An Exercise in Futility (perhaps that should be the title of my book)

Here’s a big truth for you all:

Today I have one kid who’s home sick for the fourth day in a row. He misses a fair amount of school. Last year it became a problem, in fact, although he  did well in his classes anyway. He just wasn’t well. But I get so stressed out about the missed school days, regardless of the reason.

And then I have the other kid, who just refuses to get up.

So my success rate today is 0%. That’s how I feel. Zero percent successful.

I don’t know what else I can do, though. Once your kids get to a certain age, or size really, you can’t physically force them to do anything. No more carrying a flailing kid up to the car. It’s all mental. ALL OF IT. And today I’m losing the battle.

It’s 9:09. I can keep trying to get Maddie off to school, but it’s a rare day that she can turn herself around and get going once she’s late. I hate giving up because I don’t want her to be that relaxed and happy about missing school. I want to be relentless. But I’m not sure I have the stamina to keep pestering her all day. Even thinking about this makes my head pound. This is not a good day for me and how I feel about myself as a mother. I try so hard to stay positive and optimistic and give myself credit, but I’m not feeling it today. I feel, once again, defeated.

I’ve been hearing a lot of grumblings lately by my friends and acquaintances with 12 and 13-year-old kids. Preteens and teens will push you to your limit. Apparently that’s normal. So I’m not under the delusion that only parents of special needs kids have rough days. Or feel overwhelmed or helpless. Or feel like they’re failing.

I feel like that with both my kids at times.

When you decide to have a child, you are embarking on such a potentially harrowing journey. Each day is an unknown. You can put everything you have into parenting, all or your mental and emotional and physical energy, all the skills you learned from your parents, all the tactics you can learn from books, all the advice from your friends, all the enlightenment you get from your therapist, all the special approaches you learn from your child’s occupational therapist and psychologist and teachers. And then you can still feel as if you have no idea what you’re doing. Or you might think, “It feels like I’m doing the right thing, but it’s still not working.” That’s maybe the worst. The futility of it all.

10:10 a.m.: About 20 minutes ago I made another attempt to get Maddie up. I patted her back firmly over and over and said her name about 50 times. “Maddie, Maddie, Maddie, Maddie, Maddie, Maddie…” I was trying to annoy her into submission. No response. Then I remembered she has a really nice bluetooth speaker in her room, so I turned it up loud and took her phone. I’ve been playing music, switching songs randomly. Still nothing. So now it’s on NPR. Can I bore her into cooperation? I doubt it.

Because for better or worse, submission isn’t really in her makeup. She is a tough nut to crack. You are probably thinking, “Well, you should try this! It works for me.” Guess what? I have probably tried everything that’s not abusive. I’ve tried being overly nice, being flexible, being threatening, being tough. I have tried having her write me an essay about why she should go to school. I have to admit, that worked in one way. She didn’t go to school, but I sure made her day miserable. It literally took me the entire school day to manage that endeavor, with lots of tears and crying and arguing and anger and frustration on her part. I stuck to my guns. I was proud of myself for doing that. But I think I was equally miserable. And that’s really the only thing I accomplished: making us both miserable. I don’t think she learned anything, nor would her misery that day ever translate into changed behavior another day. That’s our challenge.

10:17 am.: Tbe NPR news ended. Now I’ve turned on an NPR podcast called “Alt Latino.” Oh, it’s in English so far. I hoped it would be in Spanish. Maybe that would drive her crazy.

Ha! I just heard the speaker go off. That means she at least got out of bed to walk across her room. I’m sure she’s horizontal again.

She isn’t. She’s sitting up.

“Are you flat out refusing to go to school?” I ask.

She nods. “I’m hungry.”

“I made your breakfast and lunch. You can warm it up.”

Okay, I give up for today. I will keep her screens hidden away. She will surely find something to do to pass the time. I don’t want her to sleep more, though, or she’ll suffer tonight and we’ll be back at square one tomorrow.

Wish me luck, people.

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