Showing posts with label motherhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label motherhood. Show all posts

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Discipline and Negative Behavior

Straight off the happy train back into Downersville! Well no, I don't think this is going to be as much as a downer as it is just talking about a tough phase we are in right now.

Will is 3. Three year olds are widely known to be adorable little devils at the best of times. My nonverbal 3-year-old can be the devil and all his little minions rolled up in to one ball of temper and teeth and nails. Will gets really, really frustrated. When he was smaller he would just roll along with everything and went with it. Things are different nowadays. A friend of mine who has an incredible child with autism, who is I believe about 9 years old now, said when her son was Will's age he was a "hot mess." I would definitely use this term to describe Will. He's a total hot mess!

Can you imagine not being able to communicate effectively? What if your most-effective methods of communication were to bite, pinch, and scratch? It gets my attention pretty darn quick and I can imagine it's a way for Will to release his negative feelings and gain some control. He has learned that doing these negative things to me will get my attention fast and he has learned to do them all the time. Sometimes he laughs at my reaction to him scratching me. Like he thinks it's funny when I say "Ouch. That hurts mommy." Great.

A recent pinch from Will on my arm
This biting and scratching and pinching crap hurts. It hurts like a mother. Will's got the sharpest little teeth and comes at me from all angles. He is known to drop down and bite my leg or sneak up from behind and bite my booty. In the last month he has learned to pinch and scratch. And he is strong! He drops down now like a noodle and makes it really hard for me to pick him up. He knows how to fight back. He has that all figured out. I worry he is starting to manipulate me in some way, but it's so hard to know what to do. It is really tempting to spank him. Several people have told me to bite him back or scratch him back, but I don't see how this would help. He doesn't really understand what he's doing and doesn't know what it means to hurt me. He wouldn't understand why I am spanking him. And the times I have scratched him back or snapped him on the cheek to make him stop, he just gets more mad. It becomes a cycle of madness.

These days Will is starting to understand words and simple phrases more, which is great; but he still really lacks in understanding why we do things or why he can't do certain things. He just gets really upset when he doesn't get to do the things he wants. For instance, he wants to go out in the front yard a lot. We live on a quiet street, but he certainly can't be out there unsupervised. And I don't always want to go out front. He doesn't understand if I say to him "we will go out there after I finish what I'm doing"... or whatever. He gets so mad when he doesn't get his way and out come the teeth and nails and screams again. This kind of thing happens all day long. Sometimes someone forgets to lock the front door. Will seems to realize this immediately and will be out the door before I can stop him. I then have to try to either coax him into the house (which works maybe 1% of the time), drag him into the house while avoiding teeth and nails and fighting his weight and strength, or I simply give up what I was doing and go outside and play with him for a while. You know what annoys me about this? We have a pretty fun backyard with tons of stuff to do back there. The front yard has our cars in the driveway and grass and a tree and some flowers. I don't know what it is about the front, but he just loves it. He always wants to be out there, no matter if it's raining, snowing, windy, etc.

So how does one discipline a child like this? I admit I have lost it a few times and yelled back at him. He looks at me with a blank stare, doesn't care or even understand that I am mad or he's in trouble. Will shows no emotion when I yell at him. Sometimes he laughs and thinks I'm being funny. It is extremely frustrating. It's infuriating. I have to check myself too and take my own break. A mommy timeout. Regroup. Try again. Then try to cheer him up, even though I am still pretty upset with him. He doesn't get social cues, although he is starting to not like stern voices or being scolded. I think this is a good step.

But I have got to find out how to stop this awful behavior. Therapists have given me some ideas. One therapist said to have him hit a wall or stomp his feet instead. This worked maybe once. When his little mouth is ready to bite, there is very little that can stop him until he bites. He wears a chewy tube all the time that I can shove in his mouth instead, but this is probably 10% effective. He is frustrated and wants to hurt me. I don't hold it against him. Some days I handle it better than others. If we're at home I usually put him in his room alone to cool down. But there are days when he's gone in there 15 to 20 times for a time out. It gets to be a little much and I don't think he needs to spend that much time alone in his room. It's hard to know what to do.

I really hope preschool helps with this. I have heard great things about the preschool class he's going into in September and I think it will be great. He is going to be there 4 days a week for 3 hours at a time and some of this behavior is bound to come out. There is also behavior therapy out there and child psychologists and I would love to get him into something to help control his emotions. I'm working on getting something going for him. 

Thursday, July 11, 2013

The Aftermath From Tragedy and New Life


Losing the baby was bad. Little by little after a time I was able to be a form of happy again. Yet, I was obsessed with the idea that I did something wrong when pregnant. I had a whole list of things I thought I should or shouldn't have done that I brought to the doctor afterwards, including painting the kitchen and refinishing an old dresser. I was sure the paint fumes caused the birth defect. The doctor reassured me as best she could. I am not like this today. I know things happened and I don't know why. I had the best of intentions for my baby girl.

I also wanted to be pregnant again. I wasn't going to give up on having a baby. I waited as long as the doctor told me to and diligently kept my environment and consumption clean and straight. I took the prenatal vitamins religiously. I also loathed seeing happy people with beautiful babies. I was so incredibly jealous and saddened by them. I was just in a strange place in my mind and I was lonely for something missing.

I became pregnant in spring 2007 with my little angel Colin. As I said previously, I was a nervous wreck. I wouldn't allow myself to be happy until my early ultrasound in Denver with the high-risk OB at 16 weeks when we were able to see how the baby's heart looked and other systems. Well, he was perfect. He was handsome and had a cute little nose already. Time to lighten up here!

A hilarious thing we learned was that the doctor told us he thought it was a girl. The genitals weren't really formed yet to get a good look, but he was sure it was a girl. So we went home happy and more relaxed. I started to bust out all my girl stuff I'd been saving. I hung up clothes. I was tired of feeling awful and ready to start again.

At the 20-week ultrasound we were informed that this was indeed a boy. A boy! A boy?! I called my friend Theresa giddy and I think she thought I was nuts. She said "are you okay?" It was great. I gave my sister back all the little girl things she gave me and went shopping. I have his first little outfit still.

I really was happy the rest of my pregnancy. I relaxed and took it easy. I ate like I was starving and felt pretty great. I lived through the acid reflux and had a fun baby shower.

On Christmas Eve I went into labor. My family spent Christmas Day by the phone waiting to hear the news. They all came to the hospital Christmas night and waited. And around 10 o'clock Colin was born 3 weeks early at 8 lbs 10 oz. He was healthy and perfect. He was the best Christmas gift I will ever get and I was so happy. I was a nervous new mom about nursing and all that stuff. But I was so happy he was here I could just burst.

We brought him home to his little jungle nursery and I sat with him and fed him and I remember crying, "I'm so happy you are here little boy." I smothered him with all my love and he took a heavy burden from me.

Colin is my little angel. He's 5-1/2 now and still a sweet little boy. I may spoil him and give into him often, but I just can't help it. He is the light of my life. On days when I am feeling really down about Will and all the screaming and crying and biting we endure, when I am desperate enough to think, "wow, I don't want to do this anymore," I think of Colin and those thoughts erase in an instant.

Colin is smart. He has an amazing gift with words. He said his first word "doggie" at 9 months. I have a video of him around 17 months and he is telling me about a "yellow hose" in the back yard. It is adorable. He understands so much. He understands the meaning behind the meaning in our language. He can tell jokes. He remembers the most obscure words he hears and uses them in context. He is really the polar opposite of Will when it comes to language.

Colin and I spent nearly every waking and sleeping moment together up until Will was born. Colin loved his dad, but he was mama's boy. This is different nowadays. He would way rather spend time with his cool dad than me, but I know he loves me. He is a great kid and I value our time together.


Wednesday, July 10, 2013

The Old Me and the New Me - Heartbreak of Lost Baby

I have been anxious to write this post for a long time. I've written it many times in my head. I know I said I would write about Will's Children's Hospital Evaluation next, but I really needed to do this first.

Mick and I met and fell in love in 2001 when I was 21. He was one of the gentlest men I'd ever met, despite his tough exterior. We had so much fun those first years being together. We had tons of things in common and he always treated me well. We worked together on our goals. We bought a house together a year after meeting. I was in college still but I needed a stable person in my life. I was a fish out of water in the real world making some poor choices. I am really glad I met him when I did and I loved him from our first date.

In 2004 we got engaged and married. By that time I was really ready to be married. I had 6 months left of the college courses I was taking and was ready to get a permanent job and settle down for reals. I wanted to have a baby too. My sister had my niece then and I thought she was the best thing ever. I couldn't wait to have my own baby. We waited until I finished my classes and got a job. We waited a little longer until my health insurance kicked in.

I got pregnant in 2006. I was on cloud nine with the idea of being pregnant. It was finally my turn! I really was so happy. I did, however, have horrible morning sickness... or round-the-clock sickness is more like it. My stomach was doing me no favors. I was weak. I was hot. I just never felt very well. My hips ached so bad. I still feel it sometimes like a phantom pain in my hips. I did end up feeling better into the 2nd trimester and was starting to show. I was getting pretty happy and excited. I started collecting baby items. Mick and I even took a little road trip. We had a lovely time together. It was a nice trip, but when I look back at those pictures it is very painful. They are in a box in the back of my closet. That was the last time I was truly my old self. Look how happy I was. Not a real care in the world. I was untouchable and nothing truly tragic had ever really happened to me.

My 1st ultrasound at 20 weeks changed everything. I get a sinking sensation even writing it now. The tech seemed to be spending an awful long time looking at my baby. She did inform us it was a girl. I was giddy for a moment. She told me "have fun shopping." Umm okay, thanks lady. We met the doctor afterward. It was the first time I had seen the actual doctor at the OB office. Before it was the PA and nurse. She didn't know me. I didn't know her. She told us our baby has "a very concerning finding." The way she said it, I cringe. I can imagine us sitting there all bubbly and excited and she has to tell us something horrible.

She said our baby has a heart defect called hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS). Half of the baby's heart didn't grow; her heart, a vital organ. She told us what it meant. The baby will develop fine in the womb but as soon as she is born her heart will not pump blood properly. She would need surgery at the moment of birth. I encourage you to read more about HLHS if you have time. I remember they told us 1 in 10,000 babies had it. I think the number is higher now. I personally know of three other people who had or have children with this condition, which is remarkable. There are many details about HLHS that I have honestly blocked out. I searched online through late hours learning more and more about it. Babies were known to survive with this condition with a heart transplant or a series of surgeries.

I was scared to death. I didn't have the emotional tools to deal with such a thing. I remember worrying about money and how we would afford all this. How would we manage to make it through such a dramatic thing? What if the baby dies when she is born? How could I ever go on? This isn't a television show; this is real life.

We were sent to South Denver to see a pediatric heart specialist. They did an ultrasound of her heart that took an hour and a half. I fell asleep lying there. We were told even though it was technically HLHS, hers looked slightly abnormal. I apologize for not remembering some of these details. We talked with the heart specialist about what her options would be when born. She had very few options. It was a bleak picture. We were basically told she wasn't going to make it.

Still, I was sent to see a high-risk OB in Denver and had detailed ultrasounds done of all her systems. The only other significant finding was that my baby girl was very small for her gestational age. I don't remember the exact details.

I can tell you my heart absolutely broke during all this. I am the first child in my family and I thought this baby was going to be just like me. I thought she would have been beautiful. I still wish I had a little girl of my own to know what she would be like. I'm certain my reproductive days are over. I couldn't handle going through all this again. I get sick just thinking about all the stress I was under when pregnant with Colin. I was so worried about him. I fatefully had been introduced to "The Secret" around this time and was able to visualize and meditate on positive outcomes and that was really the only thing that kept me from going off the deep end when I was pregnant with him. I had a mantra I would repeat whenever I would start to feel negative: "My baby will be healthy, my baby will come home with us, my baby will grow up and live a full life." That was Colin. I actually still do this from time to time. I should probably do it more.

Mick and I had a lot of long talks during all this. Thank goodness we were able to communicate still. I don't even know how we did it. We had to make some tough decisions. In my heart I am a woman's advocate and I believe every woman should always be able to make informed choices about what happens to her and her body. During this time of making hard choices I got a cramping stomach illness. I was throwing up nonstop. I became dehydrated. I started spotting. I feel like I was making myself sick with some kind of mental breakdown. We went down to Denver to induce labor. I was 25 weeks. This was the decision I had made. I am hesitant to write this because I fear being judged for the choice we made.

The baby came quick; stillborn. We have pictures with her, both of us red-faced and crying. She was the tiniest little person I'd ever seen. She had a little bit of brown hair and long fingers. We named her Frances Jane. The doctor inspected the baby. I was told the cord was wrapped around her neck many times. I was told it was highly likely she had perished in the womb up to a week before. Yet we still had to make the choice to induce early. I wish I'd never had to make that choice and would have let my body take care if it. I think she died from my broken heart.

After this all went down we had a little funeral for the baby. I was empty inside. I wasn't nice to Mick. We should have held onto eachother tighter. I don't know how we even came out of all this. It was a dark day.

I retained part of the placenta for a good week and was bleeding a lot. I had no idea what it was all about. The cramping and blood came in waves. I finally went to the doctor and she sent me to surgery right away to have it removed. I didn't even know what was happening to me. I was so very sad.

I had a certain person ask me not a month after all this happened, "so when are you getting pregnant again?" That was my first real taste of human insensitivity and I cringe thinking about it still. I wish I would have screamed in this person's face. I wish I could right now. It wouldn't make any difference though in the end.

There is not a day that goes by that I don't think about this baby girl. She is always in my mind. I hope she is out there looking down on us and looking after her brothers. I hope she knows I really did want her so badly. I wanted her so bad. I still do.

Monday, July 8, 2013

A New Blog, An Old Journey

They say history repeats itself... so away we go again! I'm starting this new blog to help document our lives and give some insight into my personal feelings, struggles, pleasures, amazement, and amusements that go along with raising my son Will, who happens to be developmentally-challenged, and our family experience as I see it. Will has a big brother Colin who is the angel of my life and a happy, fun, super smart kid. Colin is now 5-1/2 and Will is 3. There's also the big guy of the house, Mick, who is a heck of a hard worker and cool and fun-loving dad. I'm Lauren and the mom. I do a lot of mom stuff and house stuff; a lot of reading and a little too much obsessing over certain cable TV shows and immersing myself in pop culture; I also love music and dancing and singing in the kitchen with Will and sometimes Colin and this is where I seem to spend a lot of my time. I love being around my extended family and wish I could spend more time with all of them. I hope to travel more one day and visit some particular family members my heart longs to see. For now, social media and technology are filling that empty space.

This blog is going to be more of my writing and less photos, though I'm sure I won't be able to resist posting photos and videos every now and again, especially since I've recently been blessed with an iPhone and have all this at my fingertips. Growing up I loved journaling and writing, though it was more about my daily life and feelings than any creative type stuff. Being a mom of young children, I feel like a lot of myself has been put on the back burner and lately I've been yearning for an outlet for all these thoughts and feelings. I'm doing this for myself too and am rather excited! Ideas are popping into my head and I'm trying to keep up. This is going to be good.

Welcome to Colorful Colorado with our gorgeous blue skies and summer breezes; welcome to my new blog. Thanks for visiting and come back often.