Have you ever read the book, or seen the movie, The Razor’s Edge? In the beginning, the main character is
living in a small town and has never really known anything else. He has a group of close friends in this town,
is engaged to be married to his sweetheart in this town, and has a safe, secure
plan for his future in this town. Before
he can get married, however, he first has to fulfill his commitment to the
military.
He has to go off to war for a little while. And, before he goes, when he talks about
this, he almost treats it as though it’s a bit of a nuisance, or a minor
inconvenience, to his plan. He intends
to return home afterwards, get married, and take a job with the company that’s
owned by his fiancé’s family. Then he
and his wife will buy a house, have some kids, and barbeque on Saturday
afternoons with all of their friends. It’s
a lovely plan.
We’re actually introduced to this character (if I remember
right) just after he returns home from the war, and during which everyone is
trying to figure out what has happened to him.
And the reader gets to experience, to some extent anyway, through the
main character, what it’s like to come back to the familiarity of home,
changed.
I don’t know that a person can experience a total upheaval
of everything that’s ever held still, of everything that’s ever made sense, and
of everything that that person’s ever been, and come out the other side of it
unchanged. Sometimes one has to be
destroyed, I think, in order to find out what kind of person might be left
standing afterward.
Even though everything in this character’s home town is
exactly the same when he gets back, things feel different to him because he’s
not the same. He spends a fair amount of
time wandering around quite dazed by this too.
And he eventually begins trying to remedy the situation by seeking
spiritual inspiration in books.
His friends and fiancé give him a period of time in which to
read his little books and “recover” from his war experience, but then they
expect him to “snap out of it” and return to his original plan. He can’t seem to explain to them, either,
even though he tries, that he’s actually changed somehow. And as he experiences all of this, he slowly
comes to realize, much to everyone else’s distress, that his original plan is
no longer going to work for him. He ends
up leaving his fiancé behind, leaving his whole life behind in fact, and
heading out on a journey of discovery.
When we first moved back to my home town in Montana after
being in Arizona for five years, my uncle asked me how I felt about being home
again. “I don’t know,” I answered, “But
I think I feel a little bit like that guy in The Razor’s Edge.”
I’m not saying that living in Arizona was like being in a
war. It wasn’t. I quite liked Arizona. What happened to me, while I was living in
Arizona, was that I had kids with Autism.
And I’m not saying that living with kids with Autism is like being in a
war. Well, maybe I am a little. I mean, not being able to do the dishes, or brush
your teeth, or leave the room for one second for any reason at all because your
children might, at any moment, suddenly jump up, start screaming, and attempt
to crack their own skulls on the hard, ceramic tile (my kids used to be head
bangers, big time), probably isn’t as traumatic as being shot at every day. But I’m really not sure what else to compare
it to.
I lived on red alert so much of the time for so long that my
weekly trip to the grocery store, by myself, became the one and only thing that
I looked forward to. It was nothing less
heavenly. For a whole half an hour I
wouldn’t have to listen to any screaming, or get hit the face, or have my hands
crushed between someone’s head and the floor, or live with the knowledge that
if I left the room for a moment, someone might die. I’d wander around the grocery store, my brain
snoozing happily on how various products are packaged, and feeling intensely
grateful not to have to think about anything else for a little while.
I loved those moments.
In fact, I grew to absolutely live for those moments. And when I’d hear people complaining about the
green beans not being on the right shelf, or about the clerk charging fifty
cents too much for a loaf of bread, or about whatever else people tend to find
wrong with living in paradise, I’d find myself genuinely amazed at the kinds of
things that regular people get to fret over.
My kids were head bangers for about two and a half years. And one day, to my surprise, the head banging
just stopped. Well, actually, this took
the implementation of a gluten/casein free diet for Isabel, and didn’t actually
stop for Cale before the introduction of psychiatric medication. But nobody ever cracked a skull. The only permanent damage, in fact, is that
Isabel has two discolored front teeth. I
asked the dentist, one time, what caused her two front teeth to become
discolored, and he said, “Trauma.”
“Oh?” I asked.
“She probably hit her face on something at some point,” he answered.
“Yes,” I said, and I didn’t tell him just how many times
she’s “hit her face on something.”
I also have one permanently swollen, arthritic knuckle (it
got crushed between skulls and floors so many times that it eventually stopped
bothering to try to heal). But did I
mention that nobody ever cracked a skull?
This is absolutely amazing. In
fact, I feel like an incredible mother because of it. To this day, I have to concentrate on not
rolling my eyes when I hear normal mothers talk about only feeling successful
if their kids read for a certain number of minutes every day, or eat the
occasional vegetable, or whatever. I’m
afraid that I still feel so successful, just that my kids survived the “head
banging years,” that I regularly have to remind myself that my job isn’t done
yet.
My kids still self-harm on occasion. And I’m not entirely sure that that’s not
just part of living with Autism. Isabel
still bumps her head on things sometimes when she’s upset, but she doesn’t do
it very hard. And Cale hits himself on
the legs so hard, on a very regular basis, that it often leaves bruises.
I tell the kids’ psychiatrist about these things every time
we see her (who tries to regulate these behaviors with medication), and I do my
best to keep my kids from getting upset in the first place, thereby preventing
them from harming themselves. But I’m
afraid that we’ve been living with these behaviors for so long now that I’ve
given up hope of them ever stopping entirely.
I do, however, find immense gratitude in the fact that they’re no longer
life-threatening.
During the “head banging years,” my husband and I couldn’t
take our kids anywhere (for fear that somebody might make eye contact with our
daughter and send her head straight into the concrete in a parking lot
somewhere). We also didn’t have help
very often (his mom would babysit on occasion, but she only lived in Arizona
during the winter months). So, for
sometimes months at a time, there really was no escape.
There were no date nights.
There were no family bikes rides, or camping trips, or voyages to the ice
cream shop for a change of scenery.
There was nothing what so ever besides our beige, tract house and our
seemingly suicidal children – day after day, month after month, for two and a
half years straight. So, naturally, one
of the things I got really into was day dreaming.
I used to dream, in between tantrums, about a cabin in the
woods. This cabin sat next to a river in
the middle of a thick, mountain forest, so close to the trees that pine sap
literally dripped right onto the roof.
And it was quiet. Perfectly
quiet, the only sound in the world being the low rush of the wind in the tree tops,
and the roar of the water in the river going by. I used to hang out there a lot, in my
head. And to this day, when I meditate,
it’s still my favorite place to go.
Until recently, I’d never told my husband about this. I think this is because it’s kind of an odd
dream for me. I mean, I’m one that loves
art and architecture and hundred year old houses with moldings up to my
armpits. I’d rather look at Greek
columns than stacked logs any old day of the week, yet when I’m in need of some
sort of renewal, I find myself longing for pine trees. Why is this?
I think it requires going back a little further, that’s all. My parents took my brother and me into the
mountains constantly when we were growing up.
And my grandma had a cabin on her ranch at the edge of a forest that I
had my very own little room in (well, that I claimed as my own anyway) –
stacked log walls and all. Those years
were the best years. And I’ve always
secretly wished that my kids could have this kind of an experience too. It’s a love that I developed long before the
days of art and architecture and hundred year old houses. It’s a raw, childhood love of the mountains.
I’m thirty eight years old now and my doctor has just
recommended a hysterectomy. Oh, I’ve got
some medical issues – nothing to worry about.
And it’s not that I mind. I’m so
done having babies. My plan was to have
a hundred of them. I would’ve done so
too, if I’d made them normal. But I
don’t, so I don’t mind that it’ll no longer even be an option to have any more,
ever again. No more at all. Not even one more. Ever. Ever. Ever again.
Ever.
I sat in the doctor’s office looking at all the pictures of
all the pregnant bellies and, at first, felt really sad. But then I thought, why should I feel
sad? My husband is amazing. My kids are amazing. My life is amazing. It’s a new season for me, that’s all.
Shane’s mom says that her forties were the best years of her
life, a time in which she really came into her own. And that’s how I want to feel too.
I’d dearly love to have a mid-life crisis. I’d like to go on journey like the guy in The Razor’s Edge, or on an Australian
walk-about, or head to Italy for a
couple of months of pasta sampling, as a means of self-discovery of course,
like the author of Eat, Pray, Love. I mean, you have to admire people that
can muster the guts to leave it all behind and go off someplace alone to make
peace with God. But just as deserving of
admiration, in my opinion, are the people that choose to stay in their lives.
I could never leave.
I joke sometimes that I would leave my children if my husband would come
with me, but that he would never leave them:)
The truth, however, is that I could never do without my children either.
My “journey of discovery” has been an
internal deal so far, instead of an external one, which works just as well I
might add. An amazing thing has just
happened however.
We’ve closed on our last house. And while we were lying in bed one night,
talking about whether or not to buy the one hundred and five year old house
that we’re currently living in – the one with the arm pit height molding, the
one in the historic neighborhood that I’ve quite literally spent my entire
adult life trying to end up in, the one that fits so very perfectly into my original plan – my husband said to me,
“Take ALL of the limits off your
thinking and listen only with your heart.”
“Only with my heart?” I looked at him.
“Yes,” he answered, “Only with your heart. Then tell me where you want to live.”
I had to think about it really, really hard for about half a
second.
“I’d live in the mountains somewhere,” I said.
Once the idea was in my head, I could not seem to shake it. I eventually started praying about it. I also started researching the public schools,
and how they might be for kids with Autism in particular, in every town in
Montana that has mountains (Red Lodge, Bozeman, Kalispell, etc.). And, just the day before we took a trip to
Missoula to visit some friends of ours, I reluctantly researched the Missoula
County Public Schools (MCPS).
I was never going to consider Missoula. The reason?
It was because these friends of ours, who happen to be two of our oldest
friends, moved to Missoula a couple of years ago. But that’s not the offensive part. The offensive part is that we were in Arizona
for five years. FIVE YEARS. And they stayed here the entire time. Then, the moment they found out we were
moving back here, they moved there.
Is that sighing I hear?
Hey! What do you mean the whole
world doesn’t revolve around me?:)
Okay. Sure, they
tried to talk us into moving to Missoula from Arizona instead of back here. And sure, they’ve mentioned the fact that
they’d like us to move to Missoula every time we’ve seen or talked to them for
the past two years. And sure, they make
it tons of fun whenever we go visit. They
have all of their gorgeous friends over and make us feel so welcome and a part
of. And sure we miss them. We’ve been away from them for far too long. But still. I was NOT going to give them the satisfaction
(imagine me with my arms folded and my nose in the air – hmmph). I clearly needed a diaper to go along with this
attitude.
My research revealed that MCPS employs an Autism specialist
(and I later found that they actually employ two). I made an appointment with this Autism
specialist, which we attended the moment we got to Missoula for our visit, and,
to make a long story short, we were markedly impressed with the kinds of things
going on in Missoula for kids with Autism.
I also made an appointment to look at a house while we were
there – ONE house (I didn’t want to spend the entire weekend with our friends
looking at houses, even though they jumped online the moment we told them we
were considering moving there, and said, “Let’s find you a house!!”).
On the way up to Missoula the day before, I had told Shane
about my cabin in the woods dream. He
was surprised by it, to say the least.
Then I’d talked for a long time about how it wouldn’t be possible to
live in a cabin in the woods with three kids to feed because they don’t put
Costco stores in the middle of the woods.
He’d listened intently, not agreeing or disagreeing in any way.
This house is a little ways up a mountain valley, is
actually in a neighborhood, and is located about ten minutes away from a
Costco. But it’s turned out to be a four
bedroom, two bathroom, cabin in the woods – complete with stacked log walls,
massive stone wood burning fireplaces (grandfathered in to be able host real
fires), and one pine tree in particular that’s so close to the house that it
undoubtedly drips pine sap onto the roof.
The place is so real, live cabin-in-the-woods-esk that it’s a tad kitschy
even for my taste, but when I stepped outside onto the deck, guess what I heard
(besides the low rush of the wind in the tree tops)?
“Is that water?” I asked the lady showing us the property.
“Yes,” she said, “There’s a river over there (not close
enough that I’d worry about Cale getting into it though). It’s nice to be able to open all the windows
in the mornings and listen to the water rushing by.”
That very same week, my mom got a job in a town near
Missoula. My mom hasn’t lived near her
grandkids in several years now, and is incredibly happy to get to do so again.
My heart seems to have spoken. We’re moving into that cabin next week (we’re
just renting it, as it’s not for sale).
And notice that I said “my” heart.
Shane says that he got his turn when we moved to Arizona, but that it’s
my turn now. And I’m taking it.
I have no idea what’s going to come of this (other than the
fact that we won’t be sinking all of our money into a hundred and five year old
house that needs a hell of a lot more work than it first appeared to). And I don’t really have any expectations of
it, although I do have to wonder if there’s a reason for it. Maybe it is about discovery. You know?
Maybe it has something to do with my writing. Or maybe I’ll be able to paint again (there’s
a big, unfinished basement that’s perfect for a studio). Maybe there’s something in particular to be
learned from it. Or maybe it’ll just be
fun.
My favorite scene in The
Razor’s Edge is when the Tibetan monk sends our character, along with all
of his books, to the top of a mountain in the winter time. As he’s sitting there, quite literally
freezing to death in a blizzard and wondering why the monk would send him to
die alone on the top of a mountain, he suddenly realizes that he has to burn
his books in order to stay warm. And he
smiles.
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