“I am NOT going to Paradigm today!!” Aaron
yelled at me.
Here we go, I thought. This will be one of those mornings. And it was.
It all happened last Friday. I’m
not even sure what set Aaron on that anger path, but he was on it for sure with
no apparent sign that he would exit anytime soon.
“Go away from me!” he loudly said.
Yet he kept coming into my room while I got
ready, standing there telling me angrily that he wasn’t going to his day
group. But he knew the consequences of
that decision without me uttering a word.
No Friday pizza. He was in quite
the dilemma as he stood there asserting himself, knowing that the further he
dug his own hole, the further away he would be from his pizza supper. Plus I wasn’t responding back to him the way
he wanted. He wanted anger from me,
which would only feed his anger. Aaron
was ready for a verbal fight, and Mom wasn’t cooperating. I stayed as calm as possible while still
being firm, even though I wanted to yell every bit as loud as he was.
Finally Aaron stomped away, walking up the
hall to his room. And then I heard
it. Aaron threw something up the hall,
where it landed on the floor outside of my bedroom. I knew what it was without looking. It was his watch…..his broken wrist
watch. He had broken it at Paradigm
almost two weeks earlier, although the details are still unclear. Nevertheless,
it was broken and I didn’t replace it immediately. So on this anger morning, Aaron decided to
focus his anger on his broken watch….demanding a new one once again and
complaining about how much he needed his watch.
Aaron could tell that I was getting ready
to leave the house, with or without him.
“OK!! I’ll go, if you’re going to
MAKE me!!” he said, dripping with frustration.
I silently went to the van, where he followed me and then stopped.
“Wait!” he said. “I have to get my watch.”
He went back into the house and retrieved
his broken watch, stuffing it in his pocket.
He couldn’t wear it on his arm, but every day he had put it in his
pocket and taken it with him anyway.
Today was no different. We were
mostly silent on the way to Paradigm. It
was later than usual. Aaron was sullen
and still steaming. I was deflated and
tired.
Earlier, as my friend Atha and I texted, I had
said to her, “There are times I truly wish for a normal life.” I always feel guilty after expressing myself
that way, for I know that this life is what God has somehow allowed me to have. I want to be like Esther, who came to realize
that God in His sovereignty had put her in the place she was for that
particular time. Yet sometimes the place
of us special needs moms seems to just be a place of frustration and dreary
sameness. We do get tired, especially on
the angry days such as I was having with Aaron.
He got out of the van, still irate but
somewhat calmer. I just drove away,
weary. But I thought about Aaron with
his broken watch in his pocket, carrying it with him all that day. He also carries something else with him,
something that often feels broken. My
heart and spirit. A mother is a mother,
forever changed by the children that carry part of her with them for the rest
of their lives. Aaron isn’t the broken
one, but I often am. I need God’s grace
and strength so many times on this road, and He never fails me. But I still feel the pain in my heart, my
heart that Aaron unknowingly carries with him…..tucked away, just like his
broken watch.
Later, I walked in the house and my eyes
were drawn to a very little porcelain figure perched on top of our DVD
player. Aaron and I had set it there a
couple weeks earlier. I thought of the
story told by that little figure, the love it represents.
Aaron had been to the zoo on Friday of that
week. He came home, excited to tell me
about his favorite animals that he saw.
When I asked him if he had bought anything to eat, he told me that he
had not bought any food but had instead bought something for me. But with regret he told me that he had left it
at Paradigm.
“I can’t tell you what it is, Mom!” he
exclaimed. “It’s a surprise!!”
So when I took him to Paradigm after the weekend,
on Monday, he was very excited for me to come inside with him so that he could
hopefully locate his surprise for me. He
barreled into Barb’s office with me in tow, and Barb immediately pulled out of
her desk a small brown bag from the zoo.
Aaron couldn’t wait for me to open it as he handed it to me. And there inside the bag, wrapped in bubble
wrap, was….well, what was it? It was so
tiny that I couldn’t exactly tell. Aaron
was rubbing his hands together as I gingerly pulled out a little porcelain
zebra. Why a zebra? I have no idea. But I loved it. I loved the fact that Aaron had spent all of
his money on Mom…..even though I worried that he went hungry. What a special, loving gift from my son!
Now it sits on top of our DVD player, where
it’s mostly safe from being broken. You
can hardly see it from across the room, it’s so little. But the joy on Aaron’s face when I opened it
was huge, and so was the joy in my heart.
My heart, like all mom’s, holds at times
great joy and then at times great hurt.
As with every situation in my life, then, I have a choice to make. I can’t ignore the hurt forever and I can’t
capture the joy forever. We all
experience both. But I can choose which
to dwell on the most.
I can linger on the brokenness and carry it
with me, like the watch in Aaron’s pocket as he carried it there day after
day. Or I can choose to see the beauty,
hard as it may be, that does often surround me in my life with Aaron. Brokenness or beauty…..it’s my choice. In every area of life, that choice is mine to
consciously make. As I deal with Aaron,
it’s also a decision I must choose.
Will I see Aaron as a blessing? Or will I see Aaron as a burden? Will I allow my grumbles and sighing and my
desire sometimes for a “normal” life rule my thoughts? Or will I pull back, take a breath and pray
to my heavenly Father, and then choose to see the blessings? Even at the end of the day, if all I can say
is, “Well, at least Aaron and I are both still alive.” Hey, I’ll take it! It’s a blessing!!
On that angry Friday, that tiny zebra
reminded me that I do have many blessings and joys in this life with
Aaron. Sometimes they’re harder to see
than at other times. Sometimes my spirit
is very frustrated and tired…..but so is everyone. Really, we all experience plenty of both in
our lives.
What will it be?
Brokenness…..or beauty?
Burden……or blessing?
A text from Atha this morning was
perfect: “Enter His gates with
thanksgiving and His courts with praise; give thanks to Him and praise His name. For the Lord is good and His love endures
forever; His faithfulness continues through all generations.”
That made me cry a little. God has blessed you as you bless us with your sweet lessons of life but wisdom and grace. Charlene
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