Sunday, December 29, 2013

So what does it take to break you?  What thing makes you throw up your hands and say, "that's it!  I've had enough?"  Why do I ask?  Well I continue to be stunned by what the final straw is for some people.  People who need a bigger house, or ones who buy a dream home and are now stressed to the max cause they can't sell the old one.  People whose kids need speech therapy because their child says "wabbit" instead of rabbit.  They are crushed and desperate.  It's hard for me in those moments of sharing.  I try hard to just say nothing, it's best if I keep my life to myself.  In my worst moments of self pity, I think of living in Cambodia, or the tent cities in India.  They would be appalled at what sends me to the edge, right?  So please know, I'm just attempting some perspective for all those who really do want to understand autism, or perhaps who want to understand me.  (God bless both of you?)  LOL

"The worst distance between two people is misunderstanding."

I suppose it's sort of like pain... you get use to it after a while, and then it takes more and more to make you flinch or cry out.  So many children with autism hardly ever complain about the pain they are in.  By the time they are desperate for you to understand that they are in unbearable pain, it's some condition that is way past serious.  For my son it has been Crohns, something that most adults I talk to go to the ER and get morphine for.  Or maybe it's the strep infection that has attacked his brain, and all the antibiotics in the world just won't kill it.   That, THAT sends me pretty close to the edge.  Wondering if he's in unbearable pain, and I don't know it.  Wondering if the last time he bit me or shoved me, if he just was at the edge of endurance himself?  I just want to help him, but how do I know how?  There is NO ONE that can help me figure it out... no one on this earth.

"I was never insane except upon occasions, when my heart was touched."  Edgar Allan Poe

So back to it, what is it for you?  Is it losing your job?  Breaking up with your girlfriend, mean boss that treats you rotten?  What's it take to push you to the edge?  The reason I ask, well I think that sometimes I am just a little shocked by what pushes someone right over the precipice.  It's a miserable marriage, or maybe being behind on your bills, kids that never call, needing to move, maybe all of it at once?
Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying those things aren't stressful, but honestly I'm hard pressed to be sent to the edge by such things. Situations that actually have choices and possible solutions.  I use to be that person, I use to have the luxury of being so, well let's be honest, so spoiled.  The reason, well I live in a house with a beautiful young man who is tortured by autism.  He spent his 23rd birthday hardly aware that it came and went.
Watching autism, participating in the care, and guidance, medical choices and schooling and just life of someone you love, who cannot whisper one word of their frustration and pain... well it's more than life altering.  It's life shattering, how can it be otherwise?

                           "You are so brave and quiet, I forgot you were suffering."  Ernest Hemingway


I'm a control freak by nature.  It's how I was born and how I was raised.  To attempt (however futile) to control my own future, my own destiny.  It's hard not to laugh even as I think about it.
About 26 years ago, I was a very different person.  I was the boss to 34 employees.  I hired and fired, and was confident of my decisions.  I worked out, had low body fat, my house was clean, I cooked good food, and considered myself a woman of excellence.  A typical Type A personality.  But then there was autism.  Over the years so much has changed.  I HAD to let go of all that.  I HAD to realize that the life I had was what I now consider a life of luxury.  I am not attempting to offend anyone, I am attempting to give you a different perspective.  You got sharp edges?  You're a control freak, Autism is here to help sand you down.  During that sanding, you will need to set aside all the things that don't really matter.  All the things that use to mean so much to you, most will sand off rather easily.  Now, they are probably more a hindrance to your new life, than a help.  There is no way to share the lessons you learn in the valley of the shadow.  It's like battle scars, those are yours alone, along with the lessons learned and the muscles built.

"You, he said, are a terribly real thing, in a terribly false world, and that, I believe, is why you are in such pain." 

After 23 years of autism, of struggle, of pain, even I am stunned by how changed I am.  I use to be someone else.  A person who thought she had it mostly figured out.  A person who was a director, a professional.  Heck, I took the Dale Carnegie Course.  LOL  But I have to be honest, I'm not that person anymore.  That person is long gone in the sanding process.  Laying in the sawdust of 23 years of sanding is most of who I use to be, who I thought was the best person I could be.  I suppose I shouldn't laugh, but as I do tears come in my eyes.  I do grieve the loss of who I was, who I could've been on occasion.  Then I remember, God will give us beauty for ashes.  Perhaps hope for sawdust?  I have often realized, I would not even be friends with that woman I use to be.  Ouch!


I don't know why it gets to me.  God wanted me to be the best me.  What HE values, more than what I, value.  He didn't want me to retain pride, envy, selfishness.  He wants to sand that off of each of us,  I apparently require a great deal of sanding.  So many times I feel sore and raw.  This past few months have been long and difficult.  ( I'd believe it if I saw an electric sander in motion.)   My son has had many ups and downs.  He has struggled with illness, with drug side effects, with a new caregiver, with his parents working too much.  Finding a new school after leaving the one he had gone to for 7 years.  New beginnings, so very difficult for those with autism.  People say such nice things to me.  Things like, 'you handle it all so well.  You are so brave!  I could never do what you do."  I so appreciate your kindness, but you are wrong.  I am neither brave nor strong.  I am a mother, who will do whatever is necessary to help her child.  I am, no different than most of you.

Somedays I wonder if I'm just pretending to be handling it all.  Pretending I'm the same person I was before autism.  That I'm NOT a ghost of my former self.
When the holidays come and life with autism just gets that much harder as there are more and more "NORMAL expectations" placed on those with autism... I catch myself wondering if  I had died in the ER more than 20 years ago, while I was doing CPR on my son...am I pretending that I didn't lay down beside my son's convulsing body and just give up.  Yep, pretending, I'm good at that.  I pretend I'm just fine, I pretend I can manage, I pretend that I've got it under control.  I pretend that when I have finally, gut wrenchingly asked someone for help, and they basically slough me off that I'm okay.  Talk about smoke and mirrors.  But somedays I just don't have the energy to pretend anymore.  I'd like to add a giant disclaimer here. ( IF you catch me on one of the days that I forget to pretend, forgive me.  God will give me the strength to pick up my mask before long and we can both pretend I'm okay again. )

"You are free to choose, but you are not free of the consequence of your choice."

  But when I do stop pretending.  No one wants to hear it, even I'm not sure you should hear it.  Honestly, it's not whether you should hear it, it's whether you can be trusted to hear it.   You will think you know something about autism when you don't.  You will think that it's my fault, my husband's fault.  Some ones, anyones elses fault.  Ya know why?  Cause you need someone to blame as much as I do.  You need the Pharmaceutical Industry to be saints.  To be what they were in the beginning when they tried to help people.  Instead of the money whores, and lying drug dealers they have become.  Yep I know that sounds really harsh.   (I'm pretty sure I just said that right out loud.  I'm sure some will be offended.  For those of you who are, I invite you to spend a mere 24 hours with my son, and then you can voice an opinion, having imagined your own child in my sons place.  Frightening isn't it?.)
The companies that place our children on a conveyor belt to death without even wincing.  (I suppose we are "decreasing the surplus population."  Ebnezer Scrooge")
Well here's a bitter piece of the truth, I don't want that to be true.  In spite of the propaganda of the BIG PHARM, parents of kids with autism wish there was a different answer.  Think about it!  It would be so much easier if we had any other answer. Genetics, some hated toxin, even an industrial poison, anything but vaccines.  But unfortunately two plus two continues to equal four, and so here we are.  Struggling and struggling with autism and all the other illnesses that go with it.
Oh didn't you know?  It's not just AUTISM, it's Crohns Disease, and irritable bowel, and Strep infections that never go away, and yeast that won't ever die, terrifying seizures and various other fungus that lodge in our kids guts.  Apparently all kinds of parasites seem to make their home in their intestines, and the list goes on and on.
The aggression and violence that takes place almost always is related to pain these children, and now young adults endure every moment of their lives.  The Nausea of all the meds to help with all the inflammation that causes their intestines to malfunction.  But aggression and violence is just part of the world of most of us.  Most of us have been biten, pinched, punched, shoved, spit on, vomited on, cleaned up more feces than a kennel owner and lost more sleep than most of you reading this blog would be able to believe and maybe not even survive.  I know you're thinking, boy is she laying it out there...  You would be right.  I am so sad, over the struggle of autism, over my friends that I love so much whose children suffer so much from autism.   We have become an army of families.  Families who battle the same enemy.  Fighting for our childrens lives, fighting for the truth to be exposed... to someday save your child, and just praying for any amount of recovery that we can gain.

"Friendship is born at that moment when one person says to another:  what, you too?  I thought I was the only one."  C.S. Lewis

I really did think, hope, pray that as he got older life would get easier.  I hoped.  It hasn't seemed to work out that way.  He is at least as demanding, and certainly big enough to carry out any wants or needs that he is not going to do without.  sighhhhhh  Autism is so hard when their little, and so hard when their big.  At least when their little people SEE a small child and they have some compassion.  When they are big, people see a grown up who is misbehaving, and scary!
 There is no condemnation there, really there isn't.  I was the same way.  EXACTLY THE SAME.  I have no right being angry at anyone who runs from my son, I WOULD HAVE RUN TOO!  I am not excusing the ignorance, I'm just acknowledging that I was ignorant too.  No condemnation, really.

So, as I finish this blog, that I pray at best gives you more understanding, or at worst leaves you shaking your head ...
A very unexpected thing broke me this past month..  We were in a mess of need, and  had no way to pay the gigantic bills that autism creates.  The facility he attends asked us to pull him out.  His caregiver quit, and I lost all my experienced employees over the course of a few months.  We did what we know to do, we cried out to God.  In a matter of a few weeks, someone who did not know our need, stepped up and asked to help us.  (Yep they asked us!  They still do not know that it was God intervening, and using them)  Crazy as it sounds, it took several miracles for that help to be available to us.  Those I expected to help us, did not.  People I never even thought of, offered to be God's hand.  I could do nothing but send thank you cards.
What is a card when you have altered the future of an entire families life?  How grateful I am for those of you, who just reach out to me or my family in such unexpected ways.  Those willing to excuse our struggle, and never judge.  Who are truly sorry for our difficulties, and are grateful they are not battling it themselves.  Those of you with compassion and love towards my son.  God's love for us, it broke me in a very different way.  I am one more time humbled by God's love and care for us.  YOU, who knew the need and prayed, you who did what you could to help the miracles happen, you who stood in awe as God delivered us one more time....
YOU ALL,  were Christmas to me.  I cannot repay your kindnesses, but I can ask God to.
So as we end 2013,  I bow on my knees before the cross, and one more time I say, "God Bless us, everyone."

"Some believe that it is only great power that can hold evil in check.  But that is not what I have found.  I have found that it is the small everyday deeds of ordinary folk that keep the darkness at bay.  Small acts of kindness and love."  

Saturday, September 28, 2013

How safe are you?

Friday, Britton was out of school.  He's an early riser, and it was only 75 degrees, so we decided to go for a bike ride.  It was a really awesome ride, and we were enjoying ourselves.  I noticed that lots of people walking and riding were smiling and waving at us.  I can't really see what he's doing back there, but I figured he must have a huge smile on his face.  He was stimming with his left hand which looks very much like waving.  Hello fellow walkers and riders.  :)

I had a big plan for all the errands we were going to, all running through my head as we rode.
I was praying that Britton was up for it.  That we wouldn't go anywhere he couldn't handle.  That no where would be super crowded, and that I'd be able to handle whatever happened.  As I was riding along the bayou, I noticed this big white bird.  Now, I don't really know what it is, but I always see it and wonder.  It's a REALLY BIG bird.  I think it's some kind of bird that you normally see at the beach.  As that thought crossed my mind, I begin to hear a still small voice.

"Most these birds live at the ocean.  He'll never taste fresh fish, he'll never smell the ocean breeze, he will always eat bugs and catfish."  I thought, So why does he stay?  The answer was obvious, because he's safe, that's why.  No predators along the sewage filled bayou.

I was so stunned by the thoughts going through my head.  It took me a minute or two, but then I got the connection.  I struggle so hard with taking Britton into the public.  I never know what's going to happen, it's always like Russian Roulette.  Will he stay with me, will he run off?  Will people get angry, will they stare nonstop?  On and on the fearful questions pummel my subconscious.
But I realize, that I have a choice, just like the bird.  I can stay by the bayou... eating bugs, or I can take a huge giant leap of faith every single day, and smell the ocean breeze.  So today, we went to Costco, then to the car wash, then to the bank, and ate lunch at Willie's Icehouse.  Some people really rather not think about the disabled, they are really bothered by my "putting us out there" for them to have to see.  Others however are inspired and grateful and kind.  There will always be both kinds of people, there will always be those who Britton inspires, and those who cringe and stare.  But because I really want him to smell the ocean, to eat fresh fish, and soar on the ocean breeze.  I'll just keep praying for God to protect us from the "predators" that we will inevitably encounter.  There are so few of us willing to step out there with our disability for the world to "appraise."  I have to say that I am stunned by how rude and uneducated so many people are to the disabled.  For those of you who wonder, you shouldn't stare.  BUT... you should acknowledge.  If you are afraid to look, and you quickly look away, it can seem like  you're either disgusted or freaked out.  So, do what you do with ANY stranger.  Just look the person in the eyes, and smile.  It would okay to even say hello.  Britton has stunned me time and again, by speaking back and replyng, "Hi."  I do find that if I can convince him to wear his t-shirt that says, "Autistic Genius" that people are less fearful.  The fear of the unknown seems to be a huge part of it.  For Britton, he looks so normal, lots of people are just trying to figure out if he's "normal" or he's not?

I consider today a success.  We went, we saw lots of folks and we didn't cause anyone to run in fear.
It was a day of soaring on the currents, a day of eating only fresh fish.  I'm not always brave, some days I take him through the drive thru cause it's really busy inside and I'm not up for it.  Yep on those days we might as well eat bugs.  It can be after a difficult situation in the public, and I cower sometimes for weeks.  I'm not alone, many moms and dads have never taken their autistic children to the movies, grocery shopping or out to eat.  Some of them have spent their lives between home and school, and a school bus.  That's it.  More and more schools are refusing to take children out as well.  Insurance premiums are just too high.  So, if you've never seen someone with autism out shopping, don't be surprised.  Even though they are 1 in 54, they are pretty much sitting beside a sewage filled bayou, eating bugs and bottom feeders. (Mostly hiding in their homes, or schools)  It's a scary world out there.  I'll never see that bird again and think or feel the same way.  I'll hope he eventually disappears and I'll believe he finally woke up one day and decided that really living is worth far more than being safe.  What do you think?  Should we play it safe, just eat the mosquitoes and flies, safely scoop up the catfish out of the sewage filled water?  Or should we risk it all, by getting on a plane once a year and flying across an ocean to paradise?  Should we gamble that people will be kind, and even if autism has a melt down, it will be worth the risk?  You've seen my pictures, you know I'm a gambler at heart.  So here's to eating fresh fish, chasing the sun across the water, and here's to that white bird.  May he take flight.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Maybe in the next life it won't matter so much.  But here, and now... it's hard to imagine that it won't.  I don't seem to be able to help myself wondering why God intervenes sometimes, and seems to turn a deaf ear other times.  My soul feels bruised, mangled, worn.  I cry out day after day and wonder what I have done for God to ignore me.  So many families get reprieve.  At least enough healing to get language, have some hope, see a possible future.  Others, like us, just aren't as deserving, or needy, or perhaps God loves them more?  I know, I shouldn't go there, but the truth is, we all do.  When things get super hard, I begin to wonder why God ignores me.  I wonder what did I do this time.  He obviously owes me nothing, but my son could not have committed any sins, since this disease began to ravage him before he was even two.  I know it's not rational, I know it does not fit with God's word... it is just what I FEEL.  When I get this tired, it's hard to deal with what I know versus what I feel.  What I feel just comes boiling to the surface like some nasty oil well about to erupt.  It's not good.  I decided to be extremely transparent.  My hope is that if you are battling something equally difficult, that you will feel comforted to know you are not alone in your depravity.  No, no, not depravity.  Let's go with despair.  I had a friend tell me that you have to be prepared for the consequences of real honesty.  I have no idea if I'm prepared for it, seems insignificant in this battle.  I personally think honesty saves me.   If tragedy really exposes who we are, I must tell you I am the most depraved of all men.  I cry incessantly.  I beg God, I ask God, and eventually I blame God for not caring enough.  Again, all NOT GOOD!
There is a tiny light of good news in all this... it's that God listens and tolerates my despair.  He always leads me back to His word and attempts to encourage me.  I just have days where I do not feel it will be possible for me to hang on any longer.  How dare I blame God, for what I know God clearly opposes? It's a good question.  God definitely operates on a different timetable than impatient human beings expect.  From Abraham to Moses, David and so many others.  I learn that God moves in ways I would neither predict nor desire.  A record of God's faithfulness in the past combines with hope in a better future for one end:  TO EQUIP ME FOR TODAY!  Right now is my most important moment in this journey, because today is the only time when I have any power.

I watch my very brave husband battle this autism monster.  He seriously does it without many tears, with his face set like stone.  He is determined to eradicate this monster from his only son.  To somehow liberate his family from this living death of a life.  He just marches on, without complaint, with the most incredible resolve.  I've never known a better man.  He is God's man.  I know that God must be so proud of him, I am another story.  Yes I am that woman who feels sorry for Job's wife.  LOL  I recently went back to research to be sure he didn't ditch her for a new wife when God restored everything.  Sure enough, there she was.  Enjoying the fruits of her husband's faith.  That gives me some hope. (feel free to laugh)

This latest twist of autism fate I didn't see coming.  I knew something was wrong back in early Spring, but we battled away, the same way we always had.  I didn't know I was NOT HELPING.  Now, that he has been ravaged by this strep virus/bacteria that I didn't even know was there.  Just one more battle his body is attempting to fight.  I'm just praying his body is up for another assault.  He isn't able to sleep much because of it.  They say the strep inflams the brain and causes all kinds of awful things.  He hallucinates, he stares at things for long periods of time.  He cries out.  He has been attempting to reach over and close my eyes for about a month.  (It feels like he might poke my eyes out) So as long as I wear sunglasses, (even in the house) he's okay with it.  If I take them off, he will come and put them back on me, or incessantly try to put his hands over my eyelids.  I know, who knew autism could get any weirder?

When he finally crashed in exhaustion somewhere around 12:30am, I was looking at him, praying for him.  Thinking, if you had cancer, if you had some awful disease that people understood they would pray for you more.  They would feel concern for you and your family.  But, no, because this disease is created by a greedy pharmaceutical industry, with the backing of the whole government.  They spend millions of dollars on their propaganda, saying that autism is caused by any and everything.  (e.g. refrigerator moms, Genetics, what the mom ate during pregnancy, what the mom DID during pregnancy.  What the mom was exposed to during pregnancy.  Starting to see a pattern?)  A researcher that was recently interviewed said that "autism has been proven to be genetic."  I threw my rubbber glove at the television.  (THAT is a bald face lie)  It has been speculated.  But if you ever thought it through for even a second you'd realize that 1 in 54 children can't be a genetic problem.  We've never had a GENETIC pandemic.  There is no such thing.  They use the genetic thing because they want you to blame the parents.  THEN, YOU FEEL SAFE!  Get it?  That way you don't worry about those pesky autism rumors and vaccines.  You just slap your baby on the vaccine conveyor belt and not let those silly autism parents worry you.  We all know it's their faults and they're just looking for someone to blame.  Yeah, I wish.

I write a lot.  Journals, blogs, just all kinds of things.  I write poetry.  Yeah, I know hard to believe.  But I often find things I've written, in books, cries of lament penciled in my bible, in spirals, just laying around.  I recently found this one.  I was stunned by how I've felt the same for years and years.  As each new battle rages... it's really the same war isn't it?  But as I think of the battle that raged when I wrote this, I remember that I got through that battle, and what I felt and believed was changed by it.  Remembering my relationship with God takes effort and intention.  I cannot pull out a video and watch the history and growth of my relationship with God, there are no photo albums of living in faith.  Only God sees my heart, and my battle scars.  This is our relationship that is forever under assault.  By the same token, the "monster" is His enemy too.  After all, "if God be for us, who can be against us?"  Let's slay this monster and burn the debris.


My precious child is held a captive..
Imprisoned by a ravaging disease
The torture is constant and endless
And only God can set my boy free.

So I pick up my sword each morning,
I hold it up all through the night.
This monster rips and destroys
I must battle him, and relentlessly fight.

Somedays I sense the enemy weaken,
Somedays he drops back in retreat.
But most days he laughs at my efforts,
Knocking me back in defeat.

Is there no place to end this fighting?
The vigil I keep is ever long.
The weapons I wield are so heavy.
But deep in my heart there is a song--

It’s true it’s my child this time,
As you watch from your life of ease.
But the monster is not too selective.
It’s on your child he’s wanting to feed.

So I strap on my helmet each morning.
I lift my shield every single day.
I pray that someone will hear me
That God will show me the way.  

When the battle overwhelms and destroys
On days that I can’t hear the song.
I’m pleading for you to wake up.
To open your eyes and believe what’s wrong.,

It’s an army of families marching,
I think I heard the sound of their cries.
Forming a wall against the monster,
A fortress against the world’s lies.

Listen I’m sure you’ll hear it.
It’s a shout, a call to fight.
No longer will we suffer in silence.
No longer will we hide from the light.

The monster has taken some serious blows,
His wounds are swelling and sore.
His companions try desperately to shift your gaze.
But the pain is just too hard to ignore.

They pretend he isn’t really a monster.
They pretend they’ve taken his claws.
But they’ve lied as they’ve stolen our children.
Their greed is directing their cause.

Some children have crawled to the surface.
Some children are now running free.
But my child still battles the darkness.
Silenced by this ravaging disease.

So mothers don’t give up your vigil.
Don’t lower your shields to rest.
The monster is licking his wounds just now,
But he’s seeking your family next.

Oh God of all poisoned children!
Please stand and fight beside me now.
The monster continues to ravage and chew,
We must stop him, but we need to know how.

Hold me tight as I’m keeping watch,
Keep me awake when the battle grows long.
Lift my arms when they fall in weakness,
But most important let me hear your song.

Help me sing about hope and about longing.
Help me believe that he can some day be free.
Help me love in this black, evil battle.
Help me forgive those who aren’t willing to see.

I need to sing out loud and forever!
I need to be heard over the lying throng!
Please help me sing loud so my child can hear...
Please empower me as I sing your song.

Father of light and Father of kindness.
My hope and strength in this dark, foul place.
My eyes have have adjusted to the darkness,
My weary limbs seem to keep up the pace.

A crack of light has pierced this prison.
Showing truth everywhere it shines.
As the crack grows larger and larger
I know that victory will someday be mine.

One more time I lift up my shield,
One more time I look in Britton’s face.
The hope and trust that shines in his eyes.
Is enough, to make me pick up the pace.

Lift your shield we have monsters to slay!


Thursday, August 8, 2013


Somedays you sure don't see it coming.  I had struggled through the morning, which is what usually happens.  Britton wakes up, runs down the stairs, and wakes us all up before the alarm goes off.  Man I'm tired.  It has been over a year now that he hasn't slept past 5, usually it's more like 4:30am.  Yes that includes Saturday and Sunday, autism doesn't care what day it is.

But today as I struggled, we did our usual routine.  Once out the door, we head to do some Mom and Britton time.  Sometimes we grocery shop, sometimes we walk at the park.  We spend about an hour and half together before I head to the school.  Today we stopped by Walgreens, because it is one of his favorite bathrooms.  Yep, I said bathrooms.  Britton is a bathroom connoisseur if there is such a thing.  He prefers them clean, and secluded.  That way he has it all to himself, and can use each stall, and each urinal separately with no interference.  It makes him happy, and calm.  Walgreens is always kind to us, and I always buy things.  He picks out snacks, and he opens the drink refridge repeatedly begging for a coke.  He rarely gets coke, and now that I know he can, he only gets a coke if he SAYS COKE!  Which is rare, as a matter of fact until today he had only said it once.

We stood at the snack/refridgerator aisle and he went back and forth.  This feels like and hour, but it takes about 15-20 minutes.  I rarely notice if anyone is watching, only if we get in their way.  Today there didn't seem to anyone in the store but us.  It was super early.  Britton blurted out "COKE!"  I was so stunned that I stopped what I was doing and hugged him and tears ran down my face and of course he did get a coke.  We took the coke, and all the things I buy, (e.g. light bulbs, dish soap, toilet bowl tablets) and went to check out.

The lady at the counter says to me, "You don't know how I look forward to when you come to the store."  I was busy watching Britton organize the gum and the candy at the check out.  He doesn't buy them, but he makes sure they are all in the right slots and neatly stacked.  I looked up and said, "Oh goodness, why is that?"  She says....

"When you come in here, I am always reminded of God's love for me."  Of course I was taken aback.  I said, "that's awesome, how do we do that?"  She said, "It's because you are so patient and kind.  Your love for your son radiates from you, to him.  No matter how difficult he is, you patiently redirect him, and help him do better.  So I know, that if there is a human on earth that can do that, that my heavenly Father will always do that for me.  He always whispers to me about you."

Well now, if that isn't some kind of morning I don't know what is.  It's only Wednesday and it's been a very hard week.  Britton is struggling with some physical ailment of which I can't seem to put a finger on.  (No surprise there)  So he is stimming and wild, and agitated.    My sons caregiver of nine years will be leaving us in less than 6 months.  I have no idea how to replace her.  The pressure, because I have to work more now...we have so many changes going on at work.  With Obamacare crashing down, we have so many overwhelming changes that don't even seem possible to make.  But you see, our clinic is not OUR clinic, it belongs to God.  Trying hard to remember that, and rest in my faith. Then there's all the employee changes as my office manager, (and daughter) heads off to Law School.  The grief I feel is overwhelming, because I know I will never see her.  (I know this because my oldest went to Medical School, and it's been ten long years and she is just NOW heading home, next month.  TEN YEARS!)  Not one birthday, very few holidays, every vacation, she missed it all... Now the 2nd daughter will miss it all for years to come.  sighhhh    God keeps reminding me, THERE ARE NO COINCIDENCES!  NONE, ZERO!  There's so much more, but you'd stop reading if I told it all to you.  :)

So here I am, standing in the Walgreens, crying like a baby.  Britton is stimming and jumping, and laughing.  The lady is saying, "I didn't mean to upset you.  I wanted you to know you are a blessing."
It's hard to believe that the struggle, the difficulties, the impossibilities of my life, matter.  You too?
Well I guess we never know what God has in mind.  We never know, who God is pointing us out to.
My mind shifts to Job, and I'm certain that he never had a clue that God had bragged about him.  Given the choice, none of us choose difficult situations.  But at that moment, the blessing that I felt come over me was worth it, at least for a moment.  I felt so loved, so bragged about... by God.  I can't imagine it.

I drove Britton to school, and he reached over and wiped a tear from my face and kissed me.  Then he grabbed his backpack and went hopping into school.  My God is an awesome God and He knows when we can't go any further without at least a word of encouragement.  This life, this horribly difficult life that we battle through, does matter.  If to no one else, it matters to God.  He watches, He brags about you and me.  He is apparently, at moments even proud of His Warrior families. So pick up your sword again, and "run quickly to the battle line" my friend.  God is watching, and he might just point you out to someone else.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Hiking the world with Autism

I know it's been a while since I blogged.  Not really but since I posted one.  Some are not fit for anyone's ears but the good Lord.  Besides that, I've been crazy busy with Britton being home since May.  Also, we got to go to Kauai, again.  I know what you're thinking, "those lucky dogs, they always get to go!"  Ahhhh the peaceful, wonderful, perfect weather, it's totally paradise. We are lucky, or rather blessed.  It's so amazing... we feel do feel lucky, grateful, amazed, blessed... every time we get to go.  God has given us this gift.  I am beyond grateful.  He knows this about me.  :)

The thing is even in paradise, autism is autism.  It's stimmy, and touchy, and refuses to sleep, and always demands it's own way, refuses to swim in the ocean for the entire vacation.  Demands to go to the bathroom in every place we go.  There's no relaxing on a beach, reading a book, walking down the beach hand in hand looking at the sunset.  No doing the kind of things that we and of course you would do on a vacation.  Nope, autism's needs, do not cease to drive my son, and subsequently us, completely batty no matter where we are.
We work all year, we save and save for that vacation.  We build it up in our minds and then... autism has its own plans for us.  But we have the good moments, the huge smiles, the words he is able to speak while we are there, his comprehension increases to almost a normal level it seems.  So, we take Britton to Kauai, for those understandable reasons, sadly autism has to come too.

I want to tell you about one of the hikes we did while we were there.  It was our last, long hike along the ridge line of the Napali Coast.  One of the most beautiful places I've ever seen.  It was an amazing, hike, in Kauai's perfect weather that feels like constant air conditioning.  Briton was enjoying this day, and I kept trying to get a picture of him, skipping, and smiling, and enjoying the hike.  He would skip, and hop along, (while we panted and climbed) he would bend every fifty feet or so,  and touch his knee to a rock or a tree.  I have no idea why, he just enjoyed it so much.  Super fun to watch him enjoy himself.  It is a rare thing on a daily basis.  Mainly because, Autism not only drives us to our wits end, it is a cruel master to Britton as well.  Taunting and tormenting him, all while he is trying to adapt to this world that rather ignores his existence.  sighhhhhhhhh  No vacation from autism for him either.  :(


As we hiked I began to think about how similar a difficult hike is to navigating a life with autism.  About how the trail is "unmaintained" and how the reality is, (for our family, and hundreds of others Britton's age) no one has gone down this trail before us.  Every time I came to a neon orange flag that was a reminder that "you're still on the trail"... I was thinking... oh how I wish for trail markers on this "hike" through life, but there are no markers, no one has been here to mark it.
That means I'm to tie the streamers and leave a path for the next family.  God and I talk a lot on these walks, I think and think, (like Wiennie the Pooh) and God and I "reason together."
Watching Britton, hike, and hop, and skip happily up the trail, I decided that I'd not done a horrific job with him.  I mean, how do I know if I've done really good or really bad?  I spend far too much time condemning myself for all I haven't been able to accomplish.  (Masters Degree in Self Condemnation)
I spend hours regretting when I've gotten angry with someone who definitely acted STUPID.  Somedays I default into the mentality of "pawns and puppets, and realize that I'm trying to decide whose victim I'm going to be."  I start telling myself how powerless I am, that God is going to do, what God is going to do...and hey being God's victim is better than being anyone elses, right?  But by the time I think it all the way through and try to imagine God being okay with me being even His victim, I realize that God always replaces victim, with victory and I look up and realize I've made it to the summit.  How fitting.

This past week we had a "fun" incident in the Hobby Lobby.  Britton's obession with bathrooms may be the end of me.  It seems he MUST go in EVERY bathroom, in every place we go... at least once.  TWICE is my absolute limit.  We had come from lunch and although I NEVER go when we are out together, I had no choice.  I told him if he came out and I was not there, I was in the Ladies Restroom, and would be right out.  He went in the mens.  I hurried into the Women's, and barely got in position, when WHAM he comes running in and scares an elderly woman as he whirls by to the last stall.  OH NO!!!  I hurry, and go out and get him to wash his hands and out we go.  The woman, has gone and gotten the manager.  They accost me as we exit, and the manager is very hateful.  He says that "If I can't control Britton, he should not be in his store."  Fabulous.  It makes me really sad, and then...really mad, so...I say, "well you have no "Handicap" restroom, where I can take him by myself?  I am sorry this woman was frightened.  BUT... he did not touch her, he did not hurt anyone, he only went in the wrong restroom."  I just kept standing there thinking,  "How many of us are faking that we aren't dying inside?"  I kept looking at the woman wondering what feelings prompted her to do this deed?  So many times I've wished I was invisible.  But do I really want to be swallowed alive and dropped down a cold, black hole and no one notice?"  Yep sometimes it's not a pretty place in my head.
 
So like hiking a really long, big incline, out we went with our tails tucked between our legs, heads down in yet more shame.  (Remember that cloak from last blog? )  Such is life with autism.  Talk about a square peg in a round hole... autism is a bizaare shaped peg that fits NO HOLES!  Where do we fit Britton?  I wish I knew.  I wish I was a better guide on this trail.  I don't know the way, and I don't know what's ahead.  I wish we weren't in complete darkness.  But we have to keep hiking cause we can't stop here, keep putting one foot in front of the other.  It's all I know to do.  I close my eyes, put my hands in Gods and I take another step, praying I'm not stepping off a cliff, believing that I'm on the right trail.  So far, only a few near death experiences. :)  It's at these moments I wonder if I should leave the outrageous faith to the Christians who haven't been beaten up by life yet.  I'm pretty sure that's not how this whole thing works though.

Autism is a condition NO ONE wants to deal with, heck no one really wants to even know it exists.  From it's extremely unpopular, controversial cause, to it's nearly impossible ability to manage, it really gets almost no sympathy, or understanding from the masses.  If you're thinking, "wow she's in a mood, throwing herself a pity party."  Maybe I am.  I'm just so worn down.  Let's be honest, I hate autism far more than you can imagine.  I hate watching autism ravish my son's brain and destroy his intestines.  I hate that the future that God planned for him is stolen.  I hate that no one on this planet gives one rats ass for all the suffering that the PHARM whores have caused so many families, and then allowed our courts to give them immunity for what they have done.  I hate that the "respectable mothers" just walk like sheep to the slaughter with their tiny bundles of joy in tow straight to the Pharm Slaughter.  All the while, they look at me with condescending eyes, not realizing they are one vaccine from crossing over to this relentless life.   Yep, trust me, I hate autism far more than you do.  Hate really isn't a strong enough word.  I'll go with loath.
Still with me?  Impressive.  Well then, I'd love to tell you about another hike, our favorite hike, the one we look forward to every trip back to Kauai.  We hike a trail called, Kalalau.  It's considered a "difficult hike" that requires proper foot wear, enough water, and that you should be in good physical condition.  Let's just say the first few times we did this hike, we were clueless as to what proper gear really was.  It's a hike around a volcano.  The first time we did it, we had no idea that you should not get caught up on the mountain after sundown.  Take the pitch black of night and compound that with the pitch black of volcanic sand, and you seriously can't see your hand in front of your face.  That's not a good idea, when staying on the trail is a difference between life and a 2000 foot plunge into a crater.
Yep, just like autism.  We walk that black trail, in the dark, wishing that someone, anyone could shed some light on our climb....  The first time we hiked it, we took our good sweet time, having no idea we would end up in pitch black at 5pm.  It's hard to navigate in the light, with the best hiking shoes.
It's an eleven mile hike with lots of climbing up for miles, only to have you lose all that elevation the next mile. The views a long the way are beyond spectacular.  Something that you almost have to see to believe.


Much like autism, you work and work and you think you're about to make a huge break thru, you get a behavior under control.  Maybe you even get a word or two...and bam, some physical illness surfaces, and your son's behaviors leave you on the floor crying again.  What to do next?  Keep on climbing?  Yep that's all there is to do.  Get back up and take the next few miles, hoping to gain back all the elevation you just lost.
This particular hike, is one of our favorites because after four miles, you end up at a beach.  So all the elevation, and then you descend into a valley that has a beach that is only accessible on foot, or by boat.  We walk down the large black lava rock, to the white sand beach.  The waves roll in and take our breath away.  It's hard to ever leave.  This year, we didn't continue the hike.  Britton sat down, right at the ocean edge, and watched the ocean for over two hours.  He had the biggest smile on his face.  Two hours, he doesn't do anything voluntarily for two hours.  This was one of those magic moments.  A moment when all our hopes for his future come soaring up and fill our hearts with hope and joy.  We allow ourselves for those few seconds to remember peace and happiness.  To remember that there is a "Hope" for our son's future too.  That the God who makes oceans and sky like these, can deal with autism with but a single bat of his eye.  ahhhh peace for a moment.



People crack me up about our trips to Kauai.  They will insinuate how rich we must be.  It's hard not to laugh, really hard.  We aren't even sort of rich.  We are desperate.  We just know, that taking him there helps him.  He loves to go.  He loves to hike.  He loves to sit and watch the waves.  Always, every time we go, we get some language.  Sadly, we look forward to those few words we get, every single year.  So, we are willing to sacrifice for it.  We sacrifice past good sense.  We go and it costs us more than can be imagined.  Picture yourself on an 8 hour flight with a young man with autism.  Now picture yourself, the caregiver of that young man.  YOU are responsible for his behaviors.  Scary isn't it?  If I've said it once, well you know the cliche', but autism is always a wild card at best.  You never know what might happen.  Worse than that, you never know how other people are going to respond to what he does.  Getting him there, has never been easy. This year however,  is the first time he had a meltdown on a plane.  It wasn't a wild, crazy, "Oh MY GOD,  this is nuts meltdown," but it involved growling, biting, and demanding for something we couldn't give him at that moment.  (bathroom during turbulence)  I think I should tell you that only one person stared nonstop.  Almost everyone, was kind, and caring.  The flight attendant tried everything she knew to help us.  God Bless you Alaska Airlines.  I will fly you every chance I get.  They were amazing to us.  It was a long flight, and I could've kissed the ground when it was over.  But that is a small price to pay to have him free of autism for a few hours.  Free to watch the waves with a big smile on his face.  Free from his damaged body for a brief moment.  I'm just willing to do whatever I can, to give that to him. 
People often ask us why we don't move there.  Goodness, if I could figure out a way to make a living, I'd leave skid marks in the drive way.   I may figure it out someday, and if I do, Aloha!
  

Monday, May 20, 2013

What do you see?

I know it's true... I'm socially impaired.  Oh no, don't go thinking I was born this way,  I wasn't.  It came from the twists and turns, and molding of life with Autism.  I use to be able to chit chat about, ohhhh the latest fashion, or someone's new hair style.  But no more.  I decided after attending a small party thrown in my brother's back yard, that I probably should not attend without a list I hand to anyone who would like to attempt small talk, they should be warned.  Like mutes I have encountered, who hand me a note about the item he is selling for $5 in a restaurant.  I'd hand out a list of possible topics of conversation.
This list would say something like this... I can engage in adult conversation, outside of using the PECS system, and/or the Proloquo on the IPAD.  However, my ability to stay on topic will be limited to the following subjects.  First and foremost, #1. Autism.  We can discuss it's many causes, treatments, controversies.  As long as Autism is the main topic, I'm good with that.  #2. Biomedical Interventions for Autism.  I realize that really falls into #1, but trust me, I can talk for hours on end on more than maybe a thousands choices for treatments.  So it warrants it's own number.  #3 Nutrition for autism, and those with various seemingly unrelated conditions, (e.g. ADD, ADHD, OCD, etc etc)  See, I'm branching out, not totally autism related?  #4.  Politics, and you guessed it, as related to Special Needs and/or Disabilities.  #5.Genetically modified foods and how they affect the physiology of most humans, specifically those who have been vaccinated and still have live measles living in their guts,  I know you guessed, those with autism.  #6.  Hormone Balancing, not specifically related to those with Autism, more for those caring for those with Autism, whose systems have burned away all their hormones from lack of sleep and proper nutrition for many year.  (But possibly for those with Autism if they are old enough to need that type of intervention.)  #7  I'm particularly proud that I can add this one, My Spiritual Journey because of.... (drum roll)  AUTISM!!  #8. Fitness - It only gets a nod because I had a whole life before Autism, although I hardly remember it.  I also hate mentioning that I know much about it, as my life with autism has certainly not been conducive to doing the things that keep ones body fit.  Something I gave up kicking and screaming, but eventually yielded and raised the white flag. Let's just say I'm NOT willing to discuss my body fat %.   #9.  Chiropractic - because I work at my husband's clinic about 20 hours a week so that I may still be capable of conversation and function apart from autism...(my eye twitched for almost a decade before I got out a little) and last but not least #10  Kauai - because my son LOVES this island beyond anything I've ever seen, and almost without fail, he talks a little when we take him there.  So although I can discuss at GREAT DEAL about Kauai, I have to say, I might have known very little of it, if Autism hadn't taken me there, again and again each year, praying for one word of communication from my son... He is imprisoned inside a body that just refuses to function well enough neurologically, to allow words to come out.  sighhhhh  And as you can see, I discuss Kauai as it relates to Autism.  I don't know if that will ever change.  I don't know if it's suppose to change.  Tragedy changes us all.  It carries us down a different channel that we never would have dared venture into if our life had not been changed so permanently.  So suddenly.
It's funny, today I sat in church and listened to a sermon about "Spiritual Eyes."  I couldn't help but think of how often I have compared having a child with autism, with waking up with a new pair of eyes.  Everything has changed!  It's not a choice that you see things you never saw before, you just do.  There is no changing what you see and how you see it.  Your "new eyes" see so many things you were blind to before.  How the disabled are "seen."  What their world is like.  How doctors view your opinion of things because so many of them assume you blame the vaccines.  Things seriously are a different color, shade, huge.  Who am I kidding, they are totally different.    Today my pastor talked of "spiritual eyes."  Eyes that see what God sees, what is real.  My new eyes are a lot like that.  they see things that God sees, or maybe has decided to show me.  There are those who like me, are given new eyes, following a tragedy, and then I have met others, who were just born with those eyes.  Truly amazing gift, or curse, depending on which eyes your currently looking through.  (I have also met others who experience tragedy and refuse the new eyes, the saddest condition of all.)  

As our pastor spoke of the story of Elisha saying, "there are more with us than are with them..."  I wondered when Elisha received his Spiritual eyes?  Was he born with them, or like me, did some tragedy happen, and he wake up seeing things he had never seen before?  Are mine "Autism eyes", or "Disability Eyes," or are they just Spiritual Eyes that need another tragedy to see yet even more?  I have journeyed through this life processing, dealing with, trying to understand so much of my experiences with autism.  Certainly not without complaint, but with unfailing perseverance that is not likely to change.  I have learned to love, to truly appreciate the gifts of a "normal" child's learning.  The kindness of strangers, who are just kind because they choose to be.  What angels they are, so important to those of us struggling each day.  The tolerance of extended family members, who just love us, although so very difficult at times. They don't understand really, but they love, and that's all we need.  
I see with these eyes, that love really MUST cover a multitude of imperfections.  I also know that unless one of those family members inherits these eyes before I leave this earth, that there will be no one left to SEE my son for who he really is.  A whole person, made in God's image, loved enough by my Savior to die just for him.  New eyes.  I never knew to pray for them before, I never truly SAW before.  I have not appreciated my new eyes much.  Not until recently.  I see so many things that I'd rather not see.  But, I can't UNSEE them.  Like Elisha, who knew what he saw, because w hat he saw, was truth.  I know what I see in this world of autism.  Others may not see it, may not wish to see it.  But it won't change the fact that my son is Vaccine damaged.  Go ahead and pretend it isn't true.  It's okay, it really is, I understand why you do it.  It's seems so much safer in the world with the old eyes.  I don't judge you for what you see, or rather what you can't see.  I use to have the same eyes.  It's hard not to feel old, worn, maybe even a tiny bit wiser.  I have finally learned to embrace my new eyes.  These eyes help me see my aging parents, and really SEE their suffering and realize that I am next.  I see other disabilities, children with cerebral palsy, who are so imprisoned inside their own bodies with not much more communication skills than my own son.  I see my niece with diabetes since she was 8 months old, saddled with a pump and a slave to the insulin that she must have in varying doses to keep her alive.  I see her mother, who also has new eyes, toiling away at a labor of love because she will give her child the best life possible at the cost of well, everything.
I don't know that anyone would volunteer for new eyes.  I recently read this quote...
"The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes."  
I decided that it may well be true, and yet "new landscapes" has a whole different meaning when looking with the new eyes.  Never did I know that my new landscape would involve showering, dressing, hair brushing, shaving, toe nail clipping and even occasionally cleaning the backside of an adult son.  Not something that my old eyes could've ever seen myself doing.  Not many of us could... but my new eyes, well they show me that I do what is necessary to make my sons life doable, livable, tolerable, and pretty much just possible.  
The real question is, what do my sons eyes see?  Does he see a world that resents his very presence?  Does he realize that so many see him as nothing more than a "leach on society".  (quoted from a member of the PTO when he was 6)  Does he know how many people just ignore his existence because they choose not to see him?  What does society look like to him?  
More importantly to me, what do I look like?  A mother who tries to stay awake all the nights that he can't sleep, but is now over 50 and it isn't possible anymore?  A small woman who can't possibly control him in public, and yet, I put on my game face and pretend.  (Sometimes he laughs at me.) Does he see the hours and hours I spend researching, preparing, planning, trying to find new hope from some doctor across the country who just might have finally unearthed that missing piece of the puzzle that will open the door to his mind?  Does he see a woman who takes constant verbal abuse from a school district who has attempted to do nothing more than groom him for a state school existence? Yes they pretend otherwise, but we both know the truth.  Please know that that's not his teachers, his aides, the ones that SEE him, the real him.  They see him FIRST, autism second. (thanks for that Michelle)
It seems I've spent my life trying to keep him from seeing what the world in general really sees when they look at him. 
The ultimate question is, what does God see?  What do you see?




Sunday, April 21, 2013

A Cloak of Shame

Have you ever worn a cloak of shame?  I guess I didn't realize I did until recently.  I've always said that I've been hiding under my giant "autism rock."  But the real truth is, I've been wearing a cloak, and when anyone got too close, I'd yell in a loud voice, "UNCLEAN!"
Hard to believe after 22 years I'm just figuring this out.  Just a slow learner I suppose.  I had a pretty rough afternoon with Britton this week.  Oh not because he did anything unusual, it was just that a group of young girls wouldn't stop pointing and whispering, etc.  We had gone to the movies and he was super excited.  Jumping and flapping, and running back and forth.  Sometimes when he's super happy, and there is hardly anyone around, I just let him BE WHO HE IS.  Perhaps I shouldn't, but we all need moments of freedom.  He has so few.  Well these teenage girls were just excited to have someone else to gossip about.  Someone else to be the target of their pointless teenage drama.  BUT.. they followed us into the theater, and sat on the same row as us.  (The theater had TWO people in it besides us!)  I got up and asked Britton to move up a few rows not to bother them, and so they promptly got up and followed us.  NOT okay with this momma bear.  Britton is autistic, he is NOT STUPID.  He realized what they were up to, and so he tried to sit lower in the chair.  He eventually took off his sweat shirt and covered his head.  That's right, HE COVERED HIS HEAD!  This just gave these young ladies more fuel, and they laughed and pointed.  I was done.  Yep, here goes...
I slid down the aisle of chairs to them, and said,

"The truth is, YOU ALL should put your jackets over your heads!  The Shame you should feel for what you have done today is so sad, and so disappointing!  The hard part is, to believe that your parents haven't taught you better!  To believe that somehow abusing someone who cannot defend himself makes you laugh, and makes you happy.  Something is seriously wrong inside all your hearts!  Tonight, Britton and I will pray for you.  We both hope that Jesus has a long talk with each of you.  He could've been your brother, your best friends brother!  Then would you still make fun?"
Two of them jokingly put their sweatshirts over their heads and continued to giggle.  I hope the popcorn gave them all horrible belly aches.  :(

Yeah, I know... I'm sure it only made them laugh harder as we left the theater.  Britton wouldn't take his sweat shirt off his head all the way home.  ALL THE WAY HOME!  He went to his room and cried for about an hour.  I'm going to say for the millionth time, If only he was REALLY retarded we'd be so much better off!!!
 I opened my bible for some comfort only to read the story of the ten lepers.  "UNCLEAN" they had to yell, as they were always "outside the city."  They weren't allowed in.  They were required to wear a shawl over their heads and even wrap it around the lower half of their faces.  Cloaks of shame were required.  As I thought about their forced isolation, I thought about my life. It's exactly what I have done for so many years.  When you try to be part of our lives, I pick up my cloak and push you away.  "UNCLEAN" I scream, to keep you back, to keep you away, to keep you at a "safe distance."  But the real truth is... I'm protecting myself from your judgment, from your painful words.  If I keep you far enough away, you will never be able to really judge me.  When strangers judge, it's no big deal.  I chalk it up to ignorance and move on.  But when someone I care about, or wish was my friend judges, that requires the cloak.  I read in Leviticus 13:45 "The person with such an infectious disease must wear torn clothes, let his hair be unkempt, cover the lower part of his face and cry out, "Unclean, unclean!" I suppose I just scream, "Autism, stay back!"  As the years have past, I have become far more comfortable with everyone else who is also "Unclean" or at least have children with Autism.  Our tragic plight gives us far more in common than any of our other differences.  Like lepers in a colony it's the only place we feel truly safe.  I have had the privilege to be friends with many parents who deal with autism everyday, who never once felt unclean because of it.  God bless you my friends, you have taught me much!

When we judge each others disabilities, (even levels of disabilities) or perhaps each others sins, aren't we just like lepers counting spots?  I love that Jesus told them that they would be "made clean."  I know it's sad, and it's just how I feel, but it's also how many of us feel.  We feel unclean, unacceptable, unreachable, untouchable, unfixable.  As I talked to friends about the situation in the theater, about what the "proper response" should've been.  Each and everyone of them said to me, "There have been times in my life that I felt so unclean.  Times I would've given anything to be able to put my sweatshirt over my head, and yell, so everyone would go away and stop judging!"  Wow, so it's not just autism, it's life.  It's whatever your sin, disability, fear, worry is.  It's the thing that makes you want to put a sweat shirt over your head!
The good news is, none of us have to count our spots.  There's this amazing children's book called, "You Are Special" by Max Lucado.  It's one of Britton's favorites.
It's the story of these small wooden people who were made by Eli, the woodcarver.  All of the Wemmicks give each other stars for being beautiful, or smart, or talented. When you're covered with stars you parade around so everyone can admire you.  But, they also gave each other grey dots for being well, ugly, dumb, crippled, etc.  Then you cower in shame, and hide.  The story is of one small Wemmick, Punchinello, who is covered in grey spots.  He eventually meets a girl who has neither spots nor dots.  None of them stick to her.  She sends Punchinello to the Wood Carver, (their creator) for answers.  The woodcarver says, "Who are they to give stars or dots?  They are Wemmicks just like you.  What they think doesn't matter Punchinello.  All that matters is what I think.  And I think you are pretty special."

So back to the story of the ten lepers.  Remember how there was one leper who was running to the priest, and realized he was healed? He immediately turned around and ran back.  He dropped to Jesus feet and thanked him over and over again.  Jesus says, "Were not 10 cleansed?  Didn't any return to give glory to God except this foreigner?"  Where were the other nine?
The thing that keeps going over and over in my mind is... I wonder....if this leper, the only thankful one,  was HE the leper with the most spots?
After meeting Jesus, no dots, no stars should ever stick again... I don't think I'll put anymore sweatshirts over my head.  :)