The Age of Worry

Today I took Mira to her first Mommy & Me class. One of Aaron’s relatives runs the class, and even though Mira was a little young for this group, we were certain she could keep up with the other kids. Mira was a little confused by what was going on, but she enjoyed herself and I think each week she’ll get more comfortable and play along.

Mira is now 15 months old (I know – where has the time gone?) and I can’t help but compare her to Cordy at that age. Mira has been walking since before her first birthday, and is currently working on building up speed to run. She still won’t say a word, or at least a word we can comprehend, but she has a sharp mind that follows everything we say. She’ll nod her head yes or no to any of our questions, and finds other ways to make her thoughts known. She’s smart, stubborn, very independent, and loves to see new people.

The only thing she has in common with Cordy at that age is the last sentence. Cordy didn’t take her first independent steps until she was 15 months, and she was talking up a storm by this point, with a vocabulary of several words and the ability to count to 5. But she was social. She loved to be out in public, just like Mira.

And then between 15-18 months, something changed in Cordy. Her social nature turned inward, with only those who saw her regularly getting any kind of notice. She wasn’t scared of anyone, but she didn’t care to interact with anyone, either. Eye contact was minimal. Where she used to notice other kids, she now looked right through them most of the time. Tantrums escalated over the slightest thing, which we dismissed as nothing more than normal toddler tantrums. While she could walk, her fine motor coordination was poor. She didn’t get into things like most kids – she was content to sit and examine the toys in front of her.

Play became more linear, either focused on counting items, lining them up, or stacking them. There was little imaginative play. Her vocabulary increased, but I noticed the sentences that formed were just repeats of things she had heard on TV or from me. More often than not, when she talked without repeating something, it was gibberish. She didn’t like to be touched on her head or feet, and couldn’t stand the feel of anything gooey, like liquid soap or applesauce. Other kids played with their food – she wouldn’t touch anything of the semi-solid variety. She started to develop repetitive motions, like pacing back and forth like a caged animal.

It was the beginning of Cordy’s slide away from many of her developmental milestones and towards the autism spectrum. Looking back over many of my blog posts from that time period, I can see the beginnings of problems, but the clues were so small back then it’s easy to see how I missed them. And much of that period I didn’t share on my blog, too, because I didn’t want people to think she was a demon child. (I’ve since realized that it’s common to think of an 18 month old as a demon child. Who knew?)

So having gone through all of that, it’s no surprise that I look at Mira – my social, curious baby – and realize she’s now the same age Cordy was when it all started to change. And realizing that paralyzes me with fear. Will this outgoing personality fall away from me to be replaced with a far-off stare and lack of interest in those around her?

It’s not pleasant to think about, but I have to prepare myself for the possibility. There is a 1 in 5 chance of a sibling being on the spectrum if one child already has ASD. And there is nothing I can do to stop it if it happens. There were things I changed this time, like organic baby foods and a delayed vaccination schedule, but there’s no promise they’ll help.

This has been bothering me for several months now, actually. I’m not letting myself get worked into a panic about it, because that’s silly when there has been nothing yet to suggest signs of autism in Mira. But that nagging worry has persisted in the back of my mind. Is her lack of words a sign? Should I be concerned that her head size is off the charts, too? These next three months I’m on high alert for any changes to her behavior that could indicate a problem.

I’ll be honest: I don’t want another child on the spectrum. I’d rather spare Mira from the additional hurdles she’d face with autism. But I wouldn’t love her any less. If she did end up on the spectrum, I’d do the same thing I did with Cordy, and start the fight to get her all of the services she needs to be successful. Even with the extra work, we’re lucky that Cordy is high-functioning, and over the past year Cordy has made amazing progress (more on that to come) an accomplishment I credit to all of the hard work put in by her teachers, her therapists, and us.

So for now I watch and wait, hoping my second feisty, stubborn and oh-so-smart girl remains the social butterfly of the toddler scene.



Forget Spelling It Out Now

There was a time when Aaron and I could have entire conversations about things around Cordy without her knowing. We’d just have to S-P-E-L-L out the word we didn’t want her to hear and/or repeat, like C-O-O-K-I-E or I-C-E-C-R-E-A-M or the ever popular W-I-N-E.

Problem is, she’s been watching Word World and Sesame Street and Super Why, all of which are encouraging her to spell. And one in particular (I’m looking at you, Word World, with your obsessive, sweets-loving Pig) teaches kids how to spell cookie.

Do you know how hard it is to talk about cookies without being able to say or now spell cookie? We can’t even use a food code word, like lettuce, because the kid likes lettuce and nearly every other food we mention. And it’s just too weird to say to your spouse, “Hey, when you’re at the grocery, can you pick up some….uh…uhm… socks? You know, the…uhm… socks with the brown spots – one might say “chunks”- in them?”

We try to give our daughters healthy snacks, and save the sweet treats for special occasions. They normally have snacks like bananas, apple slices, fruit and cereal bars, goldfish crackers, homemade applesauce (from my mom’s apple trees) and yogurt.

But hiding in one of the cabinets, on the tippy-top shelf, are the secret goodies – cookies, candy, and those little Betty Crocker molten lava cakes that you make in the microwave in 30 seconds. Hiding in the deep freezer is the ice cream that Aaron and I love – ice cream that doesn’t exist to our children and if they ask about it we will deny-deny-deny.

It’s a little ironic that we care so much about our daughters’ eating habits, and then pull out the naughty snacks when they go to bed.

Do you have mommy/daddy snacks that you hide from the kids?

(Wine doesn’t count.)

This post was written for Parent Bloggers Network as an entry for a contest sponsored by Brothers-All-Natural.



Haiku Friday: Not Fair

I sneeze and sniffle
I can’t breathe and my head hurts
This is so not fair

The weather is hot
so why am I suffering
from a stupid cold?

Colds are for winter
Not summer – I can blame this
on my one year old.

She had the sniffles
first – guess that’s what I get for
sharing food with her

To play along for Haiku Friday, follow these steps:

1. Write your own haiku on your blog. You can do one or many, all following a theme or just random. What’s a haiku, you ask? Click here.

2. Sign the Mister Linky below with your name and the link to your haiku post (the specific post URL, not your main blog URL). DON’T sign unless you have a haiku this week. If you need help with this, please let me know.

3. Pick up a Haiku Friday button to display on the post or in your sidebar by clicking the button at the top.

REMEMBER: Do not post your link unless you have a haiku this week! I will delete any links without haiku!



My Thoughts on Sarah Palin

Those of you who follow me on Twitter are probably getting tired of the political tweets this week. Sorry, I got a little fired up over the past few nights. And some may know I don’t usually talk politics, mostly because I know others are very sensitive about the subject and quick to go off the deep end if you don’t believe exactly the way they do. (Those would probably be the ones who unfollowed me on Twitter.)

I have never been into politics as much as I have this year, because so much is at stake. The two parties are so radically opposite, and it shows the deep division of ideology in this country.

I watched the DNC, and now I’m watching the RNC this week, to continue educating myself on the candidates. I’ve watched the selection of Sarah Palin as John McCain’s VP candidate, and I then went to work learning as much as I could about her, ending with watching her speech last night.

The result? After that speech I was so inspired I made my first ever direct donation to a presidential candidate’s fund.

Obama’s fund.

I’ll admit, I wasn’t that keen on Obama at first. I was a Hillary Clinton supporter early on, and continued to admire her through the primaries. As it became evident that the nominees would be Obama and McCain, I started to research each more. I’ll admit I worried Obama was more into hope than action. And while I’ve always loved watching McCain on TV (he cracks a good joke!), I don’t like many of his policies. I can accept more of Obama’s plan for the future.

And then McCain picked Palin. I was really surprised by this choice. My gut reaction was that he picked a woman to try to win over the Hillary Clinton supporters. Only he picked a woman who is the ideological opposite of Clinton. (Gloria Steinem gives a great overview here.)

I’d like to believe he didn’t think he could convince women to vote in solidarity for a fellow woman just because of our gynecological similarities. Because while I think we’re long due for a woman in one of the top 2 government positions, I still have a brain, and I will look deeper than a double X chromosome to see what this woman really stands for.

And I’ve got some major issues with Palin. I don’t like her anti-choice stance, and I worry she wants to bring religion into government and schools when the constitution clearly spells out that religion has no place there. I disagree with her on global warming and drilling everywhere you can for oil. Oil is not an answer to the energy crisis – renewable energy needs to be developed further as a replacement. I think she lacks national experience, and wonder how much experience can be gained from being governor of a state that has a smaller population than the city of Columbus, Ohio.

Her daughter’s pregnancy is not an issue for me, although I do wonder if Palin is still a believer that abstinence-only sex education works. Her son having Downs Syndrome is also not an issue for me, as I’d imagine she has plenty of help to raise him. Those are her issues to deal with, not mine, and they don’t affect my voting choice.

Sarah Palin doesn’t represent me as a woman, and she won’t be getting my vote. I don’t think she’s the everyday “hockey mom”, “PTA mom” or “insert-adjective-here mom” that she tries to portray herself as. I won’t vote for a woman just because she’s a woman, just like I won’t vote based on a single issue.

Others will disagree with me, and that’s OK. That’s the beauty of this country – we have the freedom to share different opinions. Yes, you’ll find “liberal” leanings here at my blog – I’ll fully admit to being a Democrat. I ask only that you respect my opinions just as I’ll respect yours. I know I’ve already lost Twitter followers because of my liberal comments. Yet I have many conservative friends – we participate in good-natured debates and in the end, agree to disagree.

And I hope that anyone who goes to the polls will take the time to do their full research and make sure the candidates they’re choosing are really the people they want to stand behind. I’m sure more than a few are regretting they ever voted for the candidate that they would most like to share a beer with eight years and four years ago.

And finally, I’ll end with a lot of humor and a dose of truth, as is often the case with The Daily Show:



New School Year

Ready for her first day of school – no tears, minimal protesting.
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