“The reader will be interested to know that I have discovered a means
of removing almost all of the characteristics that define Asperger’s syndrome
in any child or adult. This simple
procedure does not require expensive and prolonged therapy, surgery or
medication, and has already been secretly discovered by those who have
Asperger’s syndrome. The procedure is
actually rather simple. If you are a
parent, take your child with Asperger’s syndrome to his or her bedroom. Leave the child alone in the bedroom and
close the door behind you as you walk out of the room. The signs of Asperger’s syndrome in your son
or daughter have now disappeared.”
Tony Attwood
My mom was sitting on the couch when I came in the
door. And my brother was sitting beside
her, in the chair next to the couch.
“You’re brother was here!” my mom exclaimed as I took off my coat, “He
was in the basement!”
My mom had come to town for Thanksgiving. She’d planned on staying for a few days, so
I’d offered her the house that we’re trying to sell as a place for her to
stay. I’d offered her the house that
we’re living in too, but she’d opted for the other. Not that I blame her. My mom doesn’t much like screaming
children. Well… not for a bunch of days
in a row anyway.
I’d taken my mom over to the other house a couple hours
earlier to unlock the door for her, and then I’d left to go and see some
friends. My mom had asked if I’d pick up
a quart of milk and drop it back by on my way home later, so that’s what I was
doing. I went into the kitchen and put
the milk in the fridge. Then I came back
into the living room and sat in a chair across from my brother. “In the basement, huh?” I asked my mom, not
taking my eyes off my brother.
I was glad I already knew he’d been getting in. I’d been over to that house every day to
check on things, and I’d noticed stuff out of place two times. The lower left corner of a blanket, which was
folded across the foot of one of the beds, was a bit tousled one day. I didn’t say anything to my husband, Shane,
that time. But then, just the day
before, a throw pillow had not only been moved about an inch, it had also been
turned clockwise.
I have a fairly good memory when it comes to things that I
see, especially when it comes to simple objects and uncomplicated spatial
reasoning. The trouble is that my brother
does too. He’d been quite thorough in
making sure that things were in the exact same spots whenever he left, but he’d
gotten a little too comfortable and had finally started slipping up just enough
for me to be able to catch it. I almost
felt a sense of victory as I called Shane after I noticed the moved pillow. “My brother’s been getting in the house,” I’d
said, “We need to make sure all the windows and doors are locked at all times.”
Shane and I made sure that both of the keys to that house
were accounted for after that, and that all the windows and doors were locked. But my brother had apparently found a way in
again anyway.
It’s not that there’s anything left in that house worth stealing
(it’s just old furniture and an ancient T.V. now), and it’s not even that I
think my brother would steal from me anyway.
He’s never stolen anything from me in his entire life. It’s just that I’m trying to sell that
house. And what would I say to somebody,
exactly, if I took them over to there to show it to them, and there was a
strange man inside? “Oh, don’t worry. He probably won’t come back once you’re
living here.”??
Shane had asked me, on the day I’d noticed the moved pillow,
why my brother would be coming into the house in the first place. “The cable’s not hooked up,” he’d said, “and
there’s no way to watch the T.V. without the cable. And there’s no food there. Why would he be doing it?”
My brother’s been living with my dad, in a one bedroom
house, for something like a year now.
“Privacy,” I’d answered.
I understand this actually.
I often go over to that house just to sit in the quiet myself. Sometimes I’m over there at night,
alone. Or, at least, I’d always thought
I was alone. And as I sat there, staring
at my thirty six year old, baby brother, I had to fight the urge to imagine
what would happen if I realized that someone, during one of these times, was in
the house with me.
“I’m so sorry,” I said to my mom, “I should’ve told you he’s
been getting in. Did he scare you?”
“Oh!” she said, “I almost peed my pants! He was in the closet in the downstairs
bedroom, hiding, no doubt, from who he thought was you. I’d been here almost an hour already, and I’d
decided to have a little look in all the rooms.
You’ve got this house looking so cute, Jessie!”
My mom giggled and smiled as she talked, like this was just
some sort of cute little misunderstanding.
“He said ‘Hi Mom’ as he came out of the closet,” she continued, “so I’d
know that it was just him. But still, it
scared me half to death! Hee! Hee!”
“It’s a good thing it wasn’t me,” I smiled politely, trying
to assume the same giggly tone of voice that my mom was using, “If I’d been
here alone and had heard something, I probably would’ve grabbed the shot gun
that I have in that closet over there. I
have a couple of shells hidden for just such an occasion.”
They both looked at me.
“Hee. Hee?” I
continued.
I hoped that this might convey the gravity of the situation,
but the only thing it seemed to convey was that I was mad. My brother didn’t make eye contact. He gave me his infamous nervous giggle
instead. Then he tried to be funny. “Dad watched cooking shows for over an hour
last night,” he said, making a face, looking at his watch, making another face,
looking at his watch, then saying it again, “for over an HOUR.”
“Don’t come in my house without permission,” I said, “It’s
not okay.”
I told my spiritual advisor, of sorts, about this the last
time we met. And, once I was done
telling her the story, she laughed and said, “Wow! You’re brother probably really does have
Asperger’s (high-functioning Autism), doesn’t he?”
“Either that or he’s nuts,” I laughed.
She didn’t laugh at this.
“We know he’s not nuts,” I continued, trying to assume a
more compassionate tone, “That’s why I’m continually amazed that your question
is somehow still up for debate.”
It’s rather confusing to be writing a book, within which
you’re describing growing up with a sibling with Asperger’s, when your sibling
doesn’t know that he has it. I’m running
into all sorts of problems with this, the most concerning of which, so far, is
that I’m worried about making it look like I think there’s something wrong,
instead of different, about my brother.
I mean, this one story about him breaking into my house is a perfect
little example.
I don’t think my brother would care about being called
Autistic. He’s not the type to put much
thought into any kind of label actually.
But I do think he’d care if I thought that there was something wrong
with him. And this has had me
questioning all of my writing actually.
What if I’m making it look like there’s something wrong, instead of
different, about my kids too? What if
they grow up and read my blog and feel like their mom thinks there’s something
wrong with them?
Perhaps the real question, at the moment (since I can’t
predict the future or anything) is; why do I still tend to react to the Autism in the people that I love, with irritation? I mean, I know full well not to expect “normal-ness”
from someone with Autism. So why do I
get upset when I see the “abnormal-ness”?
It’s an important question for me to take a look at, not
only because I’m writing about the people that I love and I certainly don’t
want to be coming from a place of irritation all the time, but also because I
don’t want to be the kind of person who reacts to anything with
irritation. Yet, that’s exactly the kind
of person that I am.
I feel like there’s been concrete in my writing lately. It’s been too slow, too forced, and slowly
settling into a complete stop. And this
isn’t good, because there are a million things going on (there are always a
million things going on) that are tripping me up.
My daughter got a permanent tooth knocked out (root and all)
at school the other day. It was an
accident. She happened to be in the
wrong place at the wrong time (which is a place that Isabel seems to end up
with uncanny consistency – she nearly got hit by a car on her way home from
school last week). We had an emergency
appointment with an orthodontist, who shoved the tooth back into it’s socket
and hoped for the best (we should know in a couple of weeks whether or not it’ll
stay in, and whether or not it’ll need a root canal). And the pain is well under control now.
And Cale is on a new muscle relaxer (to counter some of the
muscle tension caused by the Risperdal) that is causing agitation and
involuntary muscle twitching. It’s not a
medication that he can just stop taking either.
If you ever want to feel freaked out, and I mean completely freaked out, watch your child cry with
his head twitching involuntarily, while putting the medication that you know is
causing it directly into his mouth. I guarantee
you a whole new kind of closeness to God after this. We’re still waiting (as usual) for a call
back from the psychiatrist to figure out what we can do differently.
It’s always something.
Always. You know?
And I do so tire of the “always-ness” of the “somethings.”
What I’ve come to realize is that this block in my writing has been nothing more than a
symptom of something larger, a block in my spirit maybe. And when there’s a block in my spirit, it
doesn’t just affect my writing. It
causes blockages (and stop thinking about poop!
Oh, maybe that’s just me:) in every area of my life.
Our other house has been on the market for a couple of
months now, yet, up until a couple of weeks ago, we hadn’t had so much as one
single nibble on the place. And the only
problem with this is that we can only afford to make the payment on both houses
one more time. Then we’re out of money.
It really has been the mother of all the blocks that I’ve
experienced so far. I’ve been thinking,
in fact, that it’s too bad they don’t make a stool softener for the spirit. Now I realize, however, that there actually
is one.