I’ve been
trying to decide how to write this blog post….or if I even should write
it. Yes, I think I should. But how to do it in a way that doesn’t make Aaron
look “bad” or make me look selfish. Yet
the truth is, Aaron isn’t bad but I am sometimes selfish. I’m human and I get tired, but I also have to
acknowledge where my roots often rest…..and that’s sometimes in soil that grows
some undesirable attitudes.
Tuesday
night saw Aaron having four large seizures, so I was up four times with
him. I did sleep some between the
episodes, which I often am not able to do, but still I was tired that
morning. I stayed up after Aaron’s last
early seizure, and later I did the usual clean-up. I stayed close to him as he lay on the couch
for the rest of the morning, waiting to see if he had another seizure. I had the laundry going and was able to do
some other things while I sat there at the kitchen table. I was on Psalm 18 that morning in my study
time, which was perfect for me. My
favorite verse is there….verse 29. “For
by You I can run upon a troop; and by my God I can leap over a wall.”
I felt very
thankful as I sat there. God seemed to
be prompting me to focus on thankfulness.
I was thankful that Aaron was for the moment seizure free, warm, and
safe. Thankful that this wasn’t the day
I was to take Nora to an important doctor appointment. Thankful that my washing machine and dryer
were just steps away, convenient and functioning. Thankful that Aaron’s seizures aren’t far
worse, as so many of our friends experience with their children. Thankful that I don’t have to work, because
it would be nearly impossible for me to do so.
Thankful for coffee. Very
thankful for coffee!
Later, Aaron
woke up and he struggled to get off the couch.
After a few minutes, as he sat with me at the kitchen table, he told me
that his arm was hurting. I think he
sprained it during one of the seizures.
Soon I asked him if he would want to eat, and we figured out together
that some Cream of Chicken soup would hit the spot. He was worried, though, that with his right
arm hurting he would not be able to lift the soup spoon to his mouth. Therefore, I demonstrated to him how he could
eat by bending close over the bowl.
Aaron sometimes doesn’t like us to use our hands to demonstrate some
action. Don’t ask me why, but sometimes
it irritates him. So when I bent over to
show him how he could eat, he snapped at me.
“You don’t have to show me how to do it by going like this….” he said
with irritation as he copied my movement.
It was as if
he had thrown cold water in my face. I
knew that he was feeling terrible…..I knew that he has never liked physical
demonstrations like this…...I knew that his autism makes him very blunt…..but I
also knew at that moment that I felt very hurt.
I just looked at him, and he knew very well that I was not happy. I didn’t say a word, but got up and fixed his
soup. I got him all settled there at the
table so he could eat, and I coldly told him that I was going upstairs to take
my shower.
For some time,
my thoughts were headed down Pity Path.
How could Aaron treat me so rudely after all I’ve done for him? It was very easy to rehash all of my
sacrifices for Aaron, and very easy to nurse my hurt. I was mostly silent toward him as the
afternoon wore on around us. He seemed
to be fine, watching a movie, so I slipped down to Dillon’s to run an errand I
had hoped to run that morning, but couldn’t because of Aaron’s seizures…..how I
had to sit with him and didn’t get to accomplish what I wanted when I wanted……how
my day was interrupted and my schedule trashed…..
See how it
went with my thoughts? Where was the
thankfulness I had experienced earlier?
Where was my, “…..with God I can leap over a wall?” I’ll tell you where it was. It was buried under my self-centered
thoughts, my tired body and mind, and my feelings of being very unappreciated
by my son. I had some major adjusting to
do over the next hours, and some soul searching, as well.
We all have
many moments of feeling just as I did on Tuesday afternoon. As a parent, spouse, sibling, friend, worker
on the job, volunteer at church…..no matter where we are…..we will get our
feelings hurt. And as the mother of a
special needs child who also has autism, it’s easy to be hurt a lot. Aaron doesn’t have filters or feelings like
we do. He must be reminded over and over
to be kind, to think of other’s feelings, to react in a nice way instead of a
blunt or harsh way, and on and on. He is
very self-centered, and this is a huge reason why it doesn’t work if I am that
way, too.
I think it
was important for me, personally, at that moment to step back and remove myself
from Aaron and the situation. The danger
I faced, though, was in nursing my hurt instead of focusing on what God would
do. What I allow my thoughts to focus
upon will determine my attitude, and will even determine whether I sin in the
situation or grow in it. To be hurt was
normal. To let my roots sink into the
hurt as I planted myself in it would not be beneficial or right.
Christ gave
up a lot for me. How often do I react to
Him with unthankfulness or pride? He
didn’t hold on to his position as God’s Son, but emptied Himself of all that
and became sin for me. That’s the best
example I can follow as I experience the hurt and the tiredness of being a
special needs Mom….or any of the other many roles I have in this life. It can’t be about me, or I will be
continually frustrated. It must be about
honoring Christ, and caring for Aaron.
Understanding
how Aaron feels after seizures…..understanding his autistic way of viewing the
world….is very necessary, as well. So is
training him and reminding him of his actions, and how they can hurt or help
others.
Understanding
how I feel after Aaron’s seizures…..understanding my sometimes selfish way of
viewing the world…..is also very necessary.
Both must be recognized and dealt with before being allowed to get out
of hand.
Well, back
to my verse in Psalm 18. I didn’t
exactly leap over that wall with God. He
more or less had to lift and shove me over it.
I wanted to sit at the base of the wall and lick my wounds, but He
wouldn’t let me. I’m glad for that! Glad that He is patient and persistent with
me. Glad that He shows me His love.
Just like we
have to be with Aaron. It won’t be the
last time, either. For me or Aaron,
either one.
You are an incredible mom and woman!
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