Tallying up my Self-Worth
Sep 28, 09- (by Mama MPJ)
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- Sober Salon
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Last Monday I walked through the grocery store feeling like a weight was crushing my chest, a tight lump in my throat the only thing between me and tears. And part of me wanted to self-indulgently sit there on the linoleum floor under the flicker fluorescent lights and cry, much the same way that I’ll both fear and crave the relief of vomiting during a wave of nausea. For the second time this year, a babysitter had dumped us because she found my son Austen’s autistic behavior too difficult to handle.
The grocery store I was in wasn’t the one closest to my home. It was an additional twenty minutes further away, because the one closest to my house was all out of strawberry Yoplait, one of the three foods Austen will eat (and not just eat reliably, but eat at all). I’d had a clerk check the stockroom and then check with the store in the next town before making the drive to the store in which I now clutched my cart wanting to cry.
It had been the sitter’s first attempt at watching the kids, and I’d been satisfied that everything went just fine. She had experience working with autistic children in the past, and both children seemed to take to her from the start. There seemed to have been a few rough patches, but it didn’t strike me that the kids or the sitter had a particularly difficult night and the sitter, even at the end of the evening, seemed interested in learning more about how to work with Austen. But this morning I’d been informed that she did not want to come back because the job was too difficult.
Too difficult? Is that what my life is? Here I was having driven an extra twenty minutes each way to the grocery store because my son’s eating issues are so severe, and I have a babysitter who has worked with autistic children before seeming to say to me (through her actions) that my son is worse than any of them. Am I in another one of those situations, like living with an addict, where we start to think that everyone secretly drives raging drunk or tries to pick up prostitutes or does drugs with their kids because that’s all we see, where the bizarre and unacceptable become normal?
I remembered the babysitter asking about whether Austen’s behavior was better at school than at home and wondering, “Was she saying it was my fault? Did she think if I’d worked harder, if I were smarter, if I were more skilled, if I set up a different structure, if I were stricter, if I trained him better, everything would be different? (I’ll work harder, I’ll do better, please love me!) Does she think I’m a bad mom? But the beloved sitter she was replacing used to tell me what great work I was doing and how blessed our family was…”
And I actually started to tally the sitters up: “Two quit this year, but three started and love us. One stayed on from last year (the one who had just moved, whose eyes would glow with enthusiasm when she talked about our family) and in past years no one had ever quit; they got pregnant or moved or started school… But maybe things are getting worse? Oh, this isn’t helping! Am I in denial? Is my life crazy or just life? Am I bad or am I good or am I… (damn!) looking to other people to tell me what is real and whether I’m doing the right thing for my son.”
It didn’t help that tightness in my chest or that longing for tears to dissipate to know that I was looking to other people (rather than myself and my God) for definition and approval. I still desperately wanted to know what I couldn’t know: that I was doing the “right” things, that my son would be ok in the way I (not God) wanted him to be ok, that he’d be able to get along in the world on his own someday. But it did help me to see that, wherever I am on my journey as a parent, the answer is not going to come from taking a tally of what babysitters think of my family, but in feeling confident in myself and my higher power.
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This is my belief. God tests some of us, but only to the extent that we may handle it, with God’s assistance, of course.
PEACE
My dear woman - God is not testing you. This is life on life’s terms and God is always there when we look for her to help us through the crappy times. There are all kinds of people (babysitters) in this world. It’s nothing personal. Hope you found your kid’s favorite yogurt. That’s more important than worrying about what anybody thinks about you.
Big stuff, MPJ. And to think that as mothers we all go through the same thing no matter what our child is like. Lots of people like to think they know what is best for us and our children. My daughter is now 23 and I have come to believe through my observations over the years that parents really DO KNOW what is best for their children. You are a great mom. You know your son like no one else does.
I feel your frustration. As an individual who has worked with some of the toughest cases out there while in brain injury rehabilitation, I can assure you that the employee needs to go into the experience with the mindset that it is a job that they are being paid to do and they can leave it at the door. Granted, there are those who will simply never be able to handle these kinds of behavioral challenges, but there are many of us out there that can.
Do not give up. There will be someone for your family. Just keep writing and sharing with us so that we can support you.
I could have written this post myself…HUGS and prayers my friend…
I totally empathize, Mary. Finding childcare for special needs children is so very difficult. Thinking of you and hoping you find a good replacement soon. In the meantime, don’t question yourself! You do an amazing job.
I can empathize- we’ve had workers and babysitters come and go throughout the years. It’s rarely had anything to do with us (except maybe the sheer overwhelmingness of 3 at the same time!), but more to do with them. Just because you’ve worked with 1 or 2 or 5 autistic children doesn’t mean that you’re comfortable working with every autistic child. I’ve had workers who preferred to work with my aggressive/self-injurious son because he’s more “challenging”, and had no interest in my more typical daughters (and vice-versa). It’s so hard to find good babysitters and workers, and often, their opinion isn’t worth much anyway. From everything that I’ve read you’re doing an incredible job.
Dear MPJ here’s a datapoint from the world of neuro-typical parenting. Sometimes you lose a babysitter because the boy plays rougher, or gets whiney when he’s tired, or the kid has softball on Sunday afternoon or an AP class on Monday, and it’s just too difficult for them. it turns out to be one thing too much, or there is something they would rather do — and it’s completely about them and their lives.
For what that’s worth.
Though I’m not a parent, I was a former babysitter during my college years. And believe me, “normal” children can be just as - or even more- “diffult”. Trust that maybe this particular sitter was not the bets fit and that God has someone perfect in store for your family.
I am very lucky to have a daycare that has been there for us from the time TC was 18 months. They have gone through the head banging, lack of communication, tantrums…all of it. And I am so grateful. However, family runs the other way. (Hugs)
Your post is heartbreaking and familiar too. Just know that, if you weren’t a “good mom,” you wouldn’t worry so much about being a bad mom. Bad moms don’t care enough to worry.