The story of how I found out about Hunter’s autism is kind
of amusing. Well, it is amusing now, but it wasn’t so much then. Now, it is
just another leg in our journey.
I was pregnant with my little guy. We were in the car on our way back from one of Hunter’s t-ball games and my hubby said to me, “Hunter’s pre-school director called and they think he might have A-U-T-I-S-M.”
I was pregnant with my little guy. We were in the car on our way back from one of Hunter’s t-ball games and my hubby said to me, “Hunter’s pre-school director called and they think he might have A-U-T-I-S-M.”
Apparently the school, knowing I was pregnant, had called my
husband as not to upset me. Yep, they didn’t want to upset me, so they left it
to him to spell it out to me in the car with my 4 year-old in the backseat. I remember staring at the road in front of us
and thinking, “Now what?” and “What is Autism” and “What does this mean for our
lives?”
When we first received the news, it was tough. I hit the
ground running right away. I made appointments with doctors. I did tons of
Internet research. I spoke with teachers I knew about what to expect and what
they had observed in their students with Autism. Still, I struggled. I
struggled with the opinions of others. I struggled with the “Why us?” and the “Why
not us?” questions. I fought the schools. I questioned the doctors. I went into
“fixit” mode.
From the moment my hubby spelled the news to me, he had a fear
in his eyes. Actually, he had anger in his eyes that was a well-placed cover-up
for the fear he was actually feeling. This was not what he had expected. This
was his first child. This was his first son. This was everything he had hoped
for and dreamed of for many years. The tears in his eyes when Hunter was born were
there because of pure joy for this life we had brought into this world. Now, he
was scared that the life of this beautiful little boy was going to be hard and
scary. He went into denial for a while. He fought the good fight that nothing
was “wrong” with our little boy.
Then, one day, not long after, he took my hand and we began this
scary, uphill, and amazing journey together. We have had many fights. We have
had many struggles. We have had way too many tears to count. We still have all
of those.
A lot has changed since that night in the car when neither
of us really knew what “A-U-T-I-S-M” was or where it would take us. We have
learned a lot as a couple. We have learned how to work together. We have
learned how to pull each other up when we are down (and there are lots of those
times). We have learned how to parent by trial and error because sometimes that’s
all you can do. By trial and error, we discovered that I am “bad cop” and he is
“good cop, “so we work that to our advantage whenever possible.
The research shows that divorce rates are high
among parents of autistic kiddos. I get it! Trust me, we’ve been there many
times. For us, this journey just works better as a team, and that’s how we will
stay! Following this A-U-T-I-S-M path one day at a time.
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