People like to use that analogy that hard times can't last forever
like a storm that eventually ends. But, I swear to you after you join
the special needs parenting club life becomes the never ending storm.
Think of it much like Catatumbo lightning storms in Venezuela, a continuous
thunderstorm that has unfolded at the exact same location for 500
years, with your child being the only source of sunshine and beautiful luminous rays that peak out from the always present ominous dark clouds.
Noah is on day ten of
problematic sleeping. And by problematic I mean beyond what is not
normal for him, far beyond what will always be not normal for most
typical children. When anything is remotely a little off with Noah it
puts me in a place of such watch guard. I remain haunted by words and
predictions regarding his life expectancy. The what if's have a
tendency of eating away at me at three a.m. in the morning. What if I
don't hear him and he is struggling? What if I miss that his breathing
is different? What if I miss something. What if...
The rest of the household seems
oblivious to the nighttime stresses that Noah and I share. The dogs
sleep curled up peacefully, Luke remains nestled against his favorite
stuffed orca whale and clings to his owl night light, Chris snoring off
and on again but never once stirring when I get up multiple times to
re-position Noah or to hold him to make sure he's still responsive all
while trying to diagnose a problem or problems I cannot see or touch or
understand but that I feel are there. Part of me festers a touch of
resentment because only Noah and I share these complications together. By
the time Noah and I are both so collectively exhausted we're into the
early morning hours and while Noah can continue to sleep a few hours
longer, my day starts with his little brother who is eagerly awaiting
the days activities just as soon as the sun comes out. I'm not
sure they make a concealer that can honestly come close to touching
camouflaging sleep deprivation and the worry from my face. Yet, I have
faith that cosmetics can disguise the very real struggle written all
over my face and continue to make myself presentable to the world.
In the midst of my evening
worry I still have to contend with all of the problems of the day;
Noah's nutritional supplier refuses to carry a doctor prescribed drink,
and apparently no other companies will supply it either due to Medicaid
funding and codes. Leaving me having to research an alternative for him
to approach his physician with as a plan B. And Plan B cannot be that I
pay for it out of pocket. A custom seating ASO appointment for Noah
that is an hour drive each way, coordinating the transport of a power
wheelchair he can't even use because the seating system is so small that
he no longer fits into it. Doing an evaluation with a room full of
people who are completely unfamiliar to Noah who want to touch his
spine, his hips, see how he moves while causing him to gag and vomit on
sensory overload. All for a determination that was visually obvious
just by looking at him without the need to touch: Noah needs a new
molded ASO, and something that has to be re-requested through Medicaid.
Something that will take up to 12 weeks for a decision and that could
come back as a denial like everything else does rendering his power
wheelchair permanently useless. A new Asssitive Technology Professional
or ATP as we refer to them as with Noah's DME (Durable Medical
Equipment Provider) NuMotion, suggesting to me that I simply
troubleshoot Noah's high tone by using folded up towels to prevent him
from crossing his legs and to counter his sensory issues by laying soft
fabric over an aggressively hard seat in his wheelchair system as he
knows that Medicaid will not approve a pummel or a new softer seat for
Noah. The suggestion feels like he's rubbing the worst kind of salt
into already raw wounds. No matter how hard I try or look or wish or
pray for this magical team of warriors to stand by my side and help me -
it just never happens. No one cares, no one bats an eye at Noah's
pressure sores caused by bad wheelchair seating, no one seems bothered
that he's doing without because of Medicaid denials, no one is ever in
my corner. I have no cheerleaders, no friends, no family (with the
exception of my mother who certainly does her best to be there in any way
that she can be), it's lonely and tiring and gives you the perpetual
feeling of defeat, isolated and continually unaided. And there are
days when you realize just how much you lost in this world the moment
you became a special needs parent.
I come home to address emails
waiting - all lined up having to deal with Noah. I write his ATP and
include pictures of items that need to be replaced on Noah's adaptive
equipment. Noah's feeder chair split the fabric at the seams which has
exposed the plastic abductor between his legs that are now rubbing him
raw. The response is perhaps we need to come out to schedule a time to
look at it rather than taking my word and pictures seriously. I'm good
at knowing what I can sew and fix and what I can't. I have to be
pushier and more aggressive than I like to be in my response to provoke
action on the parts of others to take mercy upon me and help my child.
How I feel like my dream of having someone - anyone help me in the ways I
need help is dying a slow and painful death.
Then in the middle of me doing a
remote call with Noah's speech device technicians to troubleshoot
multiple problems with his device, a light bulb goes off as to what
might be contributing to Noah's increased nightly disturbances and I
remember that he experienced an event that could have caused water in
his ears and perhaps an ear infection might be a potential factor
(although likely not the only factor). I attempt to schedule an
appointment only to be put off for two days due to lack of physician
availability by the new call center that continues to be a thorn in my
side. A mother that never takes no for an answer again must become less
than friendly on the phone, aggressive, pushy, and borderline obnoxious
to get someone to help me with a sooner appointment - something I know
is available but lacking due to the right hand not working well with the
left hand.
I consent to any doctor that is
available which happens to be one Noah has never seen before. I arrive
to deal with a new nurse who knows nothing about Noah's severe sensory
processing disorder and despite me warning her that attempting to take
his pulse ox and scan touch his forehead for a temperature will cause
him to gag and throw up, she does it anyway even when I tell her to back
off and give him some space so the gag doesn't turn into a vomit. She
ignores my warning and parental demand and Noah proceeds to throw up his
blended pureed Panera lunch that his grandmother purchased for him. We
wait longer than expected for our appointment, and when the doctor
comes in she insists that the pulse ox be taken even though I warn her
that Noah will throw up. Noah offers her a classic gag warning multiple
times. The doctor says she is not afraid of a little vomit. When Noah
throws up it's not so little, and everyone should be afraid even her
because Noah is an aspiration risk every time he does vomit like this.
Yet she doesn't back away, offers me a chux instead and Noah proceeds
to vomit again because he's on sensory overload and no one will give him
a chance to calm down and relax and get to know people who are
strangers to him that he's never seen before. Given a little time and
space both of those vomit episodes could have been avoided. But no one
listens to the mom that knows her child like the back of her hand. My
expertise in my child goes without validation or recognition.
Noah's diagnosis: bacterial ear
infection or (swimmer's ear) in his left ear. Perhaps a partial answer
to Noah's increased night time difficulties. Ear drops are
prescribed. Something Noah has never had before and I'm dreading the
anticipated sensory feedback this medication will bring him. I drive
home wishing I could curl up in a little ball somewhere where no one
could find me until I could find a way to keep breathing. I choke back
the tears that want to come like an endless waterfall, only to realize
my husband is calling me to tell me we owe hundreds of dollars in our
cash reserve line of credit and that we have to find a way to pay for
$433 of car repair for a broken sway bar on his vehicle. Instantly my
mind races towards the email in my inbox luring me to buy a stripped
down floor model wheelchair that has zero accessories that Noah would
need and knowing that it's so far fetched that I have any purchasing
power whatsoever to help Noah in any capacity beyond Medicaid. I feel
bound and tied by both my hands and feet. Overwhelming feelings if I
can't even help my own son, what good am I to other parents and families
that I try to assist. And while I have all this overflowing knowledge,
skill and talent I still feel so incredibly helpless. My first
instinct is to withdraw from the world which feels like it's perpetually
working against me.
I get to the pharmacy drive
thru only for them to tell me they need an hour to prepare ear drops for
pick-up. So I drive Noah home and then back again to the pharmacy.
The attendant says there is a note in the system saying I need
consultation with the head pharmacist. She comes to the window to ask
me what my questions might be, I re-iterate I don't have any but that
their computer system seems to insist that I do when I don't. She nods
and shakes her head simultaneously to reflect that she doesn't believe
my explanation and looks at me like somehow I must have changed my mind
about having questions.
Without my mother's assistance
both pealing potatoes and watching Luke so I could tend to Noah at the
doctor's today, we would have gone without dinner being made. Somehow
my supermom skills are sliding and accomplishing everything seems to be
growing harder. All the while I secretly ache for someone - anyone to
give me permission to fall apart at the seams and tell me I can sew
myself up tomorrow in order to keep going, no one does.
And tomorrow I start the entire
process over, perhaps with different appointments, different emails,
and calls to return. But much the same hurdles as the day before. "I
am made up of two worlds; one in which I exist to hold everyone
together, and the other where I watch myself constantly fall apart."
K-Piper
Love,
Noah's Miracle by Stacy Warden is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.