So, Thanksgiving has come and gone. Two holidays and so far no
hospitalization this fall. If we make it to New Years, Chris Hardwick needs to
show up and award points. If we make to Easter with none, I want medals and a
brass band. When you have a kid with special needs you get very good at short
range tactical thinking. How to fit five or six out of town appointments with
specialists in into a week, max. How to pack at three am for an out of state
hospitalization (that one you learn the HARD way.) Exactly who must be called
when you disappear for a week or two so no one freaks out and thinks you're
angry at them/dead/abducted by aliens. But regular long range plans are hard
for us. They take a leap of faith you sometimes don't realize you need. You
have to learn how not to overpack for visits to relatives. (Hint, you don't need
all the equipment and you can put pertinent medical info on a thumb drive now,
so no paper either.) You have to remember not every gasp or freak out on the
part of others means an emergency, sometimes they just don't know what our
normal looks like. You have to realize that gosh, darn it, other doctors in
other towns went to med school too and did not just go to the barber's school of
small pox and leeches. But it is hard, you know. You watch a kid like mine
with a mixture of awe and fear at all times. It's like Feisty Pants is the
toughest Faberge Egg in the bunch. She is resilient and tough and feisty in ways
I can only hope to be when I grow up, and yet a cold could lead to medivac
helicopters and ventilators.
I write all this , by the way, not to bitch or whine (I don't
care what the rest of the freak commune masquerading as my family here says.
Don't listen to them.) I write all this because I want this blog to be an honest
account of what the journey is really like with a special needs kid. It is at
all times a heady mix of fun, fear, and crazy. It's not all beer and skittles
but mostly because of our reaction to the circumstances, not the circumstances
themselves. And I listed fun first for a reason. I have learned to take my
victories and joys where and when I find them and that attitude has let me relax
be a better parent.
But, the holidays are upon us. And my two smallest budgets,
time and patience, are even more taxed than usual. There are relatives to visit
and presents to make and/or buy. Cards to write. People to see. Lists to
accomplish. A million things I need to remember that I know I won't
remember until it is too late. And now, sigh, in the last few weeks we have all
battled a tummy bug and then followed that up with a cold for good measure.
There were no issues that led us to an ER or hospital stay. But there have been
so many in the past. At exactly this time of year. So even though, we sailed
through with no problems or complications, I will spend the rest the year
looking at my feisty one with a slight amount of trepidation knowing that this
time, we dodged a bullet. And it could easily be next time, that we do
not.