes. With an enigmatic smile on her face. It’s too sweet! It’s like I’ve given them a huge treat.

Yesterday, my husband wondered how much an e-speaker would cost, so when the twins have quiet time in their rooms, we quietly pipe brain music into our non- speaking twin’s room, “for my poor girl especially.” Now he gets it. Now he gets it.

I can never explain to those who don’t live it, the constant strain of having all these children with significant challenges, but especially having HER- a child we so desperately want to reach but can’t.

I tried to join them for family worship two evenings ago. I stopped because both twins see me as the FoodMaster, constantly asking me for stuff to eat and drink when I pray with them and when I put my talking twin to bed. They never do that with the others. My non-talking twin grabbed my hand, pulled me and struggled to finally bring out “p-p-peanuts and raisins.” I congratulated her for asking for them! Then she took me to the FREEZER and gestured for me to get her an ice lolly. She has asked for them by name at least three times in her life. But that’s the nature of the game. Abilities she had just disappear. She no longer calls her daddy, “Dinosaur.” But she doesn’t call him Daddy either. I preferred dinosaur to nothing.

But yes, the word meaning issue is a struggle I’ve noticed for a while now. She will say a word. Blurt it out after great difficulty. But what she says isn’t what she MEANS. Like meaningfully looking me in the eye and randomly shouting out, “Dolphin.” I can tell that’s not what she wants to say. And it’s a struggle in my eight year old son too. He will string together sentences that are grammatically correct most of the time, but he has no clue what the words actually mean. And he will throw tantrums thinking what was said meant something else. I ask him when I can tell that what he’s saying is ‘wrong,’ what he means. But he can’t re-phrase. Like when he has just returned from a drive with my husband asks me, “Does dad have driving skills?” What does that mean to him? And of course he does, given he has just driven him. So what does he mean? It’s scary and draining. How do you change it? How do you fix the brain so that you all understand each other?

I don’t know.💔

See What I Mean? ☺️

We went from random unusual sounds and NO speech at all, to words and not only single words, sometimes whole phrases and sentences! Today she came to me and proudly pointed at her ears while shouting, “Ee-yors.” I responded, “Yes! Ears!” Who cares about pronunciation right now when words are so new!?

Caught her running to my room…

And after she entered, I was rewarded with more!

And “Let’s go!” Not sure where to! Her first time saying that.

What is so exciting to me is how she herself seems to find her ability to speak amusing and amazing! She just says random words too with joy and abandon! It’s like the words ‘taste good’ to her. It’s lovely. It really is.

But it’s a privilege I can’t post elsewhere. I have an acquaintance who has my number and their autistic six year old is not talking (yet.) My girl is four years old. They’ve been everywhere for help and he has been going to special schools (Due to aging out , he’s actually leaving the one we wanted but has no space for her.)

I know how it hurts -for a lack of a better word- when someone you were walking with suddenly runs ahead and leaves you behind leaving you even more isolated, even when you know they have ‘severely autistic’ (Neurologist’s words, not mine) challenges to deal with, like behaviour that’s inexplicable or the insatiable desire to keep eating. I can’t do that to her, I can’t throw our growth in her face when she’s wishing for it for her child. So, I share my surprise here. I pray it continues. I hope it progresses till she can tell us what’s in her heart, her mind, what bothers her, and what she likes. When we go out, to have her tell us WHY she’s screaming would be such a blessing. To know what makes her uncomfortable would help us reduce the discomfort, protect her from the places or smells or sights, and create more safe spaces for her. Oh, that would be such a lovely thing to happen.

Her twin-she will scream and cry. But then she will tell us that she doesn’t want a certain song to start playing until she’s there in front of the TV instead of with me in the bedroom. We now know to have her sister call her if they’re about to play music so she’s there. We know why she’s crying.

What a dream come true if the same could happen for her sister.

Keeping hope alive and VERY grateful for where we are today.

Alright no. I couldn’t keep it in. So I hid the mom instead. I post a bit about AS (Mostly what it does to others. Only two people know I’m dealing if with digestive side effects from Enbrel .) It’s only fair to post a bit of my good news.

I Didn’t Fail

My husband is overseas and keeps telling me to sleep. I keep telling him I’m in too much pain!!! (It’s 11pm here.) Ahhh. I’m at the stage of pain where if you are chatting to me about nothing linked to me, or about something trivial, I can’t. I just can’t. I need to curl up into a ball and focus on something deep. Something deep about to take my focus away. I can’t do trivial when my body has been on fire all week and the only person who seems to get it is in America.

Pain is lonely.

Pain borne alone is very lonely.

BUT I also have the joy of knowing I don’t fail. While my children were awake, I didn’t let the pain overwhelm me. I didn’t snap at them. I tried to do as much housework as I could so my teens didn’t feel like glorified slaves once they got back from their exams. I did bed time with my talkative twin. I did so much school with my middle two that they asked to stop. I did that with screaming bones.

And so, I know God understands that I’m too distracted to read the Bible right now. It needs depth I cannot give it. And He knows I’m thankful for much. Like my eight year old who knows exactly how to engage with my non-talkative twin. Who sits with her instead of trying to force her to engage with her. Proud of my little girl.

She’d made me put the box on the sleeper couch and just lay next to it for a long time. My girl respected that and worked with it.

Still An Autism Mom

We went to the aquarium a while ago. Recently… I was nervous. I didn’t know what it would be like. I pictured myself missing my husband as Twin B raced ahead with him in tow like last time.

I was so wrong!

This time, I was the object of her affection. Which meant that I’m the one who had to do the zooming ahead. She enjoyed the freedom of going walking fast all over the place. I wanted to see the new fish though so the zooming wasn’t achieving MY goals! She won! Though I did double back a few times with her as you can see. And at other times, they waited for us to come back round.

Seeing her happy made me happy. So, I held her hand and zoomed with her as we raced up the wide passages and down again.

Haha. I got down here. My knees protested painfully, but as I was quickly getting up, she came and unexpectedly sat on me. I fell over. As I laughed-after screaming in shock-husband asked, “ What ARE you doing!?”

I answered as if it was totally normal, “I’m falling!” With a “Duh!” in my head for good measure. 😉

Then there was this day. She was tired but not falling asleep so I went in and applied deep pressure by lying on her. She loved it!

Bad photos but good times!

We are still not really speaking to communicate but there are many words! She looks at us intently and will suddenly blurt out, “ Chicken! Pig! Cow! Bubbles!”

But she’s very clear when she grabs my hand and these days instead of leading me to the cupboard to get food, pulls me to the garage and says, “Car!”❤️❤️

And this morning when her dad was singing “no more wars” she stood in front of him and blurted out, “W-w-double yoo. War!”

I love those moments because what she’s saying matches what she’s thinking or hearing. I told my husband that given she’s so intentional and we get what she’s referring to at these times, then there’s a link with the random words … So, clearly when she says “cow” to me, she’s saying ‘Mom, you’re as fat as a cow.”😉

With Apologies to Old-Time Readers

For the sake of the newcomers to my life, I’m going to delve into how I became mother of three diagnosed autistics (My teen daughter and I suspect my other three year old twin daughter is also autistic but very verbal and not negatively impacted by it.) and two with ADHD, Apologies to those who have been there since the beginning.

I’ll go in order of timing of diagnosis. My firstborn was only diagnosed late last year and he turns 18 this year. What I see now was a hyper focus, I thought then was him being a stereotypical boy. (Love and knowledge of all things related to cars.) Or maybe I won’t go in order of diagnosis!

When he was young he spoke and walked early, read early (I taught him and his sister to read when they were age four and three respectively. And could tell me what kind of car was in front of us. There were absolutely no signs of any neurodivergence that I spotted.

It’s only in the recent teen years that we realized he had something interesting going on. Non-typical communication. I cringed when he spoke to my sister-in-law, thinking that how he was relating to her was giving the exact stereotypical idea of homeschooled kids-inability to socialise. He was ‘awkward,’ not aware that he sounded unusual or abrupt. But I ignored it.

Then he started making it obvious that he could live without people. He didn’t NEED human interaction. He would tell me he didn’t miss anybody. He said he didn’t want to make friends. Doesn’t “like people.” I had told my GP that I had an autistic son (Meabibg the one who was diagnosed first) but after meeting him, at my next appointment she asked if he’s the autistic one.

He also would just suddenly leave us while conversing as a family. I’d go look for him, and he’s reading a book. He couldn’t (can’t) think when there’s noise. He shuts down. And he had executive functioning issues. Logic and reasoning. First noticed those when teaching, and it became so bad in general that his dad said he’d never hire him if he went looking for a job under him.

Long story short, a psychiatrist did official tests and confirmed it.

My first diagnosed child is a difficult one. Lots happened. He was our second adoptee. Before we got him, his foster mother sent videos and photos. I asked her if she’d ever had a child in her care with ears like his. She never responded. The wars later made a neurologist and then a pediatrician this year wonder if he doesn’t have a genetic syndrome. Them plus other physical signs.

We received him when he was four months old, and the very next day, I felt something was off. He “felt like a newborn, not a four month old.” By six months old, I knew he was autistic and told my husband and children so. (Any negative person who comes across this will know it’s me. I’m just hoping they have stopped searching or don’t find me.)

Finally after a horror of awful developmental delay, muscle strength so bad that he was suspected of having cerebral palsy, having begun occupational therapy from 9 months old, inability of doctors to find good veins till they were sweating and I was on the verge of tears, postponing the admission for another time, and after an MRI to check there was nothing sinister going on in his brain, we had the diagnosis at three years old. Back then the pediatric neurologist told ME to figure out if it was what was called Asperger’s, or if it was high functioning. (Those terms are no longer used. It’s all now just autism.) He also had global developmental delay, hypotonia, SPD and ADHD. (Suspected FASD too.)

Our first adoptee, I figured had ADHD before I figured he had it. Educating her was mostly futile. Her eyes would dart all over the place, her memory was worse than it is now, she couldn’t focus, she was extremely impulsive and had verbal stims. I took both her and my son to an educational psychologist who diagnosed them both with quite hectic ADHD. They’re both on Ritalin. They both used to put books into the bath tub, into the toilet. Climbed high shelves, stuffed potato salad into the toaster, are creations, damaged clothing, couldn’t sit still for five minutes… Even medicated, I’m struggling with behaviors they would have outgrown if they were neurotypical.

Then my last baby. My three year old. She developed normally, though she cried a LOT and was a very restless sleeper. Both twins refused to sleep anywhere but in our arms. After I had suffered through their hectic pregnancy- gestational thyrotoxicosis and laryngopharyngeal disease reading their ugly beads-they were born at 36 weeks. Good sized, but they had stopped growing, and I had pre eclampsia symptoms so was admitted into hospital where they were born via emergency c-section two days later. Both placentas had stopped working, the doctors found when they opened me up. Our last born also had been in distress, evidenced by meconium in her sac and delayed crying.

She made up for it in the latter months. She cried much more, much louder and much longer than her twin, and slept restlessly when she eventually did sleep. She also made lots of noise and screams and trills instead of sleeping after we sleep trained them at four months old. She still has sleep problems. Less sleep than normal.

She had begun well. Counting, saying daddy, smiling socially…Then suddenly at 18 months or so, that all stopped. By 25 months, she too was diagnosed with “autism and severe problems.” She was no longer speaking, hated being touched, hated hugs, preferred being alone, was totally unaware of us as humans. She’d walk on us as if we were nothing. And stopped making eye contact.

It was the worst time emotionally since my now seven year old’s trials. When he was crawling stage, his arms were so weak that he’d crash down onto his face, often biting his tongue or smashing his gums. Bleeding often. When he finally started walking, he had terrible spatial awareness-running into counter tops, smashing into walls. I often felt like crying along with him.

‘Losing’ my daughter (Twin B) was just as hard emotionally. Not for my sake, but because her twin was (is) so attached to her. Twin A loved her, but my girl pushed her away, sometimes making her fall. Even now, my girl loves her with an aching love. When she returns from church, she runs to her twin, trying to hug her and shouting hello. Though she is no longer pushed away, there is no smile returned, no hug accepted. It hurts a lot. She has the twin bond but it’s not reciprocated.

She also has a definite developmental delay or lower IQ. She pulls me as I’ve mentioned before. No longer is she content to be alone. Now it’s the extreme opposite. She needs me. And needs me to feed her all the time. Which I can’t do unless I want her to die early from obesity related causes. She looks us in the eye especially when she’s trying out a word. Mostly she recites things she’s heard, sings a lots, and will either say a word, echo a word, or produces word salad. Where she looks me intently in the eye and says random things like, “Good gurr (girl), come, yellow, foot.” Rare, but much more often than when she was diagnosed.

Nothing keeps her attention. No toy, no activity. She is unable to do much, But she likes water. Splashing herself till she’s soaking wet when playing with the water table and sometimes wanting me to wash her hands. She has asked twice, “Wash your hands,” and when I’m tired of refusing to give her food, will always come with me when I in fatigue and exasperation will tell her to come with me so I wash her hands.

I am in love with homeschooling. But my children’s needs don’t work well with my physical problems. If there was an affordable special school, I’d send them all. But there isn’t. Not one that will keep them safe, that will have small classes and one to one attention. Not one where they can have all the extra help they need. And so, I pray that soon, my heavy angel will stop wanting me to walk aimlessly around the house or more often, feed her all the time. I yearn for the day she does not bang on my door crying when I’m trying to use the toilet. When she won’t pull me to stand up when I’m in so much pain that I need to lie down.

What I love is that though my heart sinks, just one look at her ‘so happy to see me’ face takes the “woe is me” feeling away, and I hug her happily, sit on the floor with her willingly when she comes in carrying bread given by an older sibling.

I have seen people ‘understanding’ when a desperate but physically healthy mom has murdered her children with differences. I have not even come close. My heart rejoices when I see them after they’ve taken a walk with their older siblings. I miss them even while enjoying the solitude. I would cry if I did find a school for them where they’d be happy. I feel like I’m the best there is for them. It’s complicated.

It’s life. Glorious and unbearable. Beautiful and hard. Lovely, and lonely.

I’m not checking for errors. Its 23:32. I’m going to try sleep again. (I suspect the AS meds are messing with my tummy so that woke me.)

PS The constant eating isn’t typical of autism. Quite a few children struggled with it in my “mothers of children with autism” group. But it’s not a defining feature or “usually there” feature like SPD is. These poor moms even had to chain their fridge and cupboard doors shut. One has a child so even are non food items. Mine is worse after going on Risperdal. But it was already extreme anyway. (2:03am and she woke me at 1:30am. Hoping she sleeps soon.🙏🏾 My head is achy and lifting her hurts my back.)