You Can’t Always Get (The Kid) That You Want
Yesterday afternoon, as I was quietly melting away in the 90-degree heat on the edge of the soccer field, watching (well, sorta watching) my son Daniel’s practice, I started chatting with another mother, whose son was in D’s preschool class. We were just having one of those idle, “aren’t they getting so big” back-and-forth things, before we both turned back to our bottles of water/magazines/making sure our other son wasn’t putting rocks in his pockets for me to find in the bottom of the washer (me).
Now, Daniel and this other boy, I’ll call him O. because his first name starts with O (duh), were in a special-ed preschool. Neither had a specific, or lasting, “special” diagnosis. All the children in this school were either late talkers, and/or had needs for occupational or physical therapy, and/or fell somewhere on the increasingly wide autism spectrum, but with the kind of issues you can–with diligence and good services–“therapy” out of them. Now second-graders, both O. and Daniel are normal (well, normal-ish). But when they were the nearly-three-year-olds they were when we put them on that mini-bus with a backpack and extra diapers, they were not talking. At all.
Now, these are not life-altering issues, I realize that, but sometimes I forget how trying it was, for me, to have a child who wasn’t … what I had wanted. Ooh, that sounded bad, didn’t it? It’s hard to say it. And I haven’t thought about it in years, not until yesterday afternoon, when O.’s mom said to me, as she related how O. didn’t talk until he started kindergarten, “I didn’t enjoy him very much back then.”
It’s heartbreaking not to get the child that you want. These longings, these things you imagine, they are less about the child himself (he’ll be smart, he’ll be gorgeous, he’ll be a good friend to many, he’ll be a wonderful father or the person who finally cures cancer), but about you. What you imagined you’d be doing with your child when he is one, or five, or 11 or 21.
I didn’t realize how much I wasn’t enjoying the child I’d been given, until one frustrating evening when Daniel was just under 2 (he had to have been, because James wasn’t on the scene yet). My husband was away on a business trip, and I was trying to feed Daniel dinner. There was something he wanted, and his usual pointing and saying “za-dah!” (which was all he said until he finally, finally said Mama when he was three) wasn’t doing it for me. I was screaming, literally, crying, pounding on the table. Just talk to me! Talk to me!
That was when I realized that having a chatty, smart, witty little child — yes, I admit, a mini-me, the gender difference aside — was what I had been waiting for since the day I peed on that stick and saw the plus sign.
Daniel talked, eventually (and yes, as everyone flippantly told me back in the table-pounding days, it’s true that he quickly moved to talking a blue streak, to the point where I found myself wondering if he had an off button). We therapy-ed out the ticks (flipping light switches on and off, for example), and he learned to hold a pencil and relate to other children. (He’s still working on that last one; he’s been late to that particular party, but he’s there, now — he has best friends, and other friends, and while he’s always been liked, he now actually likes other kids in a more or less “normal” way.) He’s smart, sweet, loyal and kind.
And I’m still learning to enjoy the child he is, because he’s still not the child I thought I’d have. Ding! What child is the one we wanted? How can he be, since at the point we’re doing the wanting and the imagining (and, if you’re like me, actually writing mom-child scripts in your head), the child is purely theoretical, or at least embryonic.
Maybe this is a small lesson in parenting, but maybe it’s the biggest one there is: We need to love the child we get, yes (and of course we do; even on the most frustrating days, I loved this boy beyond reason), but we also need to appreciate who he is, who he really is.
Have you learned that lesson yet?
Audrey
May 27, 2010 @ 2:24 pm
I can totally relate. I love my son and I feel like I enjoy the heck out of his cuteness on a regular basis, but there are times when we are at play groups and I see other kids chatting away to their moms and dads that I think..’when will he be like that?’ He’s only 20 months old but he doesn’t say much and the pediatrician has been on me since he was 15 months about putting him in speech therapy. But I’ve resisted, thinking that 15 months is too early to decide he needs therapy for speaking, and now I’m starting to wonder if I was right to. Then again, most of the other children he plays with are 4+ months older than he is and are girls. I think it’s the “boys are late bloomers” theory that I’m clinging to as we repeatedly try to teach him to say words like “bird” instead of “bah”.
Denise
May 27, 2010 @ 5:04 pm
Audrey,
Thanks for your comment! I got a lot of the “boys will be boys; boys are late bloomers” comments when Daniel was your son’s age and not talking (he was around 21 or 22 months when I first got him evaluated). I trusted my mom instincts, though. Thing is, he DID say a word, one word (star) at 16 months, then he stopped again, but for that one sound (za-dah). The evaluators pointed out that the problem wasn’t necessarily that he wasn’t yet talking at 2; that’s still within the normal range for some. The problem was that he had not progressed, at all, and hadn’t even really babbled as a baby. So, I guess my advice (as if you asked!) is to follow your instincts.
Denise
Claudine Jalajas
May 27, 2010 @ 6:11 pm
I have a child similar to what you’re describing. A child with some issues but not nearly what many families have to face on a day to day basis. It makes me appreciate how lucky I am that his issues are what they are and I stand in AWE of parents with children with severe-debilitating issues. However, I remember pointing and saying, “he really doesn’t like shoes… shouldn’t he be talking?” and got a lot of, “oh my kids hated shoes too” and “boys always talk later than girls.. my susie talked at 2 months old..” etc. They didn’t realize that he screamed his head off like his feet were on fire when we put shoes on him and the only way he’d wear shoes is if they were 3 sizes too small. Talking? Yep.. around age 4 and very limited. He had/has selective mutism and sensory issues (textures are a HUGE deal, how clothes fit, etc. Many mornings I spent begging my screaming/crying son to please wear something–ANYTHING and go to school.) He’s older now and it’s not as difficult for him but it’s still there and there are a WIDE range of issues that we deal with everyday. Yesterday my DH pointed out something that my son had done in a situation with another boy (just a strange social thing–didn’t hurt anyone) and I threw up my hands and said, “What do you want me to tell you? This is who he is…. it works for him. He’s okay with it.”
I do talk to him from time to time to “remind” him how you should address people when they speak to you, say goodbye when you hang up a phone, look people in the eye, stuff like that. But it’s all baby steps with him and I have to constantly remind myself of that.
Sally
May 29, 2010 @ 1:20 am
I liked Claudine’s comment that he is who he is – that is the truth. Just remember, as hard as it is for us parents, it’s no easy ride for the kids themselves. For me, that is the hardest part.
Carey
May 31, 2010 @ 2:13 pm
This week my 21-month-old son starts speech therapy and pre-preschool. At our pediatrician’s suggestion, we had him evaluated before age 2 (he qualifies for state programs more easily by that age). And I am glad we did and didn’t listen to those who told us that boys are late bloomers. My son’s situation sounds a lot like yours. And over this process, I have found it difficult not to beat myself about it. There were times that I felt that I failed as my son’s first teacher, only to be reminded that he wouldn’t look at me so I could show him how to talk. At 16 months, he pointed at me and said “mommy.” I cried and haven’t heard it since. I can’t wait for the day it happens again and after reading your post, I know it will. Thank you.
Tara
June 1, 2010 @ 7:03 am
My son didn’t turn out to be the kind of kid I had envisioned having either. I won’t bore everyone with our story but I’ve noticed that you’ve got several moms posting with concerns about speech therapy. Regardless of your child’s needs and/or diagnosis (or lack thereof) early intervention is the key! Speech therapy for young children isn’t painful — the therapists design activities that will be engaging and fun for your child. The added bonus is that you learn a lot about your child’s particular needs and how to address them so you can work with him/her at home. Additionally, for very young children the exercises done in speech therapy will often address other needs such as sensory issues, joint attention, stemming, etc. Every mom out there has great instincts about her own baby so of course I think we should listen to what our gut tells us… but don’t let your own fear get in the way of trying something to help your child. Almost all states have an early intervention program offering free or reduced cost services for children under the age of 3. The details will vary by state but you can contact your pediatrician or local school system for contact information to get started.
Kristin
June 2, 2010 @ 12:05 pm
This is a great post. Something no one talks about, but should.
My 20 month old doesn’t have any developmental issues that we know of, but he is very active, to the point that he can be a bit like a tornado tearing into things (and he’s usually the most active in a room of his peers). We’ve child proofed as much as we can (which is just about everything), but he still finds ways to get to things, break things etc. I just find it exhausting and there are days I wonder how I will ever survive if he continues at this rate (I have my own health issues that cause severe fatigue and this whole SAHM thing is way harder than I thought it would be – and I knew it would be tough).
Michelle McGee
June 25, 2010 @ 1:17 pm
Wow does this post resonate with me! My son was never easy – still isn’t “easy” whatever that is and he’s 12 now! At the age of 6 he was diagnosed with Tourette Syndrome. Two years later I learned that TS rarely moves in alone and he was diagnosed with OCD and put on medication after a life-threatening experience with one of his compulsions. Still years later we learned he also has ADD. I can’t tell you how many nights I spent crying because I didn’t know what to do with him. Crying because I couldn’t “fix” him. Crying because he wasn’t what I expected. And then crying because I was a horrible mother for even thinking that. It’s still a roller coaster many days as I navigate the ups and downs of our life together – mostly ups. Jacob has taught me so much about acceptance and compassion. He lives each day having to deal with people staring, laughing and making rude comments. And yet he remains the strongest person I know. I may not have received the child I expected, but I firmly believe I was blessed with the child I needed. We spend a great deal of time educating others about TS trying to break down the misconceptions. If you would like to learn more about TS I urge you to visit http://www.tsa-usa.org.
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Confessions of a Mean Mommy » Blog Archive » Mean Mom’s Thank-You Time: What I’m Grateful for This Thanksgiving
November 23, 2010 @ 4:00 pm
[…] him well as he grows up, even though they’re destined to wound him, too. He is not always the child I thought I wanted, but I’m grateful for the he-ness of him nonetheless, or maybe moreso because of […]