The Ordinary Sparkle
Autism diagnosis day always brings us up short. We’re not made for it. No one is.
Even those more prepared—those of us who had the words circling the back of our minds like wispy smoke at a campfire—well, our knees still buckle at the formal announcement. How could they not?
Autism.
The next day we try to go back to our ordinary lives because life goes on even though we hate it.
We make breakfast. We buy fabric softener. We load the dishwasher and return phone calls and generally grit our teeth through it all.
Autism is a loudly ticking clock. From the moment the diagnosis is delivered—for some of us, it happens way before the officialness of the office and the forms and the words—we feel the seconds and minutes whizzing by at shocking speeds.
So, we reduce. We turn to metrics.
Age.
Dates.
Numbers.
It was November 2006.
He was eighteen months old.
The appointment was at 10:30 in the morning.
Slowly, we add color to the landscape. Color smooths out the edges. It softens even the harshest words. Because an autism diagnosis is harsh, no matter how gentle the delivery.
I dressed him in overalls. Then I zipped up his blue jacket against the late-autumn chill.
We walked back to the car. The parking garage was mostly empty. I buckled him into his car seat. I think I kissed him on the cheek, but I can’t remember. I drove back out into the afternoon. It started to rain, the clouds telling a story all their own.
Diagnosis day.
All at once there is everything to do.
Yet nothing to be done.
Instead, we take stock. We consider the inventory.
He can stack two blocks together.
He slept three hours last night.
He tried one bite of banana before he spit it on the table.
We hold hope beneath our ribcage.
In some ways, hope is worse than the metrics.
Hope is more than dates and numbers blocks on the carpet. It is even brighter than color. It is fire and light.
With hope, we have so much to lose.
Years pass. We dream new dreams.
Instead of touchdowns on a field, we cheer for words during therapy. Small to many, our triumphs are king-sized to us.
Now, this boy of mine is eighteen. He’s in a college program.
It feels as though we’re in the end game now, as he perches upon the precipice of manhood.
We did the work. And the work landed us here—on the cusp of something bigger than we ever imagined.
It is scary business, launching a boy-Jack into a man-world.
I think about crosswalks, mean people, loneliness, homesickness, sexual predators, cyberbullies, cold nights when the wind chill dips.
I think about the demands of academics at a college level and wonder if we didn’t aim too high.
When you raise a neurotypical child, there is often a familiar trajectory. High school, college, girlfriend, wedding, career, family. These are good things. They are whole, and good, and ordinary, and right.
When you raise a diagnosed child, you are forced to acknowledge a different narrative.
Guardianship, power of attorney, residential facilities, full-time support.
When a neurotypical child leaves the proverbial nest, you hope you prepared him enough for the world.
With a diagnosed child, you hope you prepared the world enough for him.
Still, nearly two decades after a parking garage, I keep metrics.
He can do laundry.
He can cook a meal.
Can he make a friend?
Can he sit through class and take notes?
Despite the diagnosis, we build a life. Somehow, some way, we do this.
The ordinary begins to sparkle. Warm toast with lots of butter. Brightly colored blocks towering in the air. Fresh sheets at the end of a long day. These very things keep the birds in the sky.
We look up and see the stars. We hear notes of music and smile. All is not lost. All is not gone. We’ve changed our address and still, we find a way to walk home.
We have so much to lose.
Always, we hope.
There is no end game. There is simply healing and hurting and trying and building.
I love him fiercely.
My son.
My sun.
His favorite color is blue.