Back on the Horse

It’s been several months since I’ve written. I’m not completely certain why I’ve had such a dry spell. Certainly life has continued to provide challenges, failures, successes, more questions–with or without answers–and even some adventure.

I have my suspicions, though.

This blog has been primarily about raising Maddie. And in the last several months, although she has provided many an interesting moment, there have been some other serious issues on my mind, and I didn’t want to necessarily write about them.

One is my health. I’m one of those people who always has an issue. Or two. Or three. It’s my back. And migraines. And terrible allergies. And unexplained and ongoing gut issues. And my ankles are messed up. And I have an allergy-related sleep apnea that makes me so tired all the time. I might sleep for ten hours and still feel exhausted all day. It sucks. I’m slowly trying to address all of those things, but I’ve found it hard to say, stick to a Pilates schedule when my stomach hurts so bad all the time. I’m finally figuring that one out, so maybe it’s time for those Pilates classes again. And yes, I have to do something like Pilates where I’m less likely to aggravate my ankle or back or hip or whatever. I have one of those bodies.

Second is my marriage. It’s a struggle sometimes. Statistics show a greater risk of divorce among couples with special needs children. Boy, ain’t that the truth. As if being parents isn’t hard enough, you throw in some extra challenges that nobody’s really equipped to deal with, and you’re rolling the dice.

Third is the other kid. Our son. He’s almost 14. He’s such a cool human being. I’ve been challenged with two completely opposite children, so parenting each one is an adventure, to put it nicely. H is intelligent, thoughtful, philosophical, and deep. Sounds awesome, right? Well, those qualities are admirable and desirable and all that good stuff, but parenting a kid like that is hard. He can argue you into a corner, for one thing. And he never ever gives up. While I admire his persistence, sometimes it’s just exhausting. More on him later, though.

Also my parents. I love my mom and dad. They live about 45 minutes from us. I wish they were closer. So I could help them. On the other hand, they’re not super great at accepting help (like mother, like daughter, I’m afraid). My dad has suffered from debilitating depression and anxiety for many years. My therapist thinks he’s agoraphobic, among other things. The word “bipolar” has reared its ugly head of late. I suspect he has some PTSD from a few episodes from his younger life. Whatever the diagnosis, and whatever the cause, he is severely disabled. He rarely leaves the house. It’s too stressful. Just riding in the car is often more than he can bear. He hasn’t driven for years even though he is only just turning 70. So I worry about my dad. But even more so, I worry for my mom. She is a doer. A worker. A creator. She likes to make things, so for several years she has been sewing items to sell at a local consignment store. Or two. Or three. She also refinishes furniture and makes things like framed chalkboards for kids’ rooms. She cooks up a storm, too. She recently completely re-landscaped their front yard so it’s more drought-friendly. She likes to be industrious. She has also spent her life without a lot of extra money, so when something needs doing, she does it, for the most part, rather than paying somebody else to do it. Every once in awhile, there is something beyond her scope (particularly since becoming permanently partially disabled some years ago because of chronic wrist pain in both arms) and she’ll have to hire somebody. But her go-to is “just do it.” How do a person who can’t do anything and a person who only wants to do things live together? Guess what? The doer, my mom, adjusts her life to suit the other. There is a lot of going nowhere. Particularly because Mom worries about what might happen when she’s gone. Dad’s just not reliably level-headed anymore. I want to help them so desperately, but it seems to be out of my hands. I want my dad to be well and, even if he can’t be well, I want my mom to have a life.

So I’ve been distracted, I guess. And I haven’t felt compelled, or maybe just comfortable, putting all this in writing. I don’t want to “expose” anyone. I also don’t want to make this blog a tribute to all my problems, and most of all I think some of this stuff is kind of private. At least the other parties involved might think so.

And then there’s Maddie. She’s still exactly Maddie. She’s at camp right now, the camp she absolutely lives for the rest of the year. When we were anticipating a New York-London trip we took last month, I asked her if she was excited. “Meh,” she said. “CAMP!” That pretty much sums up her experience of our trip (another blog or two will cover that). She just wanted to get it over with and go to camp. So right now I can rest easy knowing she’s in her happy place. She’s probably filthy and she probably has terrible B.O., but it’s out of my hands, and isn’t that a beautiful thing!

And before that, of course, the infamous school year (the actual “Year of Living Hopefully”) came to a close. More on that in another entry, too.

So today I’m back. I remember now that I can write and I like to write and I have something to say. A lot of somethings to say.

The story continues.

Thanks for a Bunch of Stuff

It’s the day before Thanksgiving. I’m busy cooking away. The first thing I’m thankful for, though, is that I’m not hosting. Several years ago I made my first and last Thanksgiving turkey. That sucker was vile, in my opinion. I have decided that any meat I eat needs to look as little as possible like the animal from which it came. I should probably be a vegetarian, but a little meat here and there is just so darned delicious. Especially bacon. And not so much turkey, anyway.

I’m also making spaghetti with meat sauce for tonight’s dinner. I discovered I like cooking so much more when (1) it feels totally optional, (2) lots of people are going to eat it and hopefully rave about my cooking, (3) I don’t have to clean up (that remains to be seen), and (4) I have music to listen to. Jamming to my Amazon Prime streaming music on the Amazon Echo (product plug!), so tonight it’s all good.

I have hosted Thanksgiving since what I will call the Turkey Incident (only because a turkey happened here), but I had vowed that any turkey served at my house must arrive here already cooked. Or at least not seen or handled raw by me. And, as it turned out, everybody was up for something different anyway, so I made filet mignon one year and meatballs in a creamy tomato sauce last year. Both were delicious and I don’t think anybody missed the usual fare. Also most people probably had it elsewhere on another day, so I didn’t feel bad at all.

We will be having the whole turkey business tomorrow, but today I’m just making about 172 pounds of  Brussels sprouts (with bacon!), chocolate chip cookies, and some guacamole. And then we get to drive about 45 minutes to mess up somebody else’s house. I’m stoked.

The second thing I’m thankful for is my weird and wonderful family. I often despair that my kids are such polar opposites that doing anything together as a family is a real challenge. Tempers flare on those occasions, too. It can be stressful and depressing for me as the mom. But one thing we all do together so well is laugh. We love to crack jokes, make sarcastic comments, dance funny dances and play slightly inappropriate card games (now that we have teens in the house, that is). We laugh so much. Humor has always been central to my life experience. I would rather laugh or make you laugh or laugh at myself than just about anything. And we do that. A lot.

This applies to my extended family as well. Whenever we get together, my niece Maggie makes sure we play some games. A year or two ago we started playing a game (it’s really just more of an activity because nobody wins or loses). Everybody has a paper and pen and for two minutes everybody writes the beginning of a story. When the time is up, everybody passes their paper to the left and the next person continues where the previous person left off. Everyone writes furiously for two minutes. And in the end we inevitably have a collection of stories that range from funny to tear-inducingly hilarious. It turns out everybody in my family is not only hilarious but also creative. You can usually tell what Maddie wrote because she often gets stuck on a phrase (for a long time it was “flaring butt cheeks”). And I always thought I was the funny one. 😦

(An extra little shout=out of gratitude for my niece, Rachel, who is gracing my life with her wonderful self right now.)

I’m also thankful for the family I married into. I am one of those lucky women who adores her mother-in-law. It’s mutual, it’s safe to say. She’s kind and fun and honest and open and a true friend. She and my father-in-law have always treated me with such kindness, love and respect. I’m proud to be part of that family.

I’m also thankful for all my friends. My life is full of the best women. My oldest friendship is with Melinda–34 years of friendship and counting. She and her husband Jonathan successfully played matchmaker about 19 years ago, and the result is my marriage of 17 years (so far) and two crazy kids. Another result is a four-way friendship among us that is one of the greatest joys of my life. Jonathan is my husband’s childhood friend, so the history between us is unusual and deep. Our families are intertwined and our friendships are the best combination of friendship and family. We spent the evening together last weekend, and, as always, I laughed and laughed. I also didn’t want to stop hugging them.

I have so many wonderful friendships, and that term is really meaningful to me. Friendship means a close connection, being there in spirit if not in body. It means holding the other person wherever they may be. It means doing what you can to help, whether it’s picking up their kids, hanging out having an afternoon glass of wine while we try to solve each other’s problems, or sending a message of support in difficult times even if there are 3,000 miles between us. From the friends I made in high school and college and grad school across the country, to all the awesome women I’ve met through my children, I love and cherish them all.

I have so many other things to be thankful for. This beautiful place I live in, the community I’ve become so much a part of, the resources to help our special needs kid (we are SO lucky), a roof over my head, food on the table. I have everything I need and so much more. Despite the stress I write about so much (and it is real), the truth is I’m very happy. I have so much to be grateful for. And every day, not just today, I am grateful.

Last week I was snuggling up with my seventh-grader at bedtime. “We talked about gratitude in class today,” he told me. “Studies show that people who are grateful are happier.” He clarified: “It’s not that happy people are more grateful. It’s being grateful that makes you happy.”

I think he can move onto eighth grade now. Or maybe straight into adulthood. He has learned the biggest lesson of all. Focus on gratitude, and you will be happier.

So Happy Thanksgiving, all. May the gratitude you feel tomorrow and throughout the season stay with you forever. And may you laugh tomorrow at least half as much as I will.

She Remembers

One of Maddie’s gifts is her nearly infallible memory. It was evident when she was a toddler and would wipe the floor with me playing that game where you turn over cards to find matches. I never beat her, not once. Occasionally I would come close to a tie, but mostly the scores would be so lopsided it was ridiculous. Thirty-two pairs to four, perhaps. And I was trying! I really was!

And then there was the USA map puzzle, which she mastered before she could really talk.

When we were in the car, she would recognize the neighborhood we were in. “Lily’s house!” she would shout, even though were a couple streets away. She was only two.

This weekend I decided to bite the bullet and drive her to my sister’s house. I love being there, and I’m so happy to get the cousins/best friends together, but traffic can be a bear. A 45-minute drive might be twice that. Each way. You never know. Sure enough, about half way there, traffic came to a dead stop.

“I know Grammy takes a different way sometimes, but I don’t know the way,” I thought aloud.

“Take San Antonio Road,” said Maddie. “It’s by the dump. You’ll be on a road parallel to the freeway for a few miles and then get back on.”

“That’s what Grammy does?” I asked.

“Well, she did it once.”

“How do you remember that, Maddie?” I asked in amazement. “Most people wouldn’t even notice.”

“Well, other people aren’t as curious as I am,” she said.

So true. She’s remarkably observant, and those observations permanently reside in that brain of hers. It’s astonishing.

She continued giving me back-street directions. If only she could drive, she would know her way around two counties. Maybe someday.

Recently she had a science test. Her teacher had sent out an email to all the parents, letting us know that he had provided a 3X5 card to each student on which they could take notes for the upcoming test. I asked Maddie if she needed help preparing her notes.

“I’m not doing that,” she replied. “I don’t need to.”

“Well, Maddie, as you get further along in school, there will be more and more information and it’ll become increasingly complicated. I think you should do it.”

“I’ll remember. I’m not doing it.”

The conversation fizzled out, and in my usual way, I forgot about it. A few days later, I remembered, but it was too late for the test.

“How did your science test go?” I asked.

“Fine,” she answered. She hadn’t gotten the results yet.

A couple weeks later, I inquired about the results.

Calmly Maddie reported, “Well there were 40 points. I got 38.”

“Okay,” I laughed. “I guess you were right.”

So what could I say then? She has never studied for a test. Ever. She gets A’s on math and science tests. Always. She might not get an A in the class, but that’s because she isn’t consistent with her homework. She just doesn’t necessarily do it. I don’t know if she’s doing her homework from one night to the next. Maybe her grades will be good. Maybe they won’t.

But I know for sure she’s learning. I remember memorizing facts for tests and then two days later I couldn’t remember much, and today I can’t remember any of it. She doesn’t study and she remembers everything! She knows all kinds of plants and trees and related facts. She knows about the weather and space. She has an encyclopedic knowledge of the complicated anime show she watches.

She’s incredible.

As challenging as she can be at times, she is so much more than her diagnosis. She has some wonderful gifts. Her memory is one of them. And thank goodness for that!

A Little Time Off

You may have noticed I haven’t blogged for several days. It’s kind of a good news/bad news thing.

The good news is I had the company of my sister and her adult niece for the past few days, and nothing fills me up like spending time with those ladies. It was just days of the kind of girly fun I don’t get to have with Maddie, who would rather do just about anything than shop and get her nails done. Plus, I’m very close to my sister and her kids, so I was in heaven. I even went out for the evening with them once, having some true time off while my husband was home getting everyone to bed.

The bad news is I was just too tired to write. Tired of parenting. Tired as in “I-can’t-do-it-one-more-day-so-I-give-up-for-now” tired.

And that is because Maddie hasn’t been going to school this week. Well, okay, she missed two days, went one day, and is now in bed again. She’s not one hundred percent healthy, that’s for sure. Maybe she has a mild cold, maybe allergies, but something is going on in the sinus area. Nothing dramatic, but she is not completely well.

Nor has she appeared especially sick.

But this week I just didn’t have the fight in me. I tried some gentle encouragement and even, today, a reminder about the purpose of this year. But that was it. Once I was convinced she had made her up mind, I quit. I just can’t do it. I can’t fight with her, or wrestle her pants on her, or even make that big of a deal about it. I am depleted and temporarily defeated.

So I guess we’re both taking some time off this week. For me, it’s time off from the emotional and mental struggle, and even some time off from thinking about it all. So everything took a back seat, including my writing. As much as I love writing this blog, and as gratifying as it is, it does force me to spend some serious time pontificating about my situation and focusing a bit on my daily struggles, and this week I just needed to forget about it. Yesterday, when my moment of victory arrived after getting both my kids to school (the other one just broke his finger, so both of them were home the day before yesterday), I was happy. I was triumphant. When both my kids have gone to school, I figure everything else I accomplish that day is a bonus. Laundry? Bonus! Dinner? Bonus! Making my bed? Bonus! I deserve a brownie!

So today, there is no bonus in play. I will take my son to the orthopedist for his fractured finger, and then take him to school. Then I have my weekly therapy, which has been on hiaitus for a few weeks. Seems like a good time for that. Apparently I have some things to discuss. And then I do get a bonus – a movie with a new friend. The trick will be enjoying myself, not because of the company (which will be excellent!), and not because of the movie choice (rave reviews!), but because I’ll be sitting there feeling like I failed today. Okay, maybe not failed, but didn’t accomplish the single most important thing I needed to today. My number one job: getting my kids to school. Okay, maybe it’s number three after keeping them alive and loving them. But those are easy. The whole school thing is hard, and I never know how it’s going to go.

I also blew it by forgetting about this morning’s agenda and waking up my son at the normal time instead of letting him sleep in. We’re going to his doctor appointment first, so we had a good 45 minutes extra this morning. So I got up at 6:30 for nothing. That stinks too. I really could have used a bit more sleep.

So in the absence of school attendance success, I have now decided on my goal for today: to be happy. To be grateful. To be proud of all that we do accomplish around here. To recognize Maddie’s strengths and not focus on her challenges. To be positive about the future. To accept the different circumstances we have as a family and embrace the good that comes of them.

And honestly, that gratitude is not hard to come by for me. I am a lucky, lucky person. I know it every day. I have a loving family, both in the one I have created and in the one I come from. I live in a beautiful place. We have everything we need, and then some. We have the resources to get all the help we can think of for Maddie. I even get a weekly therapy session to help me cope. Talk about a luxury!

As for my gratitude for Maddie, that’s easy too. Most of the time I’m in awe of her.

Yesterday a friend stopped by to borrow something, and she’d had a challenging day. I don’t know if Maddie sensed my friend’s emotional state, but she offered my friend a hug. And Maddie is a world-champion hugger. Big, tight, meaningful, long hugs. Often just at the right moment. My friend’s face and body relaxed. “I needed that,” she said. And she really had needed that.

So even though Maddie isn’t going to school today, I am still grateful for her. She’s a remarkable human being, full of compassion and love, empathy and intuition.

I will give her the day off and I will take one too. A day of from worrying, a day off from guilt, a day off from fear. I will enjoy my day, knowing I have raised a kid who may not be a devoted student, but who is a wonderful human being. I will give her a big, tight, meaningful, long hug and tell her that I love her.

A Tale of Gratitude

The last few days there has been a massive fire raging in two nearby counties. Tens of thousands of acres are in flames, several hundred houses have burned to the ground. There was so little warning that some people were literally driving through fire for miles with only the clothes in their backs trying to escape. I can only imagine the intensity of grief mixed with relief and gratitude when they reached safety.

There are entire blocks of homes decimated by the fire. Across the street all the houses may have been spared. Maybe an entire block. Maybe only one house on that block still stands.

At least one person has died in the fire. A few people are missing.

The randomness of it all, I’m sure, hasn’t gone unnoticed by residents of that area. And it would be difficult to feel especially happy to have your home standing when all your neighbors have been devastated.

It has been painful to watch footage on TV and the internet. I’m not sure how somebody recovers from that. But they do.

And this all makes me think of two things. First, I am filled with gratitude. We are nowhere near the fire (at least not this one). I have never experienced the fear and confusion of such loss. My pets are here, my family is here, my friends are here. We are OK. We have everything we need, and as far as I can imagine, we that will all continue. But you never know.

A couple of weeks ago, when my husband and son were away for the weekend, Maddie and I were sitting quietly at home on a Saturday night when all of our smoke alarms began to sound. They are wired so that if one goes off, they ALL do automatically. It’s a good system, safety-wise, but pretty annoying when the cause is a steamy shower or my failure to turn on the fan when I’m cooking. Which I do regularly.

But this time nothing was happening. I was in my room putting laundry away. Maddie was in her room on her computer. I looked all around the house, opened the windows and doors as I usually do, but nothing would end the incessant, ear-splitting sound of those alarms. So, I thought, just to be safe, I’d call the fire department. What if something was smoldering in the walls?  I just needed those alarms to stop, and I truly believed there was nothing to worry about.

And there wasn’t. The firefighters arrived, did a thermal scan of the house, and while they were inside, the alarms magically ceased. I was calm and completely unfazed by the whole thing. Maddie and I took the dogs back inside and resumed our quiet evening.

Imagine the opposite happening. There is a fire in the distance. There is no report that you are in danger, no rush to evacuate. And then suddenly it’s almost too late. You are leisurely packing your family in the car to beat the fire, and then your house is engulfed in flames and you barely have time to get out. There are more than a few stories like that.

My life has been uneventful in that way, and for that I am grateful. My closest brush with death, if you want to call it that, was a rather harrowing boat ride in the Caribbean. Our boat was a little too small for the swelling seas, and although we made it safely to our destination, I wasn’t sure it was going to happen. I’m not a strong swimmer, so I kept imagining that if the boat capsized, I was going to be in trouble. But once it was all over, everything was fine. Nobody had even lost any sunglasses. It was eventful, to be sure, but in the end we were just left with memories of a potential problem. We all went home, had dinner and went to bed, and got up the next morning as if nothing had happened.

Second, I am reminded of the unpredictability of life. Some houses were hit by the fire. Others were not. The fire apparently started near a shed at someone’s home, according to reports. The shed looks relatively undamaged, but how unlucky for all those who lived in the path of destruction, whose lives were normal and potentially happy one day, and then in chaos the next. One day they’re making dinner at home, the next day they’re in a tent village set up for victims. One day they’re lamenting their wardrobes, and the next they’re wishing they had just another set of clothes to put on and maybe something to sleep in. One day they’re wondering how to pay the vet bills, and the next they’re searching for their dog lost in the fire.

When we first began the journey with Maddie, she was a little over 18 months old. It was overwhelming and a little frightening, to be honest. I was suddenly the mom of a kid who needed help. I hadn’t attached the words “special needs” to my child, but obviously she had them or we wouldn’t have been going to appointments every day of the week.

One of the many professionals we saw was a physical therapist, a service provided by the Marin County Office of Education. Any child who qualifies can receive free services, regardless of financial need. It’s part of the early intervention program that has proven so effective.

At first, Maddie wasn’t walking. She was awfully big to be crawling still, and sometimes it was embarrassing. Like that time I took her to a children’s concert at the Discovery Museum, and I overheard one mom say to another, pointing at Maddie, “She’s too big to be crawling!” She seemed disgusted…or something. I was probably three feet away. I felt terrible.

But then I got to the physical therapy classroom, and Maddie stood out in a different way. She was cute and smart and interested. And she was largely capable, just physically behind in her gross and fine motor skills. Many of the other kids I saw were in high-tech contraptions that supported their entire bodies, from their feet to their chins. They were kids that weren’t able to engage, either socially or physically. What I had to do with Maddie was just work, but I was confident she would catch up eventually.

I wondered if the other parents looked on us with envy, wondering what my cute little toddler was doing there. And once she started walking, I can’t imagine she looked disabled at all.

And there you have it, I thought to myself. I never once felt sorry for myself or lamented the work I had to do. But there were times when I was awfully tired and sometimes discouraged. And yet, it became clear, things could be a whole lot more difficult. I do not have a child that requires round-the-clock care, I recognized. She never required a machine of any kind to assist her, and she never would. She wasn’t talking yet, but I always had confidence that would come. And it has.

No matter your life circumstances, there is always somebody who has it worse, who has lost more, whose challenges are greater than yours. Maybe you lost your house, but the neighbor lost their home AND their dog. Or even a family member. Maybe you can’t pay your mortgage this month, but somebody, maybe even a neighbor, is going hungry.

For a child on the autism spectrum, Maddie is very high functioning. She is light and bright and friendly. She is happy and confident. You might not even realize she has Asperger’s. You might just think she’s quirky. And people like her! She has required a lot of help to get here, but she is here. And her life will continue to improve.

Today I picked Maddie up from school to give her a break from her often long cab ride home. Her special ed teacher was waiting with her and some of her classmates until they were all dispatched properly. As I pulled up, he waved at me. I rolled down my window. We were both feeling good about how Maddie is doing at her new school. “She’s doing great!” said Mr. L. “She’s coming to school every day!” He smiled and gave me a thumbs up.

“Yes!” I  agreed. “It’s going very well.” I had asked her this morning if she felt as if she were in the right place. She nodded and smiled a smile of content.

Even during the most difficult times–and there have been some VERY difficult times–I have so much to be grateful for. I have a kid with challenges, but she’s doing OK. And we have the resources to help her. We have an extended family who loves us. We have a home in a wonderful neighborhood. We have each other.

Life is good.

The Magic of Tuesdays

Well, at least this Tuesday was magic.

The prior two Tuesdays, Maddie wouldn’t go to school. At all. My friend mentioned last week that Tuesdays are hard for her, too, because she really felt like the week was underway but there’s still a lot of it left. She really feels the work load of the week on Tuesday. I guess the weight of the week feels heaviest at that point. I’d never thought of it that way. Maybe that’s also true for Maddie. I don’t know that she could articulate it that well (my friend is an EXCELLENT articulator of her feelings), but it’s an interesting theory.

Unfortunately Tuesday will always be Tuesday. It will almost always be the second day of the school week, and likely the second day of her work week, so there’s no way around it. However much you might hate Tuesdays (or Mondays or whatever), you still have to get up and go. You have to do it anyway!

Since Monday was a day off, Tuesday was more like a Monday this week, and now it’s a Wednesday, so it seems we have escaped the Tuesday problem for once!

I will call the last two days successes on all fronts. Yesterday was a bit stressful as Maddie got up at the last minute and I had to put her shoes on her feet and tie them, in the interest of time. And homework was a little bit of a struggle because we were both pretty tired in the afternoon.  Even though yesterday was a bit stressful, I got her to school, which is my ultimate goal. And I didn’t have to lose my temper, which is a close second. Maybe they’re tied for first!

Today she got up in plenty of time and we had a leisurely morning. She was able to sit and eat breakfast and brush her hair and go outside before her taxi came. Woohoo! And then this evening she did her homework willingly, took a shower when she was asked (there were a couple new rolls of duct tape at stake, which helped). And she even stopped in the middle of an important project (using duct tape, of course) to get ready for bed. She was cheerful and cooperative and adorable and charming. Right now she’s upstairs singing loudly to a Florence and the Machine song. Life is good.

Maddie doesn’t know why she was motivated today, so there’s no way to know how to repeat our success. I just rejoice in the good days, as always.

Of course I’m kidding about any magic being involved with any of this. Everyone has good days and bad days. We all hesitate to get out of bed sometimes, or eschew responsibilities because we’re just not up to taking them on. There may be an identifiable reason. Or not.

We’re working on pushing through those times. Just doing it anyway.  I guess those are the days I should really rejoice in–the ones when she’s reluctant and tired but gets up anyway. When she’s too tired, but does her homework anyway. Those are the days when Maddie will learn grit, and learn to do it anyway.

When she was younger, writing anything at all was probably her worst enemy. I think there were just too many aspects to conquer – both thinking up what to write, and then the physical act of writing it down. Her fine motor skills were weak and her pencil grip was terrible, so her hand would get fatigued quickly. And abstract thinking of any kind was nearly impossible for her. So when she would come home with a writing assignment, the homework session would inevitably dissolve into panic and tears. A blank piece of paper was the worst possible thing she could face.

So I figured something out to help her: Fold the piece of paper in half. Then the blank paper looked more manageable. I called it “Maddie-sized.” That seemed to relieve some of the stress, at least enough to allow her to write down something. Anything, even if it wasn’t much or wasn’t particularly good. My goal was to get her over the hump, to let her build enough confidence to not be so paralyzed by this very important activity.

Over the years, she has developed a passion for writing. Can you believe it? She still isn’t crazy about expository writing, or any kind of compulsory writing. But she spends her time in the taxi writing stories on her phone. It can be an awfully long ride, so I offered to pick her up from school instead, but she insists she likes it. She enjoys the writing time. That is what I call a success!

And that is how I look at our journey together. Success doesn’t lie in the things that come easily. It also doesn’t necessarily lie in conquering something, achieving anything, or winning anything. Success comes when times are tough and you make it through. When you think you can’t do something but try it anyway. When you are afraid, and then you try it and eventually find out you might even like it.

It also comes in building a solid relationship with your kid. “You’re adorable,” I tell Maddie. “You are too,” she says to me. She smiles and hugs me tightly, making sure both of us are standing up for the maximum possible contact. We squeeze each other. We appreciate each other. And we both know it. I guess if I never make any more progress with Maddie, I can still be proud of that. And happy.

So this week has been successful. I’m happy and proud and hopeful. More successes will come if we keep trying. Maybe this will be one of those times when good days turn into an entire good week. But if not, that’s OK. We’ll keep plugging away.