Thursday, August 30, 2012

God Bless the Warrior Moms

As some of you know I have two vaccine injured children. The oldest manifested in increadibly low immunity and severe respiritory problems. The second oldest was born with an encephalitic scream, I myself had a troubling reaction to the flu vaccine while in my third trimester with him. He went through a gambit of symptoms (that shriek that seemed unending, headbanging, biting, night terrors, rocking, repetative speach, tics, etc) that I never realized were associated with vaccine reaction until he was passed his second birthday when his behavior reached its apex. Doctors offered meds that I had seen do horrible things to adults and knew that was not an option for us, so I started studying everything I could get my hands on for alternative treatments for ADD and Autism, and we began our journey.

We have been fighting this uphill battle for six years now. Each treatment method we have tried has made an improvement of varying degree for him. We have made more lifestyle changes than I can count. We are finally making the final step. He was given a supplement by his naturopath that helps him produce and process seritonin which he cannot do on his own because of the neurological damage that was done.

Just over two months he has been on this protocol, he has been doing amazing. All of a sudden he seems like a "typical" eight year old, with normal fears, normal energy levels, normal interactions. And then we ran out of his supplement a week ago.

I should have seen it coming really but I had gotten very comfortable in this peaceful existance without all the turmoil that I let my guard down. I didn't realize that as the supplement processed out of his system he could regress so quickly, but it did. He went from a sleeping schedule that had finally evened out to not being able to settle at night, not being able to wake in the mornings. Then came the anxiety and lashing out. Little things first; a small stone tossed at me out of frustration, a stick thrown because his feeling were hurt.
Today, all of a sudden, it was a volcanic explosion, the likes of which I have not seen since he was three. He has grown quite a bit since he was three, and he's much more rugged than your average eight year old, and I was simply not prepared. I should have seen the signs; the toy taken from the baby and thrown while we were walking around Target, the heavy breathing. By the time we got to checkout (a matter of minutes) he was shoving the shopping cart around. By the time we got out the door he started kicking me. Normally it would have been easy to restrain him, and hold him till he was calm enough to go, but today I was wearing the toddler on my back and had a baby in a carriage I was trying to keep a hand on. He got out of my arms and hit me in the face. The whole time he is still kicking me in the shins and knees.

Anyone who has ever been through this knows how hard it is mentally and physically to have this child you love attacking as you try to protect yourself, everyone around you, and especially the child who is out of control. I have always stayed calm and collected out of necessity to defuse these situations, but today I had a moment of weakness and I just could not stop the tears that came. Right there in front of the sliding doors at Target, holding my sweet boy as he thrashed and struggled to regain control, humiliating myself. Even more rediculous I was praying the whole time that no one walking by would misunderstand and think I was harming my child. My prayer was answered. As I was trying to get a still flailing boy and a carriage out of the way of a mother and two boys entering the store. She got to the entrance and turned back to me and asked if she could help me back to my car, turns out she has a child with similar needs. Others had passed me by, not knowing how to help, or just not wanting to interfer, of which I am glad. I don't want someone to interfer in a situation like that if they are just going to get in the way or escalate the situation. But this mom KNEW. And she helped. I thanked her, but if you have ever experienced a scenario like this you know a "thank you" is not enough. She has her own family and problems, she did not have to get involved but as I was sobbing in the car with the kids finally loaded, and the situation resolved because there are no extra people in the car (his biggest anxiety trigger - crowds), I was thanking God that she was the woman who had crossed my path at that moment, and not someone who didn't understand.

I know I am very lucky, many children are injured far worse than my son, their families lives changed forever in ways they could never have predicted. Yet they continue on with their chins held high, not having mental breakdowns in front of Target over a tantrum. I solute the women who live it everyday, with no two month reprieve, because the children won't respond to treatment, yet they still search for one that will work. The women who sacrifice their "normal" lives for the difficult endless days with children they just want to see come back to them. The women who will not give up hope.

And the woman at Target, who stopped to help another mom at a low moment....I salute you.

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Olympic Parenting

    If parenting was an Olympic sport what events would we be watching on television this week? Which do you think you would be best qualified to compete in (and potentially win the gold)? Which do you think would be the funnest to watch (hey, its always funner WATCHING another mom trying to hold an active toddler in diaper changing possition than it is participating in the same activity).

   So, I have come up with some events I would love to challenge the Olympians to try:

•  Speed diapering (while keeping hands, furniture and walls feces free)

•  Unidentified flying object ducking (bonus points of they don't get a concussion or black eye)

•  Spilt milk sopping (before a child or pet tracks it throughout the arena)

•  Tantrum diffusing (to be done without actually speeding up time to complete meltdown)

•  Binky seek (would be most entertaining to watch in a toddler-trashed house, and be reminiscent of the old Nickelodeon slime shows...would be even better if they actually added slime)

• The lactation long-shot and the more precision focused event "directional lactation"

AND HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION EVENTS (dealing with older children)

•  Broken toy tossing (before anyone notices the damage our loss of said toy)

• Fire sniffing (disqualification if the arena gets burnt down)

•  Broken window prevention (there is potential for a baseball event, and a BB gun event here)

Of course there would have to be a parenting Olympic triathlon as well, but instead of events being separated as in spring triathlons this would have to be three events accomplished simultaniously (for realism purposes). So I propose:

• Grocery shopping (without acquiring unlisted items)

• Diaper blowout (sans diaper bag)

• Emergency phone call from teenager (involving one of the following: first love break up, car accident on a learners permit, or call from jail)

So, while I will not be viewing the actual Olympics, I would just LOVE to watch some of those world class athletes try to compete with the acrobatic skills I have seen demonstrated by average everyday mamas.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Now and Then

Every once in a while I get to thinking about how much my life has changed. The biggest change for me has been the way I think, and view the world. I been raised in an everyday all American home, with normal mainstream ideas and ideals. Then, ten years ago I had my first child. They say children change everything but I had no clue how much. Things didn't change overnight, of course. I started off my journey in parenthood doing everything "normal", following all the rules and advice handed down by more experienced parents and doctors and the common child rearing handbooks (like "What To Expect", and "The Girlfriends Guides") that conveniently echoed the words of wisdom the aforementioned resources gave me.
Incidentally, I have an infant child now that is the same age as my first son was back those ten short years ago (and I have two others in between, now ages 8 and 2). At several different points in time between then and now I came to the conclusion that listening to everyone else and following their advice was just not working for me, or my kids. Those other people didn't have to live in my home and face the consequences of their advice, I did. So we made changes, some little and gradually, others huge and abruptly....and never without resistance from those omniscient advice givers who were offended at my audacity of choosing my parenting and family lifestyle path for myself instead of continuing down the path most often followed.

So let's see what a few major and minor changes amount to in one short decade...

NOW vs. THEN:
•attachment parenting vs. authoritarian parenting

• Cloth diapers (and wicked cute covers and snaps) vs. disposables (and dioxin burns, and sticky tape tabs)

• Naturopaths, homeopaths, chiropractors, vs. Pediatricians

• Home remedies and self treatment vs. Emergency room trips

• Home birth vs. hospital birth (cesarean)

• Coconut oil vs Mary Kay

• Baking soda and apple cider vinegar vs. shampoo and conditioner

• Whole food vs. genetically modified, pesticide sprayed, boxed, bagged, prepackaged, nutrient depleted wannabe food

• Intact immune systems vs. vaccine compromised

• Homemade cleaning supplies vs. Tide, shout, Windex

• Vinegar and sunshine vs. bleach

• Unschooling vs. regular school

• Garlic and homeopathic remedies vs. antibiotics and antivirals

• Stay at home mom vs. working full time and attending college full time (I missed so much)

And most recently...

• Gluten free vs. whole grain

So many things can change in such a short amount of time and I'm so glad. I can't even imagine (nor do I want to) what life would be like for my family if I had not started taking steps off the beaten path.  I hope to continue being adaptable and make whatever changes necessary to offer my children the best opportunities for them that I can. I hope they learn from watching, so they can continue to change and grow instead of wallowing when they have moments and situations in their lives that aren't working for them.

Writing this list out, I can't help but wonder what the next ten years will bring, and what I  would be able to add on this then. I'll just have to wait and see....