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Category Archives: Transition issues

What would they do with my stuff?

14 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by Ann Kilter in Asperger's syndrome, Autism, Transition issues

≈ 19 Comments

Tags

asperger's, autism, disability, downsize, downsizing, minimalist

Downsizing in the next few years is a precious gift Ralph and I can give to our children.

Our house is 1600 square feet, 2400 square feet if we count the mostly unfinished basement. We are not hoarders, but we have accumulated a lot of stuff over the last 19 years in this house, 28 years as a married couple.

My parents are in the process of moving back to our state from Florida to live with my brother. A trailer of their possessions came up north with my mother in November. My siblings flew down to Florida today to help my father pack their remaining stuff into a moving truck, and drive back here with him. My parents already had three yard sales to reduce moving expenses.

We have spent so much effort thinking about our children’s future that we have forgotten to plan for our future as our lives wind down. The thought of Mary, Will, and Patty being faced with what to do with our earthly possessions is deeply disturbing. I imagine them bewildered. The fact that Mary and Will are on the autistic spectrum complicates the situation. Better to give it away before then, while we still have the strength and will.

Now is the time to get rid of craft items I haven’t even looked at in five years. Now is the time to shred documents we no longer need. Now is the time to go through the drawers and our many built-in cupboards. This summer we plan to sell our pop-up camper, which hasn’t been out of the garage in ten years.

I’ve already taken two trunk loads of stuff to Goodwill. Thanks to Facebook, I found “Becoming Minimalist” a blog by Joshua Becker about living with fewer possessions, and finding more time and money to develop friendships, travel, be with family. Mr. Becker is not writing about becoming a tightwad, but about setting priorities in life. I am following his Facebook page so that I am reminded on a regular basis to keep going. http://www.becomingminimalist.com/15-reasons-i-think-you-should-blog/

We could comfortably live in 800 square feet – a two bedroom house, condo, or apartment. A two bedroom space would have a place for Mary if she continues to live with us. Starting the process now, while we are still healthy, will prepare us for downsizing. If we wait, getting rid of the jetsam and flotsam of our lives will be overwhelming.

yard sale

Think about it.

Battling Isolation

05 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by Ann Kilter in Asperger's syndrome, Autism, diagnosis, Disability, high functioning autism, Independence, Transition issues

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

autism, disability, finding work, friendship, growing up, isolation, Loneliness, making friends

I haven’t been writing as much lately or going to meetings. It’s hard to find the time when somebody needs you.

Last month, Mary, my 27-year-old daughter with autism, mentioned she was feeling lonely, bored, and discouraged about her job prospects (It has been 3 years since graduation without landing a full time or half time job in her field). My mother instinct revved up and I sprung into action or inaction, that is. So I have dropped some of my writing, quilting, and scrapbooking nights in order to spend some time with her after work watching The Voice, and American Idol. We’ve gone out from breakfast on some Saturdays.

When my children were young, before we knew about the diagnosis of autism, I thought by this time in my life, my children would be out on their own. Not that they wouldn’t need me anymore, just that their need for my help would diminish and our relationship would change. After the diagnosis, I realized that my plans for my retirement would need some adjustment. I might be caring for one or more of my children for the rest of my life.

We began a life filled with therapy, IEP meetings, medication decisions, searching for answers, repeating the same instructions and promptings to our children, going to conferences, etc. As those of you who have read this blog for any length of time know, our children have made remarkable progress.

Then, when Mary, our most impaired child, graduated from college, I thought I might have some time after all, to pursue my own hobbies and develop more friendships with other adults my age. When my siblings and I left home, my parents enjoyed spending more time with people their own age, playing cards, going out to eat, taking long trips and vacations.

Despite his diagnosis with autism, Will has now lived in his own apartment for almost two years. He has a good job with a large corporation. Patty, Mary’s younger sister, is about to graduate from college, and in a year or two expects to move away and attend graduate school. Her mentoring professor has called her one of his most brilliant students, which embarrasses Patty.

But Mary works one day a week at the homeless shelter, for which I am grateful. Other than that, she is home with the dog, five cats and her computer. Her sister attends school five days a week. Her father and I work full time.

I am struggling with my own reaction to this turn of events, wondering why I feel so selfish and trapped.  When I think about going on a long vacation to Washington DC or Mt. Rushmore, I think about getting Mary a ticket so she can come with us. She would be interested in a trip to those locations. I would like to go to a week-long writers conference in another city. I think my husband would enjoy going with me. But Mary is not interested in writing. Therefore, my angst.

Then I read this wonderful blog post from a young mother of three young children, struggling with her desire to write and her responsibility to her children.

http://yourbestnestindy.com/2014/02/27/mommy-somebody-needs-you/

And my struggle came into focus. I am not free to do what I want. When I had young children, I had these same thoughts. However, like many parents of adult children with disabilities, the future is here and the plan to resume my young dream of writing the great American novel is still on hold.

When our kids were young, we struggled with isolation. We weren’t doing the same activities with our kids that other parents were doing. Instead of little league and girl scouts, we took our kids to therapy. Senior class trips were not an option for our kids because they would have needed their own chaperone, and the spots were limited to other sponsors because our kids would have needed more attention, more watching. It wasn’t worth the fight. The road less traveled meant isolation by default.

Wondering what to do about this has been waking me up at night. As older adults, we are battling  isolation both for ourselves and for our Mary. One of my reasons for encouraging Mary to attend college was that “at least she would have something to do.”  Then college ended.

The search for work has been ongoing. Mary is hindered by her inability to drive and her autism. Even though she dresses well and has a good resume, she can’t find competitive employment. I suspect it is her autism showing. If she says up front that she has autism, interviewers will politely dismiss her as soon as possible. If she stays quiet regarding her disability, interviewers still know something is not quite right, though they might suspect mild cerebral palsy. Either way, there has been no job. She is beginning to be willing to do anything (but not able due to her physical disability).

Mary will be 28 this summer. I think about her at 30, 40, 50…. I just turned 55 and Ralph is 62. We take her to church with us where she has a very good Sunday School class with people her own age. Someday we won’t be able to take her. Church is seven miles away and there is no bus to church. We won’t always be around to take her to church, plays, concerts, and vacations. She will have to find her own way.

My idea of a successful launch for her is to earn her own living, have an apartment, along with social activities, and her own church. I don’t know if this will be possible for her. If she always lives with someone in the family, maybe that is best. It is a hedge against complete isolation. Not what she wants, but maybe she can find contentment. Maybe I can find contentment. I want to make sure she is taken care of, at the least.

The apostle Paul wrote to Timothy in the first century, “but godliness with contentment is great gain.” (I Timothy 6:6).

And I turn to God for wisdom. The apostle James wrote, “5 If any of you lacks wisdom, you should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to you.” (James 1:5). I have come to God many times asking for wisdom regarding my children…and He has met my needs many times.

images

***********

This is a heavy topic,  but isolation is a common problem for individuals with disabilities and those who care for them. I am praying that Mary will come up with some of her own ideas.

Transition Update

16 Monday Dec 2013

Posted by Ann Kilter in Asperger's syndrome, Autism, Disability, faith, high functioning autism, Independence, Thankful, Transition issues

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

asperger, autism, independence, transition

“A ship is safest in the harbor, but that is not what ships are built for.” John Shedd. This was my the quote my friend Sharon had under her senior photo in our high school year book. As my children’s IEPs began to reference transition in their later years of high school, I remembered it and it became my motto. At the time, I put this quotation in my email signature lines both at home and at work to remind myself on a daily basis that my kids could not stay in the harbor. It was not healthy for them or for Ralph and me.

As a result, I began taking concrete steps to move our whole family toward transition. When my youngest daughter, Patty, was 12 years old, I went back to school to become a legal secretary. When she was 14, I graduated and started working. I told my kids, “I need to have something to do when you don’t need me anymore.” This type of language combined with concrete action (going back to school), helped all of us to move toward transitioning to independence.

Transition is the theme of this blog, so I thought I would update you on how transition is working out in our household.

Mary is living at home. She is working at a homeless shelter as a part-time accounting assistant in the accounting department. This fall, she also worked part-time at Habitat for Humanity for three months, but due to personnel changes, her position was eliminated. She is actively looking for full-time work. She says that when she finds a permanent position, and she has saved enough money, she will find her own place. Her brother’s transition to independent living has spurred her on. I have some reservations regarding how this will happen; however, at some point, she must live on her own separate from us. She has amazed us before; she will again.

Will has been living in his own apartment in another city for a year and a half now. He became a regular employee (rather than a long-term supplemental employee) in October. Now he has vacation time, a 401(k), and salary. He drives his beat up old car around his community. This Sunday, he will be singing in a cantata at his church. We are looking forward to seeing him at Christmas. My husband talks to him a little bit every weekday morning on the phone. I talk to him a couple times a week. He would like to meet a girl and get married. It could happen.

Patty is finishing up her senior year in college. We are pushing her to learn how to drive. Like many millennials, she is afraid of driving, but in order for her to transition to studying for her Masters/PhD, she must learn to drive. One more semester, and the Kilter College Taxi Service will cease to operate.

As for Ralph and me, we are beginning the process of transitioning to retirement. Ralph is by some miracle and perseverance and prayer, still working. (He has gone through six months of harassment at work – his employer would like him to quit). He is 62 and would like to work until 65, or at least get close. I am 54 and hope to work until I am 65. But the process of thinking about living with far less income has us thinking seriously about downsizing. Maybe we’ll have more time for volunteering. Have more time for fun activities.

cropped-1045165_10151767932451387_598288208_n1.jpg

A Place of Refuge

26 Saturday Oct 2013

Posted by Ann Kilter in Asperger's syndrome, Autism, Disability, high functioning autism, Independence, Transition issues

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

asperger, autism, coping, meltdown, parenting, Refuge

When we had the big meeting with all of Will’s teachers, therapists, and administrators before he entered the sixth grade (middle school in our district), his social worker suggested that Will should have a place of refuge at the middle school. This was his place where he could escape in order to calm himself down. In his case, we designated the Title One Room. He was allowed go in there and talk to the aide, read a book, work on his homework. Just repair himself. All of his teachers were in agreement, and it was written into his IEP.

What a good idea, I thought at the time. So at home, we designated a place of refuge for him. In our case, it was his room. We said, “You need to take refuge in your room to calm yourself down. Read a book. Look out the window. Would you like a snack to take with you? Listen to some music. When you are calmer, you can come out.” Sometimes after a little bit, Ralph or I would go to his room and talk with him. Other times, he would come back out on his own.

This was helpful for our family.

I think it mattered what we named it, too. Both to us and to Will. By calling it his place of refuge, it was communication to him that he was able to calm himself down, and we needed to calm ourselves down as well.

This was just one strategy for helping Will cope with his emotions. Later on, he didn’t need it as much and we developed additional strategies for coping.

calm

The Checklists

12 Saturday Oct 2013

Posted by Ann Kilter in Achievement, Asperger's syndrome, Autism, diagnosis, Disability, faith, high functioning autism, Independence, Miracles, Tests, Transition issues

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

acronyms, autism, Betrayal, checklist, high functioning autism, truth telling

When Will was four, an alphabet soup of diagnoses followed his name: SLI (speech and language impaired), SID (sensory integration disorder), FMI & GMI (fine and gross motor impairment), BI (behaviorally impaired), MI (mentally impaired), etc. Amazingly, he did not fit the profile for ADD or ADHD. Acronyms had to be used in part because there was not enough room to type his diagnoses on the Individual Education Plan Forms.

At seven, AI (Autistic Impaired) was added by Dr. Smith, a child psychiatrist specializing in developmental disorders.

Eight weeks before our visit with Dr. Smith, a thick packet of paper arrived in the mail.

Half of the papers were Authorization for Release of Information forms. I was instructed to sign and date the forms and return them, along with a list of all the doctors, therapists, and schools involved with Will’s care.

The other half was a Parent Reporting Form. The first page consisted of demographic questions (Name, date of birth, address, parents’ name, etc.).

The second part of the form was a long list, with instructions to check off the items that pertained to Will. The items on the list varied from the mundane (preterm birth, full term birth, weight at birth, ethnic background, 1st language, etc.) to those which identified characteristics due to developmental differences.

Some of the significant items for Will, along with my comments:

Unusual fixation or fascination with objects – Will was utterly fascinated from a very early age with lights. When he was a baby, he would twist himself around in his high chair to to view the lights through his half-shut eyes, looking through his eyelashes. I worried at the time that he might do psychedelic drugs when he was older.   Later, when he could actually reach light switches, he turned them on and off constantly. It was like a disco at our house. We moved the furniture away from light switches. That helped until he was tall enough to reach the light switches. He made it his business to find out where the light switches were in every building he entered. When he was three years old, he escaped from the nursery at church and found the light switches to the sanctuary. The lights flashed on and off during the Sunday School class.  A deacon came out to discover a giggling three year old playing with the light switches. After that, they made sure the doors to that bank of switches was always closed.
Lack of eye contact or qualitative difference in eye contact. Will not only had very fleeting, if any, eye contact; he actively resisted efforts to encourage or force eye contact. My mother would hold his face in an effort to get him to look at her when he was naughty. It was futile. Once, when we were talking to his preschool teacher when he was eight years old, he twisted his body in all different directions to avoid making eye contact. We instructed him in eye contact and practiced it. He eventually made eye contact with his father and me, but nobody else. He could read our faces, but he had extreme difficulty reading the faces of strangers. We found that forcing eye contact completely obliterated his ability to listen, so when we needed to emphasize behavior changes, such as not running across the street, we sat next to him and talked to him.

Sensory differences. Did I say lights? Also, he was highly sensitive to touch. He was extremely ticklish. He couldn’t stand any tags in his clothing, and he did not want to wear knit clothing. One of his therapies was brushing him down with a soft brush to improve his tolerance to touch.

Impaired social interaction. He could not initiate and/or maintain interaction with children his own age. He had extreme difficulty making friends. He screamed if any of them came near him. As a result, he was very isolated.

Constant talking. He could talk all day about Power Rangers long, long after I had lost interest in the subject. Later it was video games. And still later, it was computers.

Insistence on sameness. He always had to have the green plate, the green glass, the green toys. He would wear green clothing if he had the choice. We often gave him the choice because we had other battles to fight. He became upset if we took a different route to church or the store.

Difficulty transitioning from one activity to the next. Will would scream if it was time to change activities before he was ready. Changing from story time to outside recess was especially problematic.

Perseverative behavior. Will would open and shut doors over and over again. We had to put spring loaded latches on all the doors in the house because we were afraid that Will would shut his sisters’ fingers in the door.

Articulation difficulty. Will was difficult to understand.

High pitched  and sing-song voice. Will’s voice was very high pitched. He also talked in a sing-song tone of voice. His inflection was off. In American English, the pitch of the voice typically rises at the end of a question and goes down at the end of a statement. Will’s sing-song inflection affected his intelligibility.

Gross motor delays and hand eye coordination. Will couldn’t bounce a basketball. He never learned to ride a bike.

Fine motor delays. As a result of his fine motor delays, Will took much longer to learn to tie his shoes and cut his own food. His writing was labored, slow, and very difficult to read.

Etc., etc.

The last part of the Parent Reporting Form consisted of several essay questions. Do any other members of Will’s family have developmental issues? Describe a typical day in the life of your child. Do you have any other concerns about your child?

I spent three hours checking items on the list, and writing out the answers to the essay questions. Toward the end, tears rolled down my cheeks. On one hand, it had taken three years to get approval from our insurance company to have Will evaluated by Dr. Smith. On the other hand, I felt that I was betraying my son by telling the truth about him. Because I loved him with all my heart, I wrote the truth, unadorned. Then I sent the whole packet back to the doctor.

Within 20 minutes, Dr. Smith diagnosed Will with extremely high functioning autism (HFA).

Every year I had to check off a list of characteristics and write answers to essay questions to prove that he still qualified for autistic impaired services. Every three years, I had to fill out a more extensive list. I filled out lists like this for his sister as well. Sometimes I felt very discouraged.

Will is an adult now. He still has autism, but I no longer fill out any lists or write short essays.  I have always believed God has a plan for him – that is our encouragement to him and to ourselves. He has a very good job as a web design consultant for a large corporation. He cooks, drives, and keeps his apartment reasonably clean.

All the checklists and essay questions were worthwhile. Truth telling, unadorned, turned out to be for the best.

Will at 4

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