Today marks the beginning of a new school year. This school year is the first time both boys start on the same day. Preschoolers and kindergarteners start after the rest of the kids go back. This last week has been full of a multitude of tasks to hopefully make the transition and the school year go smoother. The usual school supplies. New glasses for both boys (Pyrope is forever misplacing his and Obsidian's were always sliding down his nose). Emails to their teachers regarding various points of their IEPs. A meeting with 2 of Pyrope's teachers. Various tasks for the PTA to get the year going.
As I was at the school for Pyrope's meeting, I stopped and talked with two of Obsidian's teachers. They thanked me for the email I sent, as they did not receive a copy of his IEP until this morning. I walked away very disturbed by this fact. Obsidian has educational challenges, however what I was disturb with was my email was only in regard to the medical aspects of his IEP. To have his teachers not know about his medical needs up until the day before they are in charge of his well being for 7.5 hours a day, is worrisome. Very worrisome. I'm aware that there has not been any 'issues' with Obsidian at school. Although many (including school district staff) attribute that to being proactive and not letting things get to that point. Obsidian has heat intolerance, it is very hot right now. Obsidian has fasting intolerance and can not participate in very active play unless he has had a snack (and recess is before lunch), nor can he go more than 3 hours without eating (lunch is over by 12:30, school doesn't let out until 3:55). He has occasional episodes of hypoglycemia. All very important 'details' to know about a kid in your care. To not have your employer tell you about this until less than a day before... when I'm sure they have other things on their 'must do' list?
This is why I'm always so involved. Involved in ways that my boys don't necessarily see. Just trying to set the stage so they can be healthy and live up to their potential....
Thursday, August 21, 2014
Thursday, April 17, 2014
Passing
Early in US history, there was a phenomena known as 'passing'. This was when an African American presented themselves as a white person to be allowed to have the rights of a white person.
Currently, 'passing' is becoming an used phrase again. But for an entirely different group of people, people with disabilities. Mainly people with autism, but all sort of people particularly with neurological disabilities are involved with this new, very-different-but-not round of 'passing'.
Neither Pyrope or Obsidian are considered neuro-typicals. Pyrope carries the autism diagnosis. Obsidian does not have an 'official' diagnosis, yet, but it is agreed it has neurological effects. I have never allowed their challenges or differences be an excuse. Partly as an extension of this, they want and try to be like their neuro-typical peers. They try to 'pass' as 'normal'. Yet, they aren't. And sometimes, they just can't. Then I'm stuck watching them fail and get in trouble over something they simply can not do that their peers can. I'm okay (not happy, but okay and for the most part accepting) with watching them fail. It is life. But watching them get yelled at and in trouble for something their bodies or minds simply can not do, drives me crazy. When do I interfere? When do I simply watch and offer comfort and advice? When do I explain while for a large part of the time they can 'pass' but sometimes they can't. And they need help. How do you teach a child, or anyone, when to try to come up with ways to compensate for your challenges, and when to offer a simple "I'm not able." because you aren't?
Currently, 'passing' is becoming an used phrase again. But for an entirely different group of people, people with disabilities. Mainly people with autism, but all sort of people particularly with neurological disabilities are involved with this new, very-different-but-not round of 'passing'.
Neither Pyrope or Obsidian are considered neuro-typicals. Pyrope carries the autism diagnosis. Obsidian does not have an 'official' diagnosis, yet, but it is agreed it has neurological effects. I have never allowed their challenges or differences be an excuse. Partly as an extension of this, they want and try to be like their neuro-typical peers. They try to 'pass' as 'normal'. Yet, they aren't. And sometimes, they just can't. Then I'm stuck watching them fail and get in trouble over something they simply can not do that their peers can. I'm okay (not happy, but okay and for the most part accepting) with watching them fail. It is life. But watching them get yelled at and in trouble for something their bodies or minds simply can not do, drives me crazy. When do I interfere? When do I simply watch and offer comfort and advice? When do I explain while for a large part of the time they can 'pass' but sometimes they can't. And they need help. How do you teach a child, or anyone, when to try to come up with ways to compensate for your challenges, and when to offer a simple "I'm not able." because you aren't?
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Straws
Recently, I've had a string of problems. Serious problems. There have been several points that I've felt that 'the straw that broke the camal's back' has landed on me. Although some of those straws were more like logs, or at least sticks.
Today I had "Thanksgiving" at my house for my family. Now it wasn't on "Thanksgiving" (as that will be in 4 days on Thursday), nor did we have any of the traditional "Thanksgiving" foods, as we will be having all of them in 4 days. My mom and my 3 youngest siblings will go and be with her family (in a group that rivals my immediate family), my brother who is closest in age and I will be going to be with our respective spouse's families.
I understand we a bit of a loud crowd. There are 4 boys essentially between the ages of 4-7 (yes, 4, 5, 6, and 7 year old). There are my 3 brothers (2 of which are 21 and 23 and play with the younger group of boys and can really add to the boisterousness of the play). There is me and my sister. Don't forget Mom. Or the 4 significant others of the siblings. My house is not tiny, but nor is it large. We are family, and talk, and tease, and play. When multiplied by our numbers (and ages, a 4 year old boy for example creates a significant larger amount of activity and noise than say a 70 year old woman, and then when you multiple it by essentially 6 boys horsing around). I had rubber bands shot all over my house. Matchbox cars launched down my stairs. Various kids and adults dressed up as minions. Rousing games of hide and seek. Spirited discussions of what is going well and not so well in everyone's lives. Two 1/2 lb Reece's Cups spit between the 4 little boys (giver of Reece's cups did not ask parents prior to giving... and after a little boy has received a Reece cup, there is no taking it away). Temporary tattoos applied. Pants getting wet by unknown means (pee? juice? water from the sink?). A random missing sock (foot still in shoe). Adults 'improving' children's toys. A child hair dresser cutting another child's hair (you would think with that many adults that it couldn't happen, but you would be wrong). I enjoyed it. My boys enjoyed it.
For Thanksgiving itself, I will be hosting Jett's family, 240 miles from here, in a hotel room, well hotel suite (it has a living room/eat-in kitchen and then a separate bedroom). It will be Jett, the boys, myself, my mother-in-law, my sister-in-law, and her younger daughter (age 13). Her older daughter (age 18) will be with her boyfriend and his family. I will do the majority of the cooking, I will be doing the 'hosting' duties. I will pack up what I need from my house, and transport it there. My mother-in-law is not in the best of health. And she has never really liked to travel. My sister-in-law 'doesn't have the time' to make a big meal. She doesn't have a table to have a meal at in her house (Literally, there is no kitchen table or dining room table in the house, they just eat on plates sitting on the couch, in front of the TV... typically not together). I won't do Thanksgiving dinner in a restaurant or sitting in front of a TV on a couch (well, couch is not big enough, so I would be on the floor, but any rate, everyone will be at a table(s) for Thanksgiving dinner if I have anything to do with it). So the hotel thing works out best. I like cooking. And I like hosting. (Do like doing both better in something larger, that at least has an oven and full size stove, that I don't have to pack up so much of my own stuff and bring, but I can make due.) For the most part, the day is spent watching TV, and having meaningless conversation about materialistic things. It annoys me. When I'm not cooking, I probably will read a large portion of a book. I will take my boys to the hotel pool by myself. Maybe my niece will join us. I will most likely not learn a single thing about what others are currently doing and liking and disliking. I don't dislike the quietness, I do dislike the not being with each other. We sit together at a table (mainly because I make us). We sit together in front of a TV. But there is no meaningful to me interaction. I try to do it with a good attitude. I reserve, I plan, I shop, I prepare food, I cook, I make sure everyone's drinks are filled, that everyone is comfortably seated, I serve, I try to keep the boys reasonably quiet, I try to have things the boys can share with their Grandma. I try to smile. I try not to bring up any offense conversation, or make any comment that is considered too offensive. I try to present the whole thing as 'good' to the kids and that I want to be there. If not, I need to graciously step aside. I do not want to pass on a 'bad' attitude or vibes to my children.
Jett spent all of the day, minus 30 minutes he was downstairs for dinner (and the first 10 minutes, he was washing dishes and cleaning the kitchen as we started to eat), upstairs, in his office. He came down after everyone left. He asked if I just found out my sister-in-law is pregnant. I was stunned. She had announced she was pregnant in June, she is due in January. How did he not know? I know, he was probably upstairs. As he is for every time family comes over that is not his family. Every time we have guests over that he did not invite.
When the boys were little, I always thought and said, that as they got older and had their interest and activities, he would be more involved. He would not go off nearly as much and do his own thing. This summer, for the first time, I realized to the extent that is just a dream and really false hope of mine. When one had a belt test, he wanted to go to a meeting of his aircraft club, so he did. When one wanted to go on his birthday to hear an orchestra play outside, he choose to stay home so he could go to bed at his normal time so he wouldn't be tired the next day at work. He didn't come to Pyrope's first hockey scrimmage of the season because it was a beautiful night to go on a motorcycle ride with a friend. Choosing to go to a slot car swap meet instead of a mass where Pyrope was reading a petition and being enrolled to receive two sacraments in the coming 7 months. And it goes on and on and on.
And I've started to truly move on without him. When I force him to go to things he doesn't want to, he continually asks when we can leave, in between sitting in a corner and reading his magazine. If he is not going to be with us when he is with us, then I don't want him there. Or if he is just visibly and verbally counting down the time to when he can leave. We will go with him to car shows, and air shows, and historic places, and museums that interest him. But don't rush me and the boys when we find something that interests one of us there more than it interests you. When you want to go to a specific museum and other sites in an area for spring break vacation, we will do it. And enjoy it with you. When we (and it is we, I enjoy the trip, and the boys have been asking ever since coming back from the same trip 2 years ago, they both bring it up at regular intervals as to when we are doing it again) want to go back to the ocean, spending a week being with extended family, playing on the beach, eating lots of food, and in general just being together come with us and enjoy it. His question is always "Well, can't you handle it on your own?" Yes, I can handle it. And I don't want to make you miserable, or to have you with a negative attitude with us. But I really really want you to want to be with us, doing things we enjoy doing. Trying to enjoy it yourself, even if it isn't your first choice. We do, and try to enjoy, things that are your first choice that aren't ours. I will do it alone, and make excuses for you not being there, before I 'make' you be there, and have you miserable, and you ruining our experience.
But I don't like it.
And I don't like making excuses. I like the idea even less of saying in front of our children the real reason of you would rather not be there doing things with them, with us, so you aren't. I know eventually, if not already, they know this. But I just can't bring myself to saying it.
I don't like being asked at school where you are. I don't like it when we go to friend's houses and be asked why you aren't there. Or why you take off immediately after eating, leaving us to socialize (and we like the socializing). I don't like showing up at family functions without you, time after time after time. I don't like the parents/teachers/coaches making comments how they never see you. And if you do happen to bring them, you go sit somewhere else reading instead of watching the boys and talking with the other parents. Seeing who their friends are. Getting to know their friends. I resent after working a day, the second I walk through the door, you take off, either to another part of the house or go somewhere. That when you get home from work, you need 'time' before you want to be with them. That if you are in charge of dinner, you make them food, give them plates in front of the TV. And even if they ask you to sit on the couch and eat with them, you go eat alone. Every. single. time.
I understand needing some me time. But a balance is needed.
Why did I not see this coming? If I did, I don't think my choices would have been the same....
Today I had "Thanksgiving" at my house for my family. Now it wasn't on "Thanksgiving" (as that will be in 4 days on Thursday), nor did we have any of the traditional "Thanksgiving" foods, as we will be having all of them in 4 days. My mom and my 3 youngest siblings will go and be with her family (in a group that rivals my immediate family), my brother who is closest in age and I will be going to be with our respective spouse's families.
I understand we a bit of a loud crowd. There are 4 boys essentially between the ages of 4-7 (yes, 4, 5, 6, and 7 year old). There are my 3 brothers (2 of which are 21 and 23 and play with the younger group of boys and can really add to the boisterousness of the play). There is me and my sister. Don't forget Mom. Or the 4 significant others of the siblings. My house is not tiny, but nor is it large. We are family, and talk, and tease, and play. When multiplied by our numbers (and ages, a 4 year old boy for example creates a significant larger amount of activity and noise than say a 70 year old woman, and then when you multiple it by essentially 6 boys horsing around). I had rubber bands shot all over my house. Matchbox cars launched down my stairs. Various kids and adults dressed up as minions. Rousing games of hide and seek. Spirited discussions of what is going well and not so well in everyone's lives. Two 1/2 lb Reece's Cups spit between the 4 little boys (giver of Reece's cups did not ask parents prior to giving... and after a little boy has received a Reece cup, there is no taking it away). Temporary tattoos applied. Pants getting wet by unknown means (pee? juice? water from the sink?). A random missing sock (foot still in shoe). Adults 'improving' children's toys. A child hair dresser cutting another child's hair (you would think with that many adults that it couldn't happen, but you would be wrong). I enjoyed it. My boys enjoyed it.
For Thanksgiving itself, I will be hosting Jett's family, 240 miles from here, in a hotel room, well hotel suite (it has a living room/eat-in kitchen and then a separate bedroom). It will be Jett, the boys, myself, my mother-in-law, my sister-in-law, and her younger daughter (age 13). Her older daughter (age 18) will be with her boyfriend and his family. I will do the majority of the cooking, I will be doing the 'hosting' duties. I will pack up what I need from my house, and transport it there. My mother-in-law is not in the best of health. And she has never really liked to travel. My sister-in-law 'doesn't have the time' to make a big meal. She doesn't have a table to have a meal at in her house (Literally, there is no kitchen table or dining room table in the house, they just eat on plates sitting on the couch, in front of the TV... typically not together). I won't do Thanksgiving dinner in a restaurant or sitting in front of a TV on a couch (well, couch is not big enough, so I would be on the floor, but any rate, everyone will be at a table(s) for Thanksgiving dinner if I have anything to do with it). So the hotel thing works out best. I like cooking. And I like hosting. (Do like doing both better in something larger, that at least has an oven and full size stove, that I don't have to pack up so much of my own stuff and bring, but I can make due.) For the most part, the day is spent watching TV, and having meaningless conversation about materialistic things. It annoys me. When I'm not cooking, I probably will read a large portion of a book. I will take my boys to the hotel pool by myself. Maybe my niece will join us. I will most likely not learn a single thing about what others are currently doing and liking and disliking. I don't dislike the quietness, I do dislike the not being with each other. We sit together at a table (mainly because I make us). We sit together in front of a TV. But there is no meaningful to me interaction. I try to do it with a good attitude. I reserve, I plan, I shop, I prepare food, I cook, I make sure everyone's drinks are filled, that everyone is comfortably seated, I serve, I try to keep the boys reasonably quiet, I try to have things the boys can share with their Grandma. I try to smile. I try not to bring up any offense conversation, or make any comment that is considered too offensive. I try to present the whole thing as 'good' to the kids and that I want to be there. If not, I need to graciously step aside. I do not want to pass on a 'bad' attitude or vibes to my children.
Jett spent all of the day, minus 30 minutes he was downstairs for dinner (and the first 10 minutes, he was washing dishes and cleaning the kitchen as we started to eat), upstairs, in his office. He came down after everyone left. He asked if I just found out my sister-in-law is pregnant. I was stunned. She had announced she was pregnant in June, she is due in January. How did he not know? I know, he was probably upstairs. As he is for every time family comes over that is not his family. Every time we have guests over that he did not invite.
When the boys were little, I always thought and said, that as they got older and had their interest and activities, he would be more involved. He would not go off nearly as much and do his own thing. This summer, for the first time, I realized to the extent that is just a dream and really false hope of mine. When one had a belt test, he wanted to go to a meeting of his aircraft club, so he did. When one wanted to go on his birthday to hear an orchestra play outside, he choose to stay home so he could go to bed at his normal time so he wouldn't be tired the next day at work. He didn't come to Pyrope's first hockey scrimmage of the season because it was a beautiful night to go on a motorcycle ride with a friend. Choosing to go to a slot car swap meet instead of a mass where Pyrope was reading a petition and being enrolled to receive two sacraments in the coming 7 months. And it goes on and on and on.
And I've started to truly move on without him. When I force him to go to things he doesn't want to, he continually asks when we can leave, in between sitting in a corner and reading his magazine. If he is not going to be with us when he is with us, then I don't want him there. Or if he is just visibly and verbally counting down the time to when he can leave. We will go with him to car shows, and air shows, and historic places, and museums that interest him. But don't rush me and the boys when we find something that interests one of us there more than it interests you. When you want to go to a specific museum and other sites in an area for spring break vacation, we will do it. And enjoy it with you. When we (and it is we, I enjoy the trip, and the boys have been asking ever since coming back from the same trip 2 years ago, they both bring it up at regular intervals as to when we are doing it again) want to go back to the ocean, spending a week being with extended family, playing on the beach, eating lots of food, and in general just being together come with us and enjoy it. His question is always "Well, can't you handle it on your own?" Yes, I can handle it. And I don't want to make you miserable, or to have you with a negative attitude with us. But I really really want you to want to be with us, doing things we enjoy doing. Trying to enjoy it yourself, even if it isn't your first choice. We do, and try to enjoy, things that are your first choice that aren't ours. I will do it alone, and make excuses for you not being there, before I 'make' you be there, and have you miserable, and you ruining our experience.
But I don't like it.
And I don't like making excuses. I like the idea even less of saying in front of our children the real reason of you would rather not be there doing things with them, with us, so you aren't. I know eventually, if not already, they know this. But I just can't bring myself to saying it.
I don't like being asked at school where you are. I don't like it when we go to friend's houses and be asked why you aren't there. Or why you take off immediately after eating, leaving us to socialize (and we like the socializing). I don't like showing up at family functions without you, time after time after time. I don't like the parents/teachers/coaches making comments how they never see you. And if you do happen to bring them, you go sit somewhere else reading instead of watching the boys and talking with the other parents. Seeing who their friends are. Getting to know their friends. I resent after working a day, the second I walk through the door, you take off, either to another part of the house or go somewhere. That when you get home from work, you need 'time' before you want to be with them. That if you are in charge of dinner, you make them food, give them plates in front of the TV. And even if they ask you to sit on the couch and eat with them, you go eat alone. Every. single. time.
I understand needing some me time. But a balance is needed.
Why did I not see this coming? If I did, I don't think my choices would have been the same....
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Being green
'It's not easy being green' said Kermit the Frog.
And right now, I quite agree. It's not easy being who I am. I'm glad I'm me, but it isn't easy at times.
A few weeks ago, I started getting suspicious that school was not going well for Pyrope. Socially, he was doing fine. Academically, I was concerned. Some of the comments he was making, and how homework was going was not pointing in a good direction. When I learned that there were going to be 3 'classrooms' with a total of 92 kids in his 'pod' (it is an 'open floor plan' school, meaning they have large spaces and then there are multiple 'classrooms' in that space with only book shelves and cabinets at best dividing them. In his 'pod' there are 2 second grades and 1 first grade, each being taught by their own teacher, all at the same time, in the same room), I was worried how he was going to be able to focus. When I found out that there were 32 kids in his class and one teacher, I was more worried. Pyrope is a child that could easily fall through the cracks. I was not getting much home as far as work was concerned, so I asked to see some work, or to at least know what his current grades were/are. I got non-answers from his regular education teacher. At that point, he was getting 30 minutes of push in services for math in the classroom, and 15 minutes of pull out services. Not by the person who helped make his education plan, but another 'special ed' teacher. A brand new special ed teacher. The SPED teacher who is responsible for his IEP, was oddly and uncharacteristically quiet the week this was really hitting the fan. I finally had enough of the email exchanges and just put in writing that I wanted a meeting of the IEP in the next two weeks. The next school day, I got a voicemail from the Principal saying that he thought that having a meeting was the best idea, but Pyrope was doing 'wonderful' this year. On Tuesday, I get 2 tests home. One in math, one in language arts. 57% and 66% respectively. Wonderful? The next day, while I was at work, I got a phone call from the SPED teacher that is responsible at the end of the day. It confirmed some of my fears. Pyrope was doing 'wonderfully' because he was sitting quietly in class. He was not particularly learning, but he wasn't causing problems. As of that day, all of his math time with the SPED teacher started being done in the resource room. I was asked to extend my 2 week time frame by a few days because the SPED teacher had been quite ill and not in school and needed a little extra time to pull together everything. I agreed. The IEP amendment meeting was this week. The going over of what was happening in math was straight forward, and I agreed. No more push in services for the year, and he will not be graded/required to complete any math papers that are done while he is in the regular ed classroom. I had gone in concerned about what was going to be done with language arts. Last year, he was keeping up with language arts in the regular classroom. It is clear, this year, he is not. He had no 'goals' on his IEP for language arts, nor was he getting any services for it. I saw the SPED teacher getting nervous. When she said "Now to talk about language." I knew where she was going, and I saved her the agony. I said I knew he was not keeping up, and what was she suggesting. It is to pull him out to the resource room for the majority of his language arts time. Each day, he will spend 65 minutes with her (not the same SPED teacher as math), and another 30 minutes daily with the Title I teacher (which also works on language arts). Essentially, he is at school 400 minutes of a day. 40 minutes is lunch and recess. 50 minutes of that is 'specials', which is art, music, library, and gym (if the school week has 5 days, then it is rotated which special they have twice that week). Between math and language arts, he will have 140 minutes of resource room (and 1-2 times a week he is pulled out for speech for 30 minutes at a time). Give or take a few minutes, he will spend half of his instructional time outside of the regular education classroom (when you factor in things like getting coats on/off, getting packed/unpacked from home, traveling to different parts of the school). Pyrope is aware of why he is not in the regular ed classroom, and frankly, he doesn't like it. He wants to be with the regular ed classroom. He also has a vague awareness of his challenges. He has an awareness that the majority of other kids in the resource room are father behind than him, he wants to be challenged. However, with his crazy 'pod' environment, coupled with the ridiculous student to teacher ratio (how can any one person teach 32 seven year olds at the same time?), with the complicating factor of Common Core: he can not effectively learn in the regular education class. I have tried to smooth things over with the explanation that different people learn differently and what is best for him at this point is to be in the smaller class for part of the day. He has voiced his dislike, but is too easy going to really fight me too much. I still feel bad. Given a smaller regular ed class, with 4 walls, he could most likely learn in it. But it is simply not an option. The options that exists at this point is staying in the regular ed classroom and not learning a lot, going into the resource room for about 1/2 of his day and most likely keep up or come close to it academically, or pull him out and homeschool him. The first is the option he wants, but as the adult, is not even a consideration at this point. I've considered homeschooling, and if the resource room option does not work out, I will do. But it is still not easy to be green. For me or for Pyrope.
And then there is Obsidian. (Academically things aren't going well for him either, but that is a different unrelated story.) Specifically Obsidian and Tae Kwon Do. 6 weeks ago, the center he goes to once again decided that how they were promoting him up is not working. So they came up with a different set of belts/promotion system for kids that start when they are 3 or 4 (there have been issues with other kids, Obsidian just sticks out more than the others because he has the physical issues on top of the young age issue). Pyrope belt tested and moved up to the next room last month. For a series of unrelated reasons, Obsidian did not belt test last month, but will this month. However, he will NOT be getting a purple belt like Pyrope. He will be getting a green belt with a black stripe, and he will be staying in the room he is in until the following belt test. At which point, Pyrope and Obsidian will have the same color belt again, but will be held to different standards, then the belt after that, Pyrope will get a brown belt, and Obsidian will 'just' get a black strip on his blue belt. Obsidian is both ticked and confused about this new sequence he is going to be going through. He has told us, "It's not fair". Jett and I both reply it is fair, Pyrope can do skills that Obsidian can not. Obsidian has to work and learn how to do those skills to be considered the same level. Then smart ass points out that at various times he will have the same belt as Pyrope but not have to do the same things. And he has never been held back before. He has points. Legitimate points. If from the beginning Obsidian did something different than Pyrope, and was promoted based on merit, not on length of time, that is what he would expect and I would doubt that there would be an issue. I would be all for it if both were promoted on merit, not time. Pyrope comes close to learning all of the needed skills in 3 months, but not quite at times. There is something to be learned, and valued, from a program where you have to correctly complete a skill to move on. If not your stuck where you are until you can. Changing the 'rules' after 20 months is hard. Particularly when you were told the rules were going to change before, but then didn't. I agree how the center is doing promotions with the youngest kids is not working. I don't particularly agree from a developmental standpoint, or a social, or moral/ethical standpoint of how they are changing it. Nor do I think it is particularly going to work. I tried talking about this, but language barriers and their lack of knowledge of typical developmental levels I did not get far. Its not easy being green. Or staying green in this case for Obsidian.
And right now, I quite agree. It's not easy being who I am. I'm glad I'm me, but it isn't easy at times.
A few weeks ago, I started getting suspicious that school was not going well for Pyrope. Socially, he was doing fine. Academically, I was concerned. Some of the comments he was making, and how homework was going was not pointing in a good direction. When I learned that there were going to be 3 'classrooms' with a total of 92 kids in his 'pod' (it is an 'open floor plan' school, meaning they have large spaces and then there are multiple 'classrooms' in that space with only book shelves and cabinets at best dividing them. In his 'pod' there are 2 second grades and 1 first grade, each being taught by their own teacher, all at the same time, in the same room), I was worried how he was going to be able to focus. When I found out that there were 32 kids in his class and one teacher, I was more worried. Pyrope is a child that could easily fall through the cracks. I was not getting much home as far as work was concerned, so I asked to see some work, or to at least know what his current grades were/are. I got non-answers from his regular education teacher. At that point, he was getting 30 minutes of push in services for math in the classroom, and 15 minutes of pull out services. Not by the person who helped make his education plan, but another 'special ed' teacher. A brand new special ed teacher. The SPED teacher who is responsible for his IEP, was oddly and uncharacteristically quiet the week this was really hitting the fan. I finally had enough of the email exchanges and just put in writing that I wanted a meeting of the IEP in the next two weeks. The next school day, I got a voicemail from the Principal saying that he thought that having a meeting was the best idea, but Pyrope was doing 'wonderful' this year. On Tuesday, I get 2 tests home. One in math, one in language arts. 57% and 66% respectively. Wonderful? The next day, while I was at work, I got a phone call from the SPED teacher that is responsible at the end of the day. It confirmed some of my fears. Pyrope was doing 'wonderfully' because he was sitting quietly in class. He was not particularly learning, but he wasn't causing problems. As of that day, all of his math time with the SPED teacher started being done in the resource room. I was asked to extend my 2 week time frame by a few days because the SPED teacher had been quite ill and not in school and needed a little extra time to pull together everything. I agreed. The IEP amendment meeting was this week. The going over of what was happening in math was straight forward, and I agreed. No more push in services for the year, and he will not be graded/required to complete any math papers that are done while he is in the regular ed classroom. I had gone in concerned about what was going to be done with language arts. Last year, he was keeping up with language arts in the regular classroom. It is clear, this year, he is not. He had no 'goals' on his IEP for language arts, nor was he getting any services for it. I saw the SPED teacher getting nervous. When she said "Now to talk about language." I knew where she was going, and I saved her the agony. I said I knew he was not keeping up, and what was she suggesting. It is to pull him out to the resource room for the majority of his language arts time. Each day, he will spend 65 minutes with her (not the same SPED teacher as math), and another 30 minutes daily with the Title I teacher (which also works on language arts). Essentially, he is at school 400 minutes of a day. 40 minutes is lunch and recess. 50 minutes of that is 'specials', which is art, music, library, and gym (if the school week has 5 days, then it is rotated which special they have twice that week). Between math and language arts, he will have 140 minutes of resource room (and 1-2 times a week he is pulled out for speech for 30 minutes at a time). Give or take a few minutes, he will spend half of his instructional time outside of the regular education classroom (when you factor in things like getting coats on/off, getting packed/unpacked from home, traveling to different parts of the school). Pyrope is aware of why he is not in the regular ed classroom, and frankly, he doesn't like it. He wants to be with the regular ed classroom. He also has a vague awareness of his challenges. He has an awareness that the majority of other kids in the resource room are father behind than him, he wants to be challenged. However, with his crazy 'pod' environment, coupled with the ridiculous student to teacher ratio (how can any one person teach 32 seven year olds at the same time?), with the complicating factor of Common Core: he can not effectively learn in the regular education class. I have tried to smooth things over with the explanation that different people learn differently and what is best for him at this point is to be in the smaller class for part of the day. He has voiced his dislike, but is too easy going to really fight me too much. I still feel bad. Given a smaller regular ed class, with 4 walls, he could most likely learn in it. But it is simply not an option. The options that exists at this point is staying in the regular ed classroom and not learning a lot, going into the resource room for about 1/2 of his day and most likely keep up or come close to it academically, or pull him out and homeschool him. The first is the option he wants, but as the adult, is not even a consideration at this point. I've considered homeschooling, and if the resource room option does not work out, I will do. But it is still not easy to be green. For me or for Pyrope.
And then there is Obsidian. (Academically things aren't going well for him either, but that is a different unrelated story.) Specifically Obsidian and Tae Kwon Do. 6 weeks ago, the center he goes to once again decided that how they were promoting him up is not working. So they came up with a different set of belts/promotion system for kids that start when they are 3 or 4 (there have been issues with other kids, Obsidian just sticks out more than the others because he has the physical issues on top of the young age issue). Pyrope belt tested and moved up to the next room last month. For a series of unrelated reasons, Obsidian did not belt test last month, but will this month. However, he will NOT be getting a purple belt like Pyrope. He will be getting a green belt with a black stripe, and he will be staying in the room he is in until the following belt test. At which point, Pyrope and Obsidian will have the same color belt again, but will be held to different standards, then the belt after that, Pyrope will get a brown belt, and Obsidian will 'just' get a black strip on his blue belt. Obsidian is both ticked and confused about this new sequence he is going to be going through. He has told us, "It's not fair". Jett and I both reply it is fair, Pyrope can do skills that Obsidian can not. Obsidian has to work and learn how to do those skills to be considered the same level. Then smart ass points out that at various times he will have the same belt as Pyrope but not have to do the same things. And he has never been held back before. He has points. Legitimate points. If from the beginning Obsidian did something different than Pyrope, and was promoted based on merit, not on length of time, that is what he would expect and I would doubt that there would be an issue. I would be all for it if both were promoted on merit, not time. Pyrope comes close to learning all of the needed skills in 3 months, but not quite at times. There is something to be learned, and valued, from a program where you have to correctly complete a skill to move on. If not your stuck where you are until you can. Changing the 'rules' after 20 months is hard. Particularly when you were told the rules were going to change before, but then didn't. I agree how the center is doing promotions with the youngest kids is not working. I don't particularly agree from a developmental standpoint, or a social, or moral/ethical standpoint of how they are changing it. Nor do I think it is particularly going to work. I tried talking about this, but language barriers and their lack of knowledge of typical developmental levels I did not get far. Its not easy being green. Or staying green in this case for Obsidian.
Saturday, September 21, 2013
"Free Time"
I have been lucky, blessed, and created the circumstances that I'm mainly a stay-at-home mom. I have never fully given up my paid profession. Sometimes I work more, sometimes I work less. It depends on my family needs and the needs of my employers. Currently (but very soon to change), I'm working for pay less and essentially only on weekend. Most, if not all, SAHM (and dads) get their share of "you have all the time" and "it must be so easy". Dipping into both worlds, I seem to attract even more of these comments when I'm in one of my working for pay less phases. Particularly from co-workers. I recently got a comment about how having an 11 day vacation from work is so nice but I wouldn't understand because all I have is free time. I was ticked. Let me tell you about all of my "free time".
Now both of my boys are in school. I still don't have 'hours' of free time. Obsidian has a minimum of 1-2 appointments a week in the middle of school. Two days a week, an hour and a half of my 'free time' is spent at the school helping, prodding, and keeping chaos and noise to a reasonable level during lunch. There is not enough staff to ensure kids get their food and actually eat it in the 20 minutes they have to do so without help. So I help. In many of the lower grades in particular, there is a lot of prep work that needs to be done. Papers to rip out of workbooks. Word flash cards to be copied, cut apart, and made into sets for each child. Packets to be made and put together to be sent home. Teachers that are underpaid and have 34 seven year old they are responsible for educating and keeping safe and healthy for 6 hours a day. So I help. I copy, cut, collate, listen to books be read, read to your child, go over the math your child just can't do alone, help keep order in the class, and just help how I'm asked. You know all that the PTAs do, well yes, I am an officer in not one, but two of the PTAs. You know the rugs in the lower grade classrooms that the kids sit on, and all of the furniture in the library, the 'free' books your child brings home several times a year, snacks during standardized testing week, smartboards in your child's classroom, the playground, classroom parties, scholarships, and, and, and, why yes, all of those things are brought to you by the PTA. By the hours of volunteering and work that those of us that are active in the PTA do. There are working moms and dads that are active, but most of the heavy 'lifting' are done by us SAH people and those that work part time. Days where the school gets too hot, I have to come get Obsidian and bring him home to cool off. Then there are the literal hours I have been spending each week in the attempt to get the medical care Obsidian needs. I've been learning how to file a formal complaint with the State as of late.
Since you listed me as someone your child can be released to, I get the phone call to pick up your child who has lice, or a 104 degree fever, or is vomiting, and needs to leave school, but can not go to day care for the same reason and you are in a meeting 2 hours away or presenting a large project or whatever other reason you can not get your child yourself. I do not like my own children in these circumstance, let alone another person's child. The said child is usually less than pleasant to deal with. Yet I do it, and do not mind as long as this is not abused. We need people in this world to do this. When your mother needs a ride to a doctor's appointment, or you need a ride to an outpatient surgery, it is me you call or the ride. And I will rearrange my schedule to do so. For this is what people should do for each other.
When my employer is in a tight bind and I get a phone call, I will rearrange if I can to try to help for a few hours or whatever I can.
When you have 11 days off of work, no one calls you during the day because no one thinks you are home. You (for the most part), don't have a chunk of time in the dead middle of the day that little people are depending on you in order to get the chance to eat a full meal. You have 11 days off of what you normally do. This simply does not happen for me. I don't remember when (if ever) that I haven't had a phone call to please come help with this, that, or the next thing. And I don't mind. We need people to be full time paid workers. But we also need people to fill in and help. Please don't tell me how I wouldn't understand how nice it is to have 11 days of free time. I can think of plenty of things I would love to do if I had no commitments for 11 days. I don't get to call in sick, and when I call mercy that I am sick and need help and can meet my commitments, chances are, I'm really really sick (as in the last two times that happened, the one time I got admitted to the hospital and had surgery, and the other I had a CT and was sent home on powerful meds that prevented me from driving). I do have vacations, but this is scheduled just as much as yours. If I'm staying at home for my vacation, my phones are turned off, and my answering machine is set to take messages silently.
So please, don't tell me I don't understand how nice it is to have 11 days off. I do, really. My job is just mainly unpaid, and far more unpredictable and varied than yours.
Now both of my boys are in school. I still don't have 'hours' of free time. Obsidian has a minimum of 1-2 appointments a week in the middle of school. Two days a week, an hour and a half of my 'free time' is spent at the school helping, prodding, and keeping chaos and noise to a reasonable level during lunch. There is not enough staff to ensure kids get their food and actually eat it in the 20 minutes they have to do so without help. So I help. In many of the lower grades in particular, there is a lot of prep work that needs to be done. Papers to rip out of workbooks. Word flash cards to be copied, cut apart, and made into sets for each child. Packets to be made and put together to be sent home. Teachers that are underpaid and have 34 seven year old they are responsible for educating and keeping safe and healthy for 6 hours a day. So I help. I copy, cut, collate, listen to books be read, read to your child, go over the math your child just can't do alone, help keep order in the class, and just help how I'm asked. You know all that the PTAs do, well yes, I am an officer in not one, but two of the PTAs. You know the rugs in the lower grade classrooms that the kids sit on, and all of the furniture in the library, the 'free' books your child brings home several times a year, snacks during standardized testing week, smartboards in your child's classroom, the playground, classroom parties, scholarships, and, and, and, why yes, all of those things are brought to you by the PTA. By the hours of volunteering and work that those of us that are active in the PTA do. There are working moms and dads that are active, but most of the heavy 'lifting' are done by us SAH people and those that work part time. Days where the school gets too hot, I have to come get Obsidian and bring him home to cool off. Then there are the literal hours I have been spending each week in the attempt to get the medical care Obsidian needs. I've been learning how to file a formal complaint with the State as of late.
Since you listed me as someone your child can be released to, I get the phone call to pick up your child who has lice, or a 104 degree fever, or is vomiting, and needs to leave school, but can not go to day care for the same reason and you are in a meeting 2 hours away or presenting a large project or whatever other reason you can not get your child yourself. I do not like my own children in these circumstance, let alone another person's child. The said child is usually less than pleasant to deal with. Yet I do it, and do not mind as long as this is not abused. We need people in this world to do this. When your mother needs a ride to a doctor's appointment, or you need a ride to an outpatient surgery, it is me you call or the ride. And I will rearrange my schedule to do so. For this is what people should do for each other.
When my employer is in a tight bind and I get a phone call, I will rearrange if I can to try to help for a few hours or whatever I can.
When you have 11 days off of work, no one calls you during the day because no one thinks you are home. You (for the most part), don't have a chunk of time in the dead middle of the day that little people are depending on you in order to get the chance to eat a full meal. You have 11 days off of what you normally do. This simply does not happen for me. I don't remember when (if ever) that I haven't had a phone call to please come help with this, that, or the next thing. And I don't mind. We need people to be full time paid workers. But we also need people to fill in and help. Please don't tell me how I wouldn't understand how nice it is to have 11 days of free time. I can think of plenty of things I would love to do if I had no commitments for 11 days. I don't get to call in sick, and when I call mercy that I am sick and need help and can meet my commitments, chances are, I'm really really sick (as in the last two times that happened, the one time I got admitted to the hospital and had surgery, and the other I had a CT and was sent home on powerful meds that prevented me from driving). I do have vacations, but this is scheduled just as much as yours. If I'm staying at home for my vacation, my phones are turned off, and my answering machine is set to take messages silently.
So please, don't tell me I don't understand how nice it is to have 11 days off. I do, really. My job is just mainly unpaid, and far more unpredictable and varied than yours.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Away from the screen
At my job, I have a fair amount of 'paperwork'. This paperwork is all done on computers. It is rare that I use a paper for anything other than notes to myself for when I get to a computer (no, I do not have my own, I just have to find an unoccupied one and use it).
I was finishing up my work. It was late, I should have already been gone. Several things that should have been routine wound up not. Whenever this happens, it creates more paperwork. Which means I wind up staying late. I enjoy the 'not routine', but having that much not routine in one day had left me tired and wanting to just finish up and go home. I had no interest in talking to anyone. Most times, there is no one to talk to.
I was just about done, less than 5 minutes and I would have been gone. A coworker came in. She asked if she could tell me something when I had a chance. I said that was fine, expecting her to start talking as I was typing. I quickly realized, that what she was going to say was personal. I sat for a minute, wishing to just continue my typing. And then I did what I should do. I asked if she could wait 2 minutes so I could finish and give her my undivided attention. And she waited, and I actively listened while she talked to me.
I knew I was doing the right thing as I was doing it. I have been thinking about what I did, and how much it is not being done in the current times. It is too easy to continue typing and 'clicking' through screens while others are trying to tell us something. Important things that mean a lot to them. Our cell phones and tablets are too easy to play with, or check messages.
There was nothing in the conversation that I needed to focus on that wouldn't allow me to continue typing, or using my phone, or whatever other technology. But it was something important to her. And she, and others trying to really express themselves, need undivided attention. We are all that important.
I was finishing up my work. It was late, I should have already been gone. Several things that should have been routine wound up not. Whenever this happens, it creates more paperwork. Which means I wind up staying late. I enjoy the 'not routine', but having that much not routine in one day had left me tired and wanting to just finish up and go home. I had no interest in talking to anyone. Most times, there is no one to talk to.
I was just about done, less than 5 minutes and I would have been gone. A coworker came in. She asked if she could tell me something when I had a chance. I said that was fine, expecting her to start talking as I was typing. I quickly realized, that what she was going to say was personal. I sat for a minute, wishing to just continue my typing. And then I did what I should do. I asked if she could wait 2 minutes so I could finish and give her my undivided attention. And she waited, and I actively listened while she talked to me.
I knew I was doing the right thing as I was doing it. I have been thinking about what I did, and how much it is not being done in the current times. It is too easy to continue typing and 'clicking' through screens while others are trying to tell us something. Important things that mean a lot to them. Our cell phones and tablets are too easy to play with, or check messages.
There was nothing in the conversation that I needed to focus on that wouldn't allow me to continue typing, or using my phone, or whatever other technology. But it was something important to her. And she, and others trying to really express themselves, need undivided attention. We are all that important.
Sunday, August 4, 2013
Attitude of Choices
I've entered into a season of reflection. I have an awareness that the direction of my life is about to change. How and what direction are unknown. Choices will need to be made that are going to greatly impact not just me, but my whole family. I think as a consequence of this, I find myself reflecting on what I like, and what I don't, and what I wish I had, and what I'm grateful to have. I find myself thinking, if I have a better understanding of the past and the present, it will somehow help me decide what to make the future.
When Pyrope was 10 weeks old, I met my best friend. Her daughter, A, was 5 weeks old at the time. As we grew closer, so did Pyrope and A. Then I had Obsidian, and 4 months later, she had her 2nd daughter, B. Likewise, the two of them grew up together.
Initially, our parenting was very similar. In someways, it still is similar. Our underlying morals and ethics, and what we want to teach our children is very similar. As time has gone on, how we go about doing this has started to look different. Sometimes it looks very different. Periodically, I have found myself jealous of what she does to parent her girls. In the last year, it has got stronger, and I've found myself at times pulling away from the relationship. Many times I find myself 'blaming' it on the fact that Pyrope and Obsidian have 'disabilities' and A and B are considered 'typical'.
This last year, Pyrope was officially diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder. This was no surprise. I have been asking about it since he was a baby. He was not a child who was 'typical' then started to develop it, it is who he always has been. I have been always very conscious of it, and very conscious of my parenting decisions that promote his attachment to me, as well as him learning social rules and norms. As multiple 'professionals' have said, my constant working on it, is most likely a good part of the reason he is as 'mild' as he is on the spectrum. He struggles in school. I feel mainly because of his ASD. Math is a particular struggle. Nightly, we go over whatever concept he is supposed to be learning in school. This summer, every day, we work on math. Typically for an hour. Progress is being made now. In January, he was at a Pre-K level for math without much progress, now we are at a middle 1st grade level. Each day this summer, he is also required to read for 30 minutes. Then most days, we also work on writing and learning cursive (which is no longer taught in the schools). When he is playing on the playground, I watch in hearing distance. If it is a major issue, I will go correct as it is happening. If it is more minor, I talk to him about it when he comes to tell me something. I write, then go over multiple times, 'social stories' for situations he struggles with. He gets it. Slowly. One of the skills I feel all children should learn, and preferably not from a parent is how to swim. I have always told my kids, they need to pass Red Cross level 4 (or whatever that skill level equivalent is) before they can stop. This spring, Pyrope got a teacher that simply was not a good match (I was by far not the only parent with problems. Pyrope was in a class of 8 kids, 2 did not finish the session, and he was the only child that signed up for the next. Level 4 is a long level, 7 of the 8 kids had been in at least the 2 sessions before together with him.). I talked to the supervisor, and then to the director. He got a different instructor (well the whole level did). There were tears the first day of the next session (as there were from the 2nd class on with the previous teacher) but they quickly disappeared (and he made more progress in that session than he had in the 2 sessions before).
Obsidian loves music. This spring, he decided he really wanted to start taking violin lessons. I gave it a couple of weeks, and he kept asking. After much searching, I found the right size violin, and a teacher that was willing to take on a 4 year old, that has a form of dwarfism, whose hands are proportionately short to his arms, which are proportionately short for his small for his age body. Oh yes, and he also has a learning disability. Daily, we practice what is currently working on in violin. There have been some really ugly lessons. There have been some pretty ugly weeks with practice. Obsidian has to be told it is time to practice each day. He has never stopped wanting to play well, he just doesn't like all of the necessary steps to get there. Such is life my small child, you have build the foundation well to get to the 'good' part. Daily we practice what letters what make what sounds. He is only making very slow progress. Daily we practice his gross motor skills, with very very little progress being made. Still, each day we do it. At the end of last summer, he could ride his 2 wheeler 1-2 houses without falling. With daily practice since the spring, he can still ride the same distance. He is still working on being able to walk down stairs reciprocally without falling. He still can't, even holding onto a railing.
We take both boys to Tae Kwon Do two to three times a week. On the days we do not go, I have them do their stretches, sometime practice kicks or punches, sometimes watch videos of the current form they are learning, and practice their vocabulary and school rules they need to know for belt tests. I don't do all of it everyday, but I some part of it each day.
Then there is my friend. At the beginning of first grade A was behind in math. A had shown signs of good math skills as a preschooler, but the kindergarten that A and Pyrope went to did not have a strong math program. At Christmas time, A was still behind. So my friend hired a math tutor, and once a week (including this summer), A goes to the math tutor for an hour. My friend does no extra math with her in between. A started piano this summer. My friend does not tell her to practice, and A does not seek out to do it on her own. Typically the evening before or the day of her next lesson, she does her piano 'homework'. A also does dance lessons once a week. She simply goes to the lesson, then comes home. She does not practice between. This past school year, B took swimming lessons with Obsidian. She had been doing well. They got a new to them teacher. Obsidian adjust fine, he even started doing some different things. B did not do well. The teacher pushed them to do more, more quickly as well as if the first attempt did not go well, he would make them do it again. She started to refuse to come (and then was not brought) and then was not signed up for further lessons because the last session did not go well.
So lately I've been finding myself wishing I was more like my friend. Or rather, wishing that I could spend time doing things with my kids that are more enjoyable that teaching math, listening to "Walter the Farting Dog" and similar books in halting learning to read style, drilling social rules, drilling on what sound goes with what letter, practicing violin, practicing TKD, continuing with lessons that are 'hard', advocating for good teachers for my kids. While thinking about how I would word this in a post, I had a realization. Even if I had A and B instead of my kids, I wouldn't just hire a tutor and do math no other extra math. I wouldn't take A to piano lessons then not make her practice (just let her initiate if she wants to practice). I wouldn't just do ballet once a week and not have practice in between. Nor would I have let B stop swimming lesson because of her not getting along with one specific teacher when she had been doing well. I can choose to not do all of these labor intensive difficult things with my boys. I could just let the school teach Pyrope his math and reading, and Obsidian his sounds. I could not make Obsidian practice his violin. I could just take them to TKD and not practice on their 'off' days. I could have let Pyrope stop with swim lessons when he came across the difficult teacher. I could let them watch more TV and video games (which is very limited to not allowed) and spend more time at the beach, playground, and pool (we spend plenty of time doing all of these... I just have them spend time daily on other things as well).
However, I think I am teaching a more important lesson than even math, reading, violin, swimming, or TKD long term. If you are going to do something, do it well, with everything you can.
And with that in my head, my jealousy has retreated to a place where she is barely felt. As now, I feel I am choosing this. It has not been chosen for me because my children have 'special needs'. I have chosen it for my children, irregardless of their abilities. With this, there comes a peace in how I'm spending my time, and how I'm choosing my boys to spend some of theirs.
When Pyrope was 10 weeks old, I met my best friend. Her daughter, A, was 5 weeks old at the time. As we grew closer, so did Pyrope and A. Then I had Obsidian, and 4 months later, she had her 2nd daughter, B. Likewise, the two of them grew up together.
Initially, our parenting was very similar. In someways, it still is similar. Our underlying morals and ethics, and what we want to teach our children is very similar. As time has gone on, how we go about doing this has started to look different. Sometimes it looks very different. Periodically, I have found myself jealous of what she does to parent her girls. In the last year, it has got stronger, and I've found myself at times pulling away from the relationship. Many times I find myself 'blaming' it on the fact that Pyrope and Obsidian have 'disabilities' and A and B are considered 'typical'.
This last year, Pyrope was officially diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder. This was no surprise. I have been asking about it since he was a baby. He was not a child who was 'typical' then started to develop it, it is who he always has been. I have been always very conscious of it, and very conscious of my parenting decisions that promote his attachment to me, as well as him learning social rules and norms. As multiple 'professionals' have said, my constant working on it, is most likely a good part of the reason he is as 'mild' as he is on the spectrum. He struggles in school. I feel mainly because of his ASD. Math is a particular struggle. Nightly, we go over whatever concept he is supposed to be learning in school. This summer, every day, we work on math. Typically for an hour. Progress is being made now. In January, he was at a Pre-K level for math without much progress, now we are at a middle 1st grade level. Each day this summer, he is also required to read for 30 minutes. Then most days, we also work on writing and learning cursive (which is no longer taught in the schools). When he is playing on the playground, I watch in hearing distance. If it is a major issue, I will go correct as it is happening. If it is more minor, I talk to him about it when he comes to tell me something. I write, then go over multiple times, 'social stories' for situations he struggles with. He gets it. Slowly. One of the skills I feel all children should learn, and preferably not from a parent is how to swim. I have always told my kids, they need to pass Red Cross level 4 (or whatever that skill level equivalent is) before they can stop. This spring, Pyrope got a teacher that simply was not a good match (I was by far not the only parent with problems. Pyrope was in a class of 8 kids, 2 did not finish the session, and he was the only child that signed up for the next. Level 4 is a long level, 7 of the 8 kids had been in at least the 2 sessions before together with him.). I talked to the supervisor, and then to the director. He got a different instructor (well the whole level did). There were tears the first day of the next session (as there were from the 2nd class on with the previous teacher) but they quickly disappeared (and he made more progress in that session than he had in the 2 sessions before).
Obsidian loves music. This spring, he decided he really wanted to start taking violin lessons. I gave it a couple of weeks, and he kept asking. After much searching, I found the right size violin, and a teacher that was willing to take on a 4 year old, that has a form of dwarfism, whose hands are proportionately short to his arms, which are proportionately short for his small for his age body. Oh yes, and he also has a learning disability. Daily, we practice what is currently working on in violin. There have been some really ugly lessons. There have been some pretty ugly weeks with practice. Obsidian has to be told it is time to practice each day. He has never stopped wanting to play well, he just doesn't like all of the necessary steps to get there. Such is life my small child, you have build the foundation well to get to the 'good' part. Daily we practice what letters what make what sounds. He is only making very slow progress. Daily we practice his gross motor skills, with very very little progress being made. Still, each day we do it. At the end of last summer, he could ride his 2 wheeler 1-2 houses without falling. With daily practice since the spring, he can still ride the same distance. He is still working on being able to walk down stairs reciprocally without falling. He still can't, even holding onto a railing.
We take both boys to Tae Kwon Do two to three times a week. On the days we do not go, I have them do their stretches, sometime practice kicks or punches, sometimes watch videos of the current form they are learning, and practice their vocabulary and school rules they need to know for belt tests. I don't do all of it everyday, but I some part of it each day.
Then there is my friend. At the beginning of first grade A was behind in math. A had shown signs of good math skills as a preschooler, but the kindergarten that A and Pyrope went to did not have a strong math program. At Christmas time, A was still behind. So my friend hired a math tutor, and once a week (including this summer), A goes to the math tutor for an hour. My friend does no extra math with her in between. A started piano this summer. My friend does not tell her to practice, and A does not seek out to do it on her own. Typically the evening before or the day of her next lesson, she does her piano 'homework'. A also does dance lessons once a week. She simply goes to the lesson, then comes home. She does not practice between. This past school year, B took swimming lessons with Obsidian. She had been doing well. They got a new to them teacher. Obsidian adjust fine, he even started doing some different things. B did not do well. The teacher pushed them to do more, more quickly as well as if the first attempt did not go well, he would make them do it again. She started to refuse to come (and then was not brought) and then was not signed up for further lessons because the last session did not go well.
So lately I've been finding myself wishing I was more like my friend. Or rather, wishing that I could spend time doing things with my kids that are more enjoyable that teaching math, listening to "Walter the Farting Dog" and similar books in halting learning to read style, drilling social rules, drilling on what sound goes with what letter, practicing violin, practicing TKD, continuing with lessons that are 'hard', advocating for good teachers for my kids. While thinking about how I would word this in a post, I had a realization. Even if I had A and B instead of my kids, I wouldn't just hire a tutor and do math no other extra math. I wouldn't take A to piano lessons then not make her practice (just let her initiate if she wants to practice). I wouldn't just do ballet once a week and not have practice in between. Nor would I have let B stop swimming lesson because of her not getting along with one specific teacher when she had been doing well. I can choose to not do all of these labor intensive difficult things with my boys. I could just let the school teach Pyrope his math and reading, and Obsidian his sounds. I could not make Obsidian practice his violin. I could just take them to TKD and not practice on their 'off' days. I could have let Pyrope stop with swim lessons when he came across the difficult teacher. I could let them watch more TV and video games (which is very limited to not allowed) and spend more time at the beach, playground, and pool (we spend plenty of time doing all of these... I just have them spend time daily on other things as well).
However, I think I am teaching a more important lesson than even math, reading, violin, swimming, or TKD long term. If you are going to do something, do it well, with everything you can.
And with that in my head, my jealousy has retreated to a place where she is barely felt. As now, I feel I am choosing this. It has not been chosen for me because my children have 'special needs'. I have chosen it for my children, irregardless of their abilities. With this, there comes a peace in how I'm spending my time, and how I'm choosing my boys to spend some of theirs.
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