The first 2
stages of the grieving process are shock and denial. For mothers of special needs children the
order is reversed:it’s denial, then
shock.Subsequently, the first and most
dangerous stop on the road to Acceptance is Denial.I have never taken any drug stronger than
marijuana, but the effects of substances like heroin have been described to me, and life in Denial sounds eerily similar.
The road to
Acceptance is very strange, because none of us can remember exactly when we got
in the car. We just woke up one day, on
an unknown road, with no map, no cell phone, and no clue where we were supposed
to be going. All that kept us driving was
the COMPLETE inability to turn the car around and go home. We weren’t allowed, not yet at least, and we
didn’t know why. And just when it all became truly terrifying, the road curved,
revealing the most spectacular landscape we’d ever seen. A sign emerged: Welcome to Denial.
In Denial
there is valet parking and the attendant is Chris Hemsworth in his Thor
costume, complete with the hammer. And
just when you thought things couldn’t get any better, you notice your son is
there, and he’s perfect. The creeping
suspicion that something is wrong with him has evaporated. You were wrong, he’s fine, and you were just
overreacting. After all, plenty of
little boys drool like sheepdogs until they’re four. Even more run around in circles flapping like
a bird when they’re frustrated over their inability to communicate. In Denial it’s common for baby boys not to
crawl until they’re 12 months old, and even more common for them to require
physical therapy at 18 months, because they still can’t walk. Right now Kevin
is outside in the 35 degree weather in shorts, pissing on a tree, in full view
of our landscapers, who think it’s hysterical.
If I was still living in Denial I would think this was perfectly normal,
but I’m not. I left a long time ago, and
if you and Thor are reading this from your Barcalounger by the pool in Denial,
run. You heard me: run.
Get out now. Denial is dangerous and
if you stay too long it will destroy you and your son, and it will be your
fault. Deep down you know you’re in Denial,
you just haven’t left because you’re afraid of what might happen if you do.
If my words
are not convincing enough, get out of your lounger, give Thor a nice tip and
take a stroll. Notice what you don’t see
anywhere? Mirrors. There are no mirrors in Denial because if
there were, you might have to take a good, long look at yourself and admit you’re
wasting valuable time (that COULD be spent helping your son) sitting in a Barcalounger
with Thor. Thor wouldn’t want you to
have to do that, it would ruin the fun, so he smashed all the mirrors with that
hammer of his. Continue your stroll and
you’ll notice that most of the women in Denial have young children, and the few
who have older children seem strangely out of place. Why is that?
Because all the good mothers
woke up, realized they were in Denial and left a long time ago, before their
children were too old, and it was too late to help them.
Still not
convinced? Well let me tell you a story. I am acquainted with a lady who only left
Denial a few years ago: Her son is 12
now. When he walked into his first day
of preschool it obvious to just about everyone including the janitor that this
kid was disabled. It took the Child Study
Team 5 minutes to offer testing and subsequent special education services. She turned them down, because there was
nothing wrong with her son. By the end of preschool, when he was still pissing
his pants, destroying the classroom and pulling children’s hair, the school
suspended him and told mom she couldn’t bring him back unless she agreed to
testing. She finally gave in. He was classified as “communication impaired”
because Mom would rot in hell before anyone called her son autistic. Although the school offered to send him to
YALE, the finest and most expensive private school specializing in children
with autism and behavior disorders, she refused. “You’re not going to ship my son away”, she
said. Then they offered to place him in
a special education classroom. To this
she said, “Most of the children in there have Down Syndrome! He needs to be with “normal” children! He’ll never learn to socialize if you put him
in there!” After all, what did the Head
of our Child Study Team know? A woman
with 17 years of special education experience and a Master’s Degree in Child
Development. Please. FYI:
Mothers in denial think that if they put their disabled son in a
classroom full of “normal” kids, the normal will rub off and their son will be
cured. Thor told them so, and he’s far more reliable than the head of the child
study team.
Anyhooo……Though
they knew it was wrong, and because the law always takes the side of the
parent, the school placed this woman’s son in an inclusion class with an
assistant. After a few years she even
refused the assistant: that lady was no
help at all and made her son “stand out” in class. He rotted away, disrupting
and alienating his regularly developing peers, learning absolutely nothing, for
8 years. When he graduated grammar
school he couldn’t read or write, had no friends, and no social skills to make
any. My acquaintance will look you
straight in the face and tell you this is all the school’s fault, but it isn’t. It’s her fault, and deep down she knows
it. She never left Denial, she was forced
out by the realization that she sat in a Barcalounger with Thor rather than admit her son was disabled and get him help.
It’s too
late for my acquaintance but not you. Grab
your son, get in the car NOW and start driving. Eventually you will find
yourself at the top of a high hill, before a large gate, which is guarded by
someone you loved and lost a long time ago.
For me it was my Aunt Rose. This
is your mind playing tricks on you, so you’ll return to Denial and be spared
the shock that waits beyond the gate. I
still remember the dream I had about the exit gate in Denial and the
conversation with my aunt.
Aunt
Rose: Hello Elizabeth (that’s what she
used to call me)
Me: Is it really you?
Aunt
Rose: Of course it is. I’ve missed you so much.
Me: I’ve missed you too, every day. My daughter’s middle name is Rose, after you.
Aunt
Rose: I know. Turn the car around dearest. There’s nothing but pain out there.
And this is
the part where you want, with all your soul, to turn around. A lot of women do. Sometimes they make it up that hill 4 or 5
times before they finally find the courage to leave.
Me: I love you so much. I want to stay, I really do, but I don’t
think I’m supposed too.
Aunt
Rose: Why?
Me: I know it’s going to hurt, but I have to do
it. I’m his mother. He never asked to be born, and he’s never
going to get better if I keep pretending like this.
And with her
soft, wrinkled hand my aunt brushed my cheek where a dimple appears when I
smile. She called it my magic spot.
Aunt
Rose: Elizabeth Rachel, if you leave
here, understand that you can never come back.
Me: I know.
Please, open the gate. If you
love me the way I remember please open that gate before I change my mind.
She did.
When the
gate opens you’re thrown into Shock. The landscape of Denial and the woman you loved
slowly disappear. Absolutely certain you’ve made the biggest mistake of your
life, you explode into pitiful tears and close your eyes, so you don’t have to
see it happen. As you do, you hear the
voice of Aunt Rose in your head: “I’m so
proud of you dearest. That took
courage. You did the right thing. That woman you saw at the gate wasn’t me, it
was just your mind playing tricks on you, to protect you from what you’re
experiencing right now. I wish I could
lie and tell you everything is going to be OK, or that I know where you’re
going but I can’t. All I know is that
you did the right thing.”
And then I
opened my eyes to look at my long lost Godmother, only she was gone and Kevin
was standing there. His facial features
were dysmorphic. I’d never noticed that
before. He had braces on his legs and
although he was 4, he was still wearing a diaper. This boy, who had been absolutely perfect a
moment ago, was disabled, and I was shocked.
He pointed to the car:
Kevin: Gonin?
Me: Yes buddy, we’re gonin
Kevin: Where gonin?
I looked
back then, with some slim hope that Denial was still there but it was gone,
along with the gate, and the woman I loved.
I took Kevin’s hand and put him in his carseat.
Me: I’m not sure buddy. I think we’re headed to Blame. I’ll try my best to drive around it.
And then we
were off, and as I drove an empty juice box hit me in the back of my head and
Kevin shouted “Mail!”