My granddaughter Lexi is a special needs child with Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD) and is under the autism umbrella. We have come to understand this gradually
over these past five years of her life, because the doctors, therapists,
counselors, social workers all have a different diagnosis. The only constant has been the SPD which
began 24 hours after she was born when she had a seizure twenty minutes after
we walked in the door from the hospital.
Although the neurologist and eeg test said differently, we knew
something was not right, especially her feeding and sleeping habits that were
unlike anything the books on newborns could explain.
Fast forward four years, melt downs after melt downs,
sleepless nights, hospital stays for stomach problems because of taste, smell,
feel of foods and an entire family confused about the constant crying that
seems to get worse the older Lexi gets, to a day I want to forget, but a day
that changed my perspective forever.
I lost my temper last summer on a drive from Chattanooga to
Beaufort, SC. Lexi had been crying
constantly for three hours and we stopped for lunch at the IHOP in Macon. Her mother had been sleeping, or trying to
sleep. Emery Kate, the one-year-old
seemed to have a sixth sense that she needed to stay quiet.
The stop for lunch was a nightmare as the place was packed
and the service was poor and slow. The
girls were hungry and that made Lexi more upset. I was at a loss as to how to handle
things. Do I treat my daughter like a child
and make her get Lexi to stop crying? Of
course not. Do I assume some sort of
role as disciplinarian? Not that either.
But as we left the restaurant, my daughter took the baby to
the car leaving Lexi and me alone in the restaurant. She had ordered orange juice and then didn’t
want it, but Emery Kate did. Her mother
gave it to Emery Kate. Time to leave and
Lexi wanted her juice back but EK thought it was hers. Suddenly we had two little girls screaming;
hence the decision to separate them.
While helping my daughter with the baby get buckled into her
car seat, the orange juice became the tip of the iceberg and for one reason or
another, I threw the cup of orange juice down spilling all of it. My daughter was horrified. I felt relief and embarrassment at the same
time for showing such a display of temper.
I apologized.
I took Lexi back inside with me to get another orange juice
and while waiting she got very anxious and was about to have another melt down
and began demanding the orange juice and this in front of all the people
sitting by the door waiting for a table.
I overheard one woman say, “Too bad she can’t handle the child
better.” I didn’t say anything. I did wonder at that moment how many times my
daughter and son-in-law has heard this from strangers and my heart hurt for
them.
I begin to buckle Lexi up in the car and the crying
continues and then she is wailing and then EK starts crying. My daughter
doesn’t seem to hear it and I realize we have at least three more hours of
driving and I’m not sure I can drive with the screaming and so I do something
horrible. I yell at Lexi.
I tell her that if she does not stop crying, I will not go
home with her and that I will stay at the IHOP and let her mother drive them
home and I will have her grandfather come get me in Macon and I’ll go back to
Chattanooga. I expect her to beg me to
not do this but instead she continues to cry and then my daughter gently tells
me I do not have to stay the rest of the week with them in SC. Not because she is angry with me, but because
she does not want my relationship with Lexi to be ruined.
Lexi did continue to cry off and on the rest of the trip,
and so did I; silent tears for my shame, for my ignorance, for my daughter and
son-in-law who deal with these issues day in and day out, for Lexi’s sister who
loves Lexi no matter what, and for Lexi who cannot control the crying and may
not know herself why she cries.
What I learned from this experience and the reason I share
it is that I can be proud of my daughter and her husband for their deep abiding
love for their daughter. Multiply this
one day in the life of Lexi by many days and weeks and one can only imagine the
life of dealing with a special needs child.
I know my daughter has forgiven me. I pray that Lexi does too.
I can honestly say that the week I stayed with Lexi and her
family was a true joy. Even when she
woke me up in the middle of every night and asked me to tell her a story and
not just any story – but a story I make up about a little girl named Lexi.