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A Light In the Dark
It had been a dark day here. Clouds were thick with not one peek of sunshine all day. The outline of the bare trees was stark against the grey sky. The big oak tree out back looked dull, even though its leaves were still clinging to its branches. It was just a heavy day in the way that often happens at this time of year.

And then suddenly everything changed. I’m glad that I looked out the window when I did. The change, though stunning, was very brief.

Somehow the sun did shine through that thick layer of clouds. And what a difference its appearance made. Color returned to the world outside my window! Greens, golds, rusts, and even blacks were so beautiful in those few moments. And those moments showed me that the sun was there behind the clouds, still shining even when the clouds hid its brightness again.
I don’t know why sometimes God allows His children to endure prolonged periods of heavy, dark days. I do know that suffering makes us more like Christ. Suffering is the tool that God uses to form us into His likeness……to show us Who He is……to bring Him glory. Sometimes it just doesn’t make much sense, though. And it hurts, deeply hurts.
There is hope. God hasn’t gone anywhere, even when we can’t see His light. These few words that I read recently say it very well:
“Light arises in the darkness for the upright….” (Psalm 112:4a)
This is so much more than our human wisdom. This promise isn’t, “Just look at the bright side!” Sometimes there is totally no bright side to see anyway. Please don’t tell me to try to find one.
The light that arises in our darkness is the Light of the World. The baby that we celebrate this time of year is that Light. John called Him the true Light. But baby Jesus was born into a dark world in a dark manger. His life was hardship and ended in horrific pain….all because He was the Light.
His light shines into all my dark places today, not only to expose sin, but also to show me the way and to show me that He is there in the darkness. He is there to comfort……He is there to provide…….He is there to love.
I don’t have to “find” Him. He shows Himself to me in sudden ways, sometimes even brief ways, like my burst of sunshine on that heavy day. He brings sweet answers to prayer. He fills my heart with peace. He brings a friend to cheer me. He reminds me of my many blessings.
The dark days grow my trust.
The light that arises in that darkness reminds me of the One in whom I trust…..that He is there and He is faithful.
The light shines best in the dark. May I remember that truth on every dark day.
Have a Tootsie Roll!
My writing about life with Aaron has taken a back seat lately. Actually, more like the back car on a very long train. Traveling over Thanksgiving and then returning to the mad rush of Christmas preparations have certainly been major factors. But there’s more to it than that.
I feel overshadowed. Living under a dark cloud of Aaron issues. Increased seizures…..medicine decisions……doctor visits. But even heavier than those concerns are the disruptions caused by his behaviors, which honestly have at times been far from nice.
Autism……family therapist…..psychiatrist……investigating alternative medical helps…….phone calls……meetings. It can get overwhelming sometimes. Keeping our cool can also be next to impossible, sometimes as impossible as understanding what makes Aaron tick. But we must understand that Aaron operates with a very unique mindset, without most of the filters that others have, and that he is constantly bombarded with sounds and ideas and stimuli that you and I never have to handle. His day group is a perfect breeding ground for noises and irritants and unusual people that can aggravate him quickly. We rarely see the behaviors at home that they see there. It can get messy.
Today I saw the side of Aaron that I wish he showed every day. It’s there…..just sometimes not seen as vividly as I saw today. Yeah, he got mad at a game this morning before we left for his dentist appointment. But he and I had a good discussion about it as we drove to the dentist’s office, where he also relished discussing his angry experience with the office staff, and with anyone else who had ears. He has no shame…..really.
As we left the dentist’s office, he gladly grabbed a cookie that was offered to him by the staff. And Tootsie Rolls that were in a bowl. Did he ever take Tootsie Rolls! I had no idea.
He ate one or two in the car on the way to Pizza Hut for lunch. The Pizza Hut buffet, heaven on earth for Aaron. All You Can Eat…..anything…..is heaven on earth to Aaron.
As we left Pizza Hut, paying for our All You Can Eat buffet……where Aaron really didn’t get to eat all he could eat because Mom stopped him way too soon……
Anyway, as we left and were paying at the register, Aaron pulled out yet another Tootsie Roll from his pocket. “Here,” he said to the smiling lady behind the counter. She was smiling because Aaron had tried to hide from me while I was in the bathroom. He was standing near the exit doors, peeking around the edge of the wall, grinning from ear to ear and then laughing loudly when I saw him. All of this in full sight of a banquet room full of people who were supposed to be listening to a speaker, but who were instead looking at Aaron and me with grins on their faces. Story of my life.
So Aaron pulled out the Tootsie Roll, handing it to the now laughing employee, and said, “Here. Because I liked the food today.”
When does he never like the food today?
But she was so happy to get his Tootsie Roll! She took it and thanked him, telling him that she loved Tootsie Rolls. Aaron was super pleased at her reaction.
“Look!!” he loudly said. “See how many I got at the dentist?!”

Oh dear. He pulled out a whole fist full of Tootsie Rolls. All I could think about was the fact that the ladies in the dentist’s office probably saw him take that stash while my back was turned to Aaron. When will I learn to never turn my back on Aaron when there are cookies or Tootsie Rolls involved?!
I gave him the “Don’t Be a Tootsie Roll Pig” lecture on our way to TJ Maxx, while he unwrapped Tootsie Rolls and enjoyed his free dessert. He offered me one and I accepted, feeling like a hypocrite. I stopped the lecture. Shouldn’t talk with my mouth full.
We walked into TJ Maxx, where I told him that I was looking for a gift for Nora. Nora is my little elderly friend that I take out once a week. She was our neighbor for 15 years before moving to assisted living. Aaron knows Nora. Sometimes he’s been not so nice to her, but other times he’s tolerable. Today he surprised me.
“Mom!! I want to get Nora a Christmas gift!” he exclaimed. “Here!! I want to get her……this!!” And he grabbed the first thing he spied, a Christmas candle holder that I knew Nora wouldn’t need or want.
Aaron’s desire to get Nora a gift just made me very happy, so I told him that we would look for something. We were browsing in the perfume section when I heard Aaron talking to someone.
“Here!” he was saying. I looked over to see him offering the employee manning the dressing room……you guessed it……a Tootsie Roll!!
This young lady looked a little uncomfortable as big Aaron held a Tootsie Roll out to her. At first she declined his offer, but then for some reason she said yes. She looked at me with a smile and at Aaron with a smile as she accepted the Tootsie Roll. And Aaron laughed with delight as he bent over and rubbed his hands together, oblivious to shoppers who were looking and this new friend whose mind was full of questions, I’m sure.
It was really very, very sweet. Sometimes in these moments it’s tempting for me to be too embarrassed to enjoy what just happened. Today, though, I really relished what Aaron was doing. I loved it!! I loved how happy it made him to share with strangers. And how happy these strangers were to have received such a spontaneous little gift from unusual Aaron.
Aaron had not forgotten that he wanted to buy a gift for Nora. We looked here and we looked there, and finally I saw a perfect box of chocolates.
“YES!!” Aaron said when I showed him the box. “Let’s get that!”
Later, at supper, Aaron had a thought.
“Mom? Can Nora eat that chocolate?”
I told him she could…..that she loves chocolates.
“But does she have fake teeth?!”
I told him she does not have fake teeth as I tried not to laugh.
“Good!” he answered. “I thought she might have fake teeth and couldn’t eat it.”
Aaron wants to give the gift of chocolates to Nora, in person. I am quite sure that he will ask her if she has fake teeth. She still hasn’t forgotten how he once said that she was old.
See what I mean? No filters…..no shame.
But Aaron has a big heart.
Here. Have another Tootsie Roll.
I need to give the dentist a bag of Tootsie Rolls at my next visit.
Dad’s Bible
Eight years ago today we got the news that my Dad had stepped into heaven. And for eight years before that, Dad had fought a hard fight against the cancer that eventually took his life. So many stories of that time in our family…..so many memories of the month I spent with him and Mom before he died. I’ve written much about it in the past.
This past Thanksgiving our family gathered in West Virginia, in our hometown. Some still live there in Princeton. Others had far to travel. It was an epic gathering, really, and the first time many of us had seen each other in years. Mom and Dad would have loved it, we all found ourselves saying over and over. Wouldn’t they have been so happy that we did this?!
And look how we have grown. This picture was taken in the mid-90’s.

The below picture was taken this Thanksgiving. Yes, we have multiplied! And we were missing a few who weren’t able to come!

We had a wonderful time, all too short, of hugs and laughter and lots of talking as we tried to catch up with each other. The day was over all too quickly. As nice as it was, though, I felt like something was missing. It just didn’t feel the same. I realized, as I thought about it, that the something missing was actually someone who was missing……Mom and Dad.
In the past they were the center of everything. Stories…..laughter……teasing……singing. So much of that revolved around them, and now for the first time this very important part of all our lives was gone. That was the huge difference that I felt. It just wasn’t the same, and I guess it just couldn’t be without Mom and Dad there as our focus.

I’ve been thinking today about Dad on this anniversary of his death. And remembering the very poignant part of our recent Thanksgiving meal when my brother, John, read to us out of Dad’s Bible. He told us this story before he read Psalm 145. In John’s own words:

Regarding Dad’s Bible, it started on Thanksgiving of ’15, when I reached up to a shelf at home to get a Bible to read Psa 145 for our family. I knew it was Dad’s Bible, but didn’t remember that he had carefully marked his daily readings with the dates on which he read each section (including the introductory notes and the 500 pages or so of study notes at the end). When I looked at Psa 145, I noticed he had read it on Nov 26, 2000, exactly 15 years to the day before I was set to read it to my family. There was something about that divine intervention that touched me very deeply. When I got ready to read the same chapter to our family this year, the thought hit me to check his detailed medical journals to see what he was experiencing at the same time he was reading those passages of praise in Psalms. He was right in the middle of his radiation treatments from his first bout with cancer. He had already had the surgery to remove two-thirds of his right lung, and had already finished the grueling chemo treatments. Now as he took radiation, he was circling verses like Psa 116:6, 116:15, 121:7, 126:3, 127:3-5, 131:2a. 138:8, and 139:16. What a window into his soul to see the verses that God was using to comfort him, giving him hope and trust in the greatest challenge of his life. And so characteristic of Dad, he was not talking with everyone about this. It was a very intimate journey with his Lord that bolstered his soul as his body suffered. I found myself thanking God for the man he was, and wishing I could talk with him about that journey. I probably missed him more then than at any time since he had died. What a treasure, though, to have that record of his triumphant faith in the midst of adversity.
Isn’t that amazing? I’m so glad John shared that with us. Dad’s “triumphant faith in the midst of adversity” never wavered as his body wavered and finally succumbed to this disease that we all hate. Dad remained true to the Lord, to Mom, and to his family.
And now today we five children carry with us his heritage of faith, as do many of our children and grandchildren. I’m so very thankful for that! Of all the many things to be thankful for this past Thanksgiving Day, that would be one of the biggest.
We miss you, Dad, but we know we’ll see you and Mom again. Thanks for showing us the importance of following Christ, and for living out your own faith so beautifully and consistently.

Glittery Moments
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This is The Day……
Two years ago….and I needed to read this again today. “This is the day the Lord has made!”
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You Want Me Gone?
The other night, Aaron kept coming in our bedroom after we had gone through his bedtime routine and said our goodnights. Gary was already trying to go to sleep, and I wanted to do the same. But Aaron kept opening our bedroom door and then softly knocking on our closed bathroom door……as softly as Aaron knocks, which is about as softly as he whispers……which is not much.
“AARON!!” I hissed. “Why are you in our room?”
“I just wondered if you’re gonna have the monitor on,” he said.
“I’ve already told you I’ll have the monitor on,” I replied. “Now go to bed!”
Not long after, it happened again. Just repeat the above scenario, but this time Aaron said, “I just wondered if it’s going to rain tonight.”
I told him it was not going to rain…..and to go to bed, as I escorted him to our door, which I soundly closed.
Take three.
Same thing, except now he stood in the bathroom with me saying, “I just thought I could talk to you while you get ready for bed.”
The Mom look I gave him was all he needed, but still he just had to ask one more question.
“Are you SURE you want me gone?”
I assured him that I was sure as I yet again walked him to the bedroom door, closed it with one last goodnight……and locked it!
It’s been a rough couple of weeks with Aaron. Both his seizures and his behaviors have escalated…..seizures at home, behaviors at his day group, Paradigm. Another bad report this past Monday just took all the wind out of me. Gary and I feel like nothing is working, but something has to make a difference. We saw his caregiver at the Epilepsy Center this week, had labs drawn, will see his autism doctor before long, talked to friends who travel this road, are researching some options……and praying. Praying a lot.
I was so thankful for the verse that God gave me this week. The portion that meant so much to me was this phrase:
“DO NOT HIDE YOUR EAR FROM MY PRAYER FOR RELIEF.” (Lamentations 3:56)
It’s like that old story of the guy up in the tree with a coon, telling his friend on the ground, “Just shoot up her amongst us! One of us gotta have some relief!!”
It’s funny to hear that story…..not so funny to live with Aaron when he has so many behavior struggles that are severely impacting his happiness. But all of us need some relief, Aaron included.
When he and I got home on Monday, after such a dismal report from his day group staff, Aaron went to his room. Soon he walked up to me and handed me one of his sticky notes. Here is what he had written:

Bless his heart. He really wants to do better, but finding that better is very difficult for him in certain circumstances. Really impossible at times, as his Epilepsy nurse and practitioner discussed with me on Wednesday.
That verse God gave me early in the week was perfect. We need relief, as many believers through the ages have expressed, and as many of my friends are experiencing now in their lives in very serious ways. The book of Lamentations is all about God’s faithfulness throughout the stresses and calamities of life on this earth. In fact, the following verse after the author begs God to not hide His ear, says, “You came near when I called on You; You said, Do not fear!”
Good advice…..great promises!!
The day after these verses spoke so much to me….the day after Aaron’s bad day at Paradigm…..this happened. I was out with my little elderly friend, Nora, when I got a text. This text was from my friend in Texas, Dona, whose husband had a terrible stroke 11 months ago. Dona and I rarely text, so I was surprised and a little alarmed to see her name appear. I instantly thought it might be about her husband, Steve.
But all Dona said was, “Are you doing OK?”
Wow!!
She had totally, absolutely no way of knowing what I was dealing with. We briefly texted, with her telling me that I had just been on her heart and mind. God at work, without a doubt.
I could hardly wait to get home and call her. We talked for quite awhile. She told me again that she kept thinking about me and so she prayed. I love it when God does these things! He shows His love and His care in these amazing, wonderful ways, blessing all of us in the process.
A day or two later, Aaron and I were in Dillon’s. We bought our few items, and then the cashier pointed to a large container of roses at the end of the conveyer belt.
“Would you like a free rose?” she asked.
And Aaron jumped on that like a flea on a dog!! He took a rose and then handed it to me, his face nothing but a huge grin.
“Here, MOM!” he boomed. “I want to give you a rose!! Because I love you!!”
And with that, he gave me the biggest hug! I thought my heart would explode!
The love note…..the rose……the hug.
Mixed this week with the behaviors…..some scary seizures…..doctor visits…..decisions looming.
It’s like Aaron bounding in our room at bedtime, just when we think that he’s settling in for the night. BAM!! There he is again, full of talk and excitement, no matter how tired we are.
“Are you sure you want me gone?” he asks. No, Aaron, not gone…..but resting. Go rest, and let us do the same.
His behaviors can be so very tiring. This past week has been emotionally exhausting for us, as well as physically. We could use some relief.
But we don’t want Aaron gone…..his personality and his take on life’s events to be gone. We just want him to be happy, and to know how to behave in a way that makes others happy, too. We have to keep working on that, and to keep trying to enable him to achieve that.
We’re praying for God to give us wisdom, and to not hide His ear from our cry for relief. I know He’s listening…..I know He cares……I know He’ll answer. He’s already impressed others to pray for us. That’s such an encouragement!
And when I look at my lone little rose in its vase, I’m reminded of Aaron’s love and of God’s love, entwined in many ways in my life. One so often shows me the other.
I just have to be making an effort to look sometimes.

My View
I was in TJ Maxx with my elderly friend, Nora, last Wednesday when I got a call from Paradigm, Aaron’s day group. I was tempted not to answer it, figuring it was Aaron just wanting to tell me about his day. That could wait. But I wasn’t sure, so I did answer and I immediately knew that the news was not good. Aaron was on the other end, his voice thick and choked with anger and tears. Here we go, yet again, I thought. How I wish that Aaron could stay happy!
I picked him up as soon as I got Nora settled back at her apartment. Aaron was asleep, so I had time to talk to the staff, all of us scratching our heads as to what caused his angry outburst that morning……and what the solution could be. I found out from Aaron later what happened. He tried to give his good friend two McDonald’s coupons and she didn’t want them. She wasn’t being mean to Aaron, just honest, but Aaron felt rejected and very hurt, so he just had a total meltdown.
Thursday was a better day for Aaron. Then came Friday…..
I told Aaron that we would go out to eat when I picked him up at the end of his day. His choice. So he chose Denny’s, of course. He does love Denny’s. On the way to Paradigm, I talked to him about being nice…..being kind with both his words and his hands. About talking to someone if he was angry or hurt. He agreed with everything I said……until he walked into Paradigm.
I was waiting in the van after I dropped him off, waiting for him to come and tell me if they were going to a movie. But instead, out the door came one of his staff. She told me that Aaron had become verbal instantly with another client when he walked in the door. Then out came Aaron, yelling at this staff as he stood on the sidewalk. He eventually got in the van and off we drove. My anger and disappointment and great frustration spilled out in harsh words as we drove toward home. I was so mad at Aaron and mad at myself for being mad, and it just all boiled over.
I pulled into Denny’s, deciding that it might do us both good to be in a neutral place. Aaron sat on the curb before going in, saying that maybe he just shouldn’t go in to eat. I told him to come on and he did, but for most of the meal I just sat silent. I was exhausted and defeated and still battling my anger. Aaron was scared……scared because of all the people from whom he fears rejection, he fears it the most from me. He kept telling me that he loved me……kept trying to share his salad with me…..his crackers, French fries, chicken strips……even reached over, took my hand, and kissed the back of my hand. Yes, he really did that. I wonder who saw it, and what they thought of my lack of emotion?
We ran into WalMart after our meal, where I picked up food for Thanksgiving bags for church, and Aaron tried to help. I still felt numb, tired. After I checked out, I looked toward the bench where Aaron was sitting, and this is what I saw.

Then my heart did stir with sorrow for Aaron as this picture of him was a picture of dejection, and his own tiredness. Oh Aaron, how I wish your life wasn’t so difficult and hard! And how I wish you could understand that you so often make it that way, and yet so often you can’t control the impulses you have that make you make it that way. It’s so complicated!
Aaron went right to bed when we got home. I went to the patio, baby monitor and my Bible in hand. I could listen for seizures while I spent some time unwinding and processing……reading my Bible and praying. I could hear Aaron’s steady breathing on the monitor as I breathed out my prayer to God, asking Him for wisdom to know how to deal with these constant ups and downs from Aaron.
I called my friend, Wendy, who walks this road that I walk. She understands and doesn’t judge. She offers counsel and advice, empathy and understanding. And I know that she prays for us, for Aaron……prays with love and care.
Aaron was awake then, coming outside to test the waters……to see if Mom was still distant and angry. He relaxed some when he could tell that I was better. He smiled when I said that we could take Jackson for a walk around the yard.

We walked down to the back of our yard, around the huge evergreens that hide the very back loop of our property. It’s an area that is hidden from view as you stand on our patio or look out our windows. You would never know it’s there until you walk behind the thick trees that keep it hidden.

I stood looking at the eerie sight. Branches of the old trees there hang low, gnarled together as they bend toward the ground. A finger of the neighborhood lake curls around under the limbs, still holding water since we’ve had such a wet summer. It’s a shadowy and dark place, a little creepy even. It’s interesting, but not warm and welcoming……not a place I want to linger for long.

As we stood there, Aaron talking and Jackson sniffing the bushes and tall grass, it hit me that this is so much like our life with Aaron. Anyone who lives with a person who has autism…..or multiple seizures…..and takes tons of meds to help them…..knows what I mean.
Aaron is funny and smart and often kind. But he is also prone to angry outbursts where he is hurtful and unreasonable. For days we may mostly see the pleasant side of Aaron, but we know that hidden inside him is still the anger and the frustration that he feels, and sometimes releases. It is not a fun place, and it is not a place where we desire to linger. Yet sometimes Aaron makes us linger there as his brain is going through whatever his brain goes through at those times.
I know that mentally and emotionally I must walk away from the shadows that threaten to engulf me when I am overwhelmed by Aaron’s behaviors. He needs me, for one thing. And I need to stay whole and strong, loving and forgiving. It’s not easy, but I must. Friends and family help. A good staff at Paradigm helps. Gary is my biggest help, taking over when I can’t. And definitely, crying out to God helps the most.
Aaron and I turned from that scene, finally, and went back out into the open yard…..to the sunshine and grass……to the full view of our welcoming house. Likewise, given a little time, he and I returned to our normal relationship. I love him dearly. I know he needs me. He needed me when he had three hard seizures during the night on Friday. But he also needed me even more when he was out of control emotionally that day. He needed me to believe in him…..to discipline him……to try to help him even when he pushes me away……to care for him and to love him.
Behaviors are perhaps the hardest part of Aaron’s disability. They are frustrating, embarrassing, and exhausting at times. Families who deal with this need extra love and prayer. Staff who deal with this need the same, as well as frequent thank-you’s for what they endure.
Aaron’s behaviors hold him back in many ways…..and could easily hold us hostage in many ways, as well. But Gary and I know that we can’t let the dark times be our focus. Like the staff at Paradigm says, today is a new day and we start all over.
We don’t always get to choose our view on any given day, but we don’t have to stay forever where the view is scary and dark.
“Today is the day that the Lord has made! Let us rejoice and be glad in it!” (Psalm 118:24)

Walking the Tightrope
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I’ll Go Happy
Last Monday, Aaron had a rough and grouchy day at his day group. Sometimes we can pinpoint the cause and other times we just can’t. I’m so thankful for the understanding staff at Paradigm. I don’t know how they do what they do on some days, but I do know that they don’t get paid enough for all they endure on those days. I love their philosophy: Tomorrow is a new day and we start all over.
As I said goodnight to Aaron at the end of his rough day and gave him a hug, Aaron said, “Mom, tomorrow I’ll go happy!”
So on the next day, the new day in which we were starting all over, Aaron was indeed happy. His attitude was entirely different than the no good very bad yesterday. And on this better day we also got some wonderful news from our daughter in Houston. She has a break between jobs and was coming home for a visit!!!! Not only Andrea was coming, but also her boyfriend Kyle!!!! Not only Andrea and Kyle were coming, but also Andrea’s two dogs and Kyle’s dog!!!!!

Can you tell I was excited? You bet! Aaron was excited, too. He loves and misses his sister. He’s getting to know Kyle and to realize that Kyle is a new part of our family. But oh, I know Aaron and I know that having a house full of people and pets can be challenging for him. We face this issue any time that we have extra people around…..extra noise……extra routine disruptions……extra attention grabbers away from our usual main attention grabber.
We work to prepare Aaron for those disruptions before they occur. I went over several things with him, like how he would use Gary’s and my bathroom while Andrea and Kyle were here. We talked about the dogs and how we need to act with having four dogs in the house. I tried to cover all the bases with Aaron, but Aaron brings out new bases quite often……based on what’s happening around him at the time…..things we just can’t predict.
I let Aaron stay home from Paradigm on the two Paradigm days that Andrea and Kyle were here. Aaron was SO happy with that idea!! He loved going with us to eat lunch at Freddy’s.


He loved going for a walk in Swanson Park.

He loved being here with us and the doggies.

He loved us watching Independence Day Resurgence with him while he ate snacks and snacks and snacks.
He loved trying to sneak snacks and snacks and snacks to the doggies.
He loved talking to all of us, especially to Andrea and Kyle, about all his favorite topics. And this is where we usually start seeing some issues with Aaron, because Aaron doesn’t know when to stop talking. Sharing the stage is hard for Aaron. He truly wants to be included in our conversations as we sit around the dinner table, for instance. We do listen to him and try to include him, but Aaron isn’t going to talk about the subjects that we talk about.
Here is a sample conversation: We may be talking about Andrea’s new job or talking about Kyle’s summer at sea. Then Aaron will loudly call one of our names.
“Andrea!!” he says. When she responds to him, we often hear this from Aaron: “Ummm. Ummm. Ummm.” We wait. “Ummm. Did you know what the Queen Alien on Independence Day Resurgence looks like?!”
“No, Aaron, I don’t know what she looks like,” Andrea answers.
“Well, she looks like a…..I don’t know. Mom, what do you think she looks like?” Aaron asks.
So I try to answer but I don’t really know how to describe the Alien Queen because it’s been awhile since I saw that movie….and I don’t really care what the Alien Queen looks like…..and in trying to muster some enthusiasm and interest in this question that I’ve heard a hundred times, Aaron can sense a shift in my emotions. As much as Aaron struggles with social norms, he is very adept at picking up the subtle cues that we are not as animated about Alien Queens as we are about Andrea’s job or Kyle’s schooling.
He views our world from afar, wanting so much to enter in, but never knowing how. But he does express his frustration by comments that we later hear.
“Mom, you didn’t want to talk to me. You just wanted to talk to Andrea or Kyle,” he will say.
I try to explain that we do want to talk to him but that we haven’t seen Andrea or Kyle in so long…..and we want to catch up with them on their lives…..but to Aaron that doesn’t make sense. Round and round we go, and where we land nobody knows. Or when we land.
Which happened on Friday during supper. Andrea’s friend, Sarah, had come over to see Andrea and Kyle. They sat in the family room visiting and talking and laughing. Aaron was up in his room, then down in the family room…..up in his room, down again. He wanted to be a part and he was in many ways. He just can’t be the whole part and so conversation would swirl around him. Kyle was talking and laughing at one point, and Aaron whacked Kyle’s leg with a book. I heard it but didn’t see it. It was a sign of things to come. Aaron was frustrated now, truly frustrated, and when that happens he picks a target. Lucky Kyle.
I don’t remember all the details of what happened at supper. I was up from the table getting slices of cheesecake ready to serve. Aaron was at a boiling point and we didn’t realize it. His system was on overload…..his pressure gauge was maxed out…..and he erupted. He leaned forward and yelled at Kyle.
Aaron left the table. We apologized to Kyle. He was understanding and patient. Aaron came down later and apologized. We watched the movie later and Aaron was very happy, as if nothing ever happened.
Why do I tell you this story, one you’ve heard before if you’ve read this blog for very long? Because this scenario is just a very real picture of how Aaron processes…..or doesn’t exactly process…..the world around him. Our world is ticking along like normal, but Aaron’s isn’t. He is so impacted by nuances that we don’t even notice. Sounds…..loud laughter that he doesn’t understand…..hilarity……silliness…..his routine changing…. All these things greatly affect him, more than we can begin to know.
So he reacts, usually loudly and hurtfully. Then he’s sorry. It takes great understanding, as I’ve said, to deal with this about Aaron. He doesn’t think like we do or process as we do or react over time as we do.
But he truly wants to.
Andrea and Kyle left to go back to Houston the next day. Aaron was with us in the driveway, entering into things, when Andrea asked for a hug. Aaron ducked his head and walked away, through the garage and into the house as he muttered to himself. A hug in front of everyone? Are you kidding me?! We know this about Aaron and it makes us smile. He can yell, but spontaneous hugs are very, very difficult.
One of the first things I did after they left was to get Aaron’s things put back in his bathroom. “Us kid’s bathroom,” he calls it. We got his cup with his toothbrush and toothpaste put back on the counter. We got his body wash and wash cloth back in the shower. We hung his towel on the towel rack.
Aaron then noticed that his razor attachments were not in the correct place. He rearranged them the way he wanted them. He stood back and observed the counter for a few seconds.

Then he said, “OK. It’s looking good.”
That night at supper, Aaron asked the blessing. He nearly always says two things when he prays. He doesn’t say the same thing with each prayer, but he says two things. On that night he said, “Lord, thank you for the food. And thank you that Kyle and Andrea got to come.”

Yes, it was looking good now for Aaron. He was happy that Andrea and Kyle were here, along with Darcy and Oakley and Aries and our own Jackson. He will be very happy when everyone comes for Christmas.
Aaron will have every intention of saying, “I’ll go happy!”
He’ll go happy into our family time, but it will be a time of upheaval for him and of struggle as well. It’s up to us to understand that and to allow that for Aaron, all the while trying to help him know how to take time to decompress and not to blow up.
Only when things are back to normal…..Aaron’s normal…..will he be able to step back and say, “OK. It’s looking good.”
And it’s very important for us to be able to look at Aaron’s world through Aaron’s eyes, and still be able to say, “OK, Aaron. It’s looking good.”
Let’s go happy! It’s sometimes the hard choice, but always the best choice.
