Autism x 2 {Part 1} ….

Sometime in college, I got this feeling like I was going to have a special needs child. No, really – I did. The feeling was so strong that I had decided at one point that I didn’t want to have kids. Over time, the “want” part changed, but I was scared to death of having a special needs child. I was afraid I would be a horrible a mother to a child that had needs that exceeded those of a typical child. I remember once my husband and I were engaged, I told him my gut had told me for over 10 years that special needs was in my future. As my witness, he will tell you what I said. I’m guessing that he didn’t believe me.

It’s funny now. Who knew I would be my own prophet! Of course the “special needs” I had pictured was something completely different. But none the less, I’m exactly where I had thought I would be and there is not a day that goes by that I’m not scared – for my children, not me.

Lonnie and I were married in November of 2002. I worked at a dental office {that I loved and miss daily!} He worked full time at Home Depot as their district trainer. Other than a couple of years in his adult life, he had been either in the Tennessee Army National Guard or Army Reserves. At the time of our wedding, he was in the Reserves. Since it was a year after 9-11, he was called up for a deployment. Not what I was expecting. But hey, it was just me and a diabetic cat he was leaving behind – we would be fine.

The inoculations were insane – to include Anthrax. {I’m including this in the story. Do I think it caused Autism – no. Did it contribute – I have absolutely no idea.} Fortunately, Lonnie stayed state side the entire time and never went over seas. He came home in the summer of 2003 and wasn’t long afterwards he left the Reserves and went back to the Guard. The next step was AGR {a full-timer and not just the one weekend out of the month and two weeks out of the summer soldier.} We have never looked back.

The following summer {2004} we were pregnant.

I did it all by the book. I gained only five pounds the first trimester. I ate incredibly healthy. My real cravings were salads and onion soup. I drank {too much} water and an occasional Sprite. Eventually, the water caught up to me and I ended up gaining a whopping 51 pounds. Five foot and 168 – I was short and round! But the pregnancy had zero morning sickness and went incredibly smooth. Other than failing my first glucose test and barely passing the second one, I had NO problems.

We were having a boy. Hudson Wyatt Wheeler. He was due 05-05-05. I was stoked. The ultrasound showed a perfect baby. And I was ready to meet the joker.

On Thursday, April 28th, I had what was going to be my final doctor’s appointment. When I got there, my blood pressure was elevated. It was weird because my blood pressure had been almost exactly the same exact numbers every single time, so we knew this wasn’t right. My doctor was concerned and I was clueless. She told me to go on over to the hospital, it was time to have a baby. I went back to work and began end of month statements, because it was the end of the month and the world would stop spinning if I didn’t get those statements out on time. Looking back, my only regret is that  I wished I would have put a blanket message on all the statements that said something like I’m supposed to be at the hospital having a baby at this very moment, instead I’m sending you your bill! I hope this makes you feel obligated to pay it! And my boss would have probably loved it if I had! Live and learn.

I did make it to the hospital around 5ish. By 9 pm my water broke. At 3 am, I was begging for an epidural. Around 10 am, I began pushing. I had a healthy 7 lb 4 oz baby boy within 30 minutes. The world stopped. He was perfect.

He never left my side except for the testing and all the other little stuff they do to newborns the first few days. I had planned to breast feed and prayed like crazy I could and he would! After the typical 2 days, we were released to go home.

Before I had my own children, I worked with kids all the time. I did daycare, babysat every weekend and I nannied. Seriously, I knew kids. But I was glad to finally have my own.

I decided early on that Baby Beethoven was my best friend. I could really get something done with some Baby Beethoven playing. And it was that Baby Bee that caused me to notice something I thought was strange enough to make a mental note. Hudson would be setting in his bouncy seat or laying on his back on the floor and I would hand him the DVD case. Because of the way I was standing, I would hand it to him upside down. And every time, he would immediately turn it right side up. I don’t mean a casual turn right side up. I’m talking about if I would have handed another grown adult an upside down DVD case and without nothing but a glance, the adult would flip the case in the right position. Yes, Hudson would do this. Every single time. At first, I thought it was flukey. But then I would hand him other cases, sometimes right side up and other times, upside down. There was not a single time he ever got it wrong. And again, it would be with a quick glance and it would be flipped immediately. It was nuts. And he was about 3 months old. I knew that was NOT normal. But what was I supposed to say to my pediatrician? Nothing.

Around six months old, Hudson would be sitting in the floor with toys around him. He would get really disturbed and scream uncontrollably if it was a modge podge of toys. They had to be from the same collection of toys. Or all the pieces to a puzzle. Or just a set in general. He loved the ring stacker. You know the one – the classic fisher price ring stacker.

These days, the yellow post is the same size from top to bottom. So, you can stack the rings in any order. Did I find it weird that my 5 month old never stacked them any other way than what is considered the true and correct way? Yes, a little. But what was I supposed to say to my pediatrician? Nothing.

Around this same time, Hudson could only be soothed one way – I had bought a CD set at Wal-mart or Target. It was a collection of children’s songs that we all grew up with. There were 20 or so songs on each CD and 4 CDs total. Most of them had children singing with an adult singing as well. The first one on the first CD was Wheels on the Bus. The first verse was sang by one child and no music. And then the music would begin with the adult and other children. He would freakin’ scream his head off. I would instantly back up the song to just the one child singing and he would almost fall asleep. But let those other kids start back up – WHAM, back to wailing. I figured out quickly that if he was ever irritable, I could pop in that CD and play that 22 seconds over and over and he was happy! Most parents gave their cranky kids a bath to make them feel better. I was blasting a really whiny rendition of Wheels on the Bus. I ask again, what was I supposed to say to my pediatrician?

Once he started crawling and could really scooch along, we really started noticing some little oddities that were very interesting! The biggest one was his matching abilities. We had these fat letter and number magnets on the refrigerator. He would crawl up to it. Grab the “O” and the zero. With one in each hand, he would flick each one out in front of him and then crawl after them. If the zero was missing, he would grab the “Q”. I guess they matched to some degree – “O” and “Q” or he would grab the one and “l.” Anything that would match would work. And the world was right if he actually had a real match – the same thing AND it was the same color. He would sleep with real matching things. Matching items would soothe him. It was the craziest thing ever!

And puzzles – I knew I was raising a nerd if you could see how quick and amazing he could work a puzzle. As weird as it all was, I was proud that he seemed so bright! Although, I had the underlying fear something else was going on. And I had a really good guess as to what it was.

There was other stuff.

  • He stared at his hands {all the time!} He watched how they moved and he would move them in weird ways.
  • He would line up toys.
  • He would spin the wheels on his little cars over and over and just stare at them as if he was getting lost in the spinning.
  • He hated swinging. And it would get ugly!
  • He wouldn’t drink out of a cup unless it had set out for long periods of time because the condensation killed him.

Then there was stuff that scared me.

  • He didn’t seem to know his name.
  • He didn’t say anything.
  • Anything loud would fa-Reak him out. The Happy Birthday song was the worst {and still is.}
  • A tooth brush – NEVER made it in his mouth the first year {or second year} of his life.
  • He started getting really picky about his food. And not your typical toddler picky stage – I’m talking about whole food groups missing completely from his diet.

I know that these things don’t mean a child has autism, but a combination of them sort of leans in that direction.

Then it happened – it was the summer of 06 and Hudson had just had his first birthday – Oprah had  the episode with Jenny McCarthey and her experience with her son and autism. I broke down. I knew. I had known. Literally as soon as the episode was over, one of my best friends called to check in. She had recently moved to Atlanta and we would call in periodically to see what was happening. She told me to hang up and call my pediatrician immediately.

And that is just what I did.

{to be continued ….}

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About Kim
I picked up a paint brush for the first time 7 years ago, and haven't put it down since. My goal - To paint a canvas for my son's nursery. I never dreamed a business would be born out of it. {And if you saw the first canvas, you would think the same thing, too!}

Comments

  1. Lacy says:

    As I read your blog, I feel as though I hear my sister talking about her second child. After lots of encouragement, she had him tested, and he was diagnoised with Aspergers Syndrome, in the autism spectrum. It was a difficult in the beginning, but at 11 years old he has come leaps and bounds. He is still has his moments, but he is a great student and excels in school. You are a wonderful mom!!! As you have always known, you would be parent to a special needs child. I can assure you that is takes special people to take care of special child. You got this!

  2. Jeanette says:

    Thank you for sharing this! I am completely sucked into your story and am just on the edge of my seat, waiting to hear “the rest of the story.” My son was diagnosed with autism at age three, and it was so similar to your story – all the oddities were there, and then I saw an episode of “Parenthood” where one of the kids has Aspergers. I watched the episode three times over, saying to myself, “That is just like my David.” and it prompted a call to my pediatrician and here we are two years later, navigating the crazy world of autism.

    It’s always good to know people that have “been there” and even more importantly, “are there.” Again, thanks for sharing!

  3. My friend went through the very same thing with her son. Being a teacher, she thought she could start teaching her son a few things and get ahead of the game, but things didn’t go as planned. He wasn’t catching on to simple things. By the time he was two, they had him tested and the result was autism.
    To this day, she thinks back trying to find the cause; reads research reports and books about autism. Her husband is much older and for a while was thinking the age difference could have caused it. She’s very careful with pesticides and chemicals in her house, and is healthy eater. In other words, she took every precaution while pregnant.
    Today, he’s in middle school and doing well. He still has food issues, but is thriving. The first week of school he had a meltdown because he didn’t have enough time to eat his lunch. He came home very upset. I didn’t know this, but there’s an 800 number available for autistic kids who need to talk about issues or situations, that is what he did because he wouldn’t talk to his parents about it. Everything turned out well in the end.
    Reading your story is like reading a page out of my friend’s life.
    And FYI, it only gets better, of course there will be challenges, but that’s basically life for everyone. :-)
    I can’t wait to read part 2.

  4. lisa says:

    Your photos are fantastic! What an adorable boy!

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