Monthly Archives: September 2025

Being a realist isn’t always fun

Those that know me, know that I tend to be a realist. I am a suck-it-up buttercup, this is your life make it work kind of woman. Even with Bridget, while she has defied any person (including myself) who put a barrier in her way, I’ve always been okay with the barrier. I knew the work it would take to break down any walls. I knew that she would struggle, that there would be battles and that she would do the unexpected.

Like every parent, we all have dreams of what our child’s future will look like, and then we stand back and watch them redefine their life to make it the best one possible. Every parent has to watch at the sidelines as their child grows and becomes their own person. They may decide a different course than we expected (or hoped or thought). They might land on might not be exactly what we expected. We just hope that they will be more than what we are. We want them to accomplish great things, continue to learn and evolve.

I am in a strange place right now, a place where I think the battles may be over. That Bridget has accomplished all she can, and this is the person she has fought to become.

At her IEP meeting, I asked and was given the truth. I have always known that Bridget is my forever 4-year-old. I have always known she will not live independently, obtain her driver’s license, or go to college.

I thought I had come to terms with this life. That I understood this life. That I was realistic in my expectations for Bridget.

It took her most recent IEP meeting to understand that I was wrong. All this time, I was not being realistic but hopeful that someday Bridget would have a vocation. I knew it would not be at 14, or maybe even 16 years old. But I fooled myself, that one day, one day Bridget would have a job. I didn’t care what kind of job, but a place she would go and contribute to her community

That one day she would be a part of the community. Not “her” community, where special education resides and she is safe and has peers of her own capacity.

But the real world, the one we live in.

Foolish really.

That I mislead myself, knowing that Bridget cannot be left long enough for me to truly walk the dog and exhaust him but harboring this idea that one day Bridget would be happy and fulfilled working in a greenhouse for a few hours.

Or a restaurant, as a hostess telling patrons that they would be having pancakes. Even if they were not offered on the menu. Even if she doesn’t have the ability to read a seating chart or know how to count how many people in the party to seat the properly.

Selfish really, because if Bridget had the ability to have a job (even part-time), her dad and I would have a few hours of respite. That I am selfish (and honest) enough to say that if Bridget had a job, we would not have to be vigilant during those hours. That we are getting closer to retirement, and she is getting closer to aging out of the school system and how having her home 24/7 is going to impact our future.

During her IEP it became clear, that a vocational program might not be appropriate for Bridget. That she requires too much supervision, that for all intents and purposes, Bridget will always need a 1:1 and someone to not only lay out a task but a visual schedule for her to remain on that task.

That isn’t reality. That isn’t the real world. That is special education, that ends when she turns 22 years old.

The team did not say it would not happen, that they are working towards a goal of Bridget working in a controlled environment. The premise of her IEP is to give her small wins of independence. Even if she cannot enter the vocational programming next year, it does not mean she never will. I am so thankful for their honesty, that they were willing to bring my expectations in alignment with Bridget’s ability.

But I am that realist, who read between the compassion of the team as I let go of one more dream.

One more hope.

Ten Things of Thankful

It has been a really difficult week for Bridget. While there have been good days, they seemed to be outnumbered by the moments of holy crap I cannot take on one more thing. Yet, there is still a lot of good going on in our lives, which helps to keep the balance.

  1. That when discussing Bridget’s IEP, the team mentioned that she is afraid of police. When asked why, Bridget said, “too loud” “too scary” and “they bring trouble. Thankfully, I know a few policemen and when I called them to ask if they would be willing to help, not only did they say yes, they came up with a plan for us to have Bridget meet them out in town and at our house so she will understand they don’t bring trouble. They stop it.
  2. That my eldest is living her best life in college. And while I cannot believe she is in college (or so far away), she checks in often. I know some parents struggle between their typical child vs their unique one. But I am so very lucky that the girls have a relationship of true love and enjoyment. Even if one of them is too far away.
  3. That we live in a small enough town, that when Bridget accosts someone in the grocery store demanding they take the Pop Tarts that she has placed in their grocery cart, they wait until we are in another aisle until they put them back on the shelf.
  4. That PACS1 research is continuing. While there might not be a cure for Bridget in the future, there might be ways to minimize what its impact.
  5. That while she might not realize it, Bridget sometimes gets life spot on. The other night she opened the bathroom window which I didn’t even know she could do. When asked why she opened it, her reply: My poop stink, we need fresh air. Which is freaking hysterical and was not wrong.
  6. That during Bridget’s IEP meeting, her team was compassionate as I realized that Bridget may have accomplished all she can.
  7. That while the group chat at work may technically be an HR nightmare, it also makes me laugh out loud.
  8. That while summer may be over, we have one more camping trip left to look forward to.
  9. That thank goodness Amazon exists and I was able to order a larger Gamora costume for Bridget to wear for Halloween.
  10. That my friends continue to make allowances for how this unexpected life does not always make being my friend easy, but they are always there to listen to the ugly tears and celebrate the happy ones.

What are you thankful for this week? Come on, you must have at least one thing!

It’s IEP Season

For most parents, going back to school means buying new school supplies (another pair of scissors!), fighting with your child over new sneakers and back-to-school clothes.

For the special needs parent, it means that the IEP season is on us and we have to review the current IEP to see what goals our child have attempted to accomplish, which goals were good on paper but an epic fail in reality, what new goals we want to see our child attempt and the parent concern statement.

The dreaded parent concern statement. How does a parent whose child has significant special needs create a “concern statement”. Our child’s entire being is a concern. Yes, we want the IEP to be a guide of how to address the concerns. But in reality, there is no way this piece of paper is going to address them. Even if we concentrate on what the school team needs to focus on, forgetting about every other aspect of our child’s life, there is not enough ink in the world to truly capture a parent’s concern.

I have been incredibly lucky that since Bridget’s first IEP at 3-years old (before I even knew what an IEP was), the IEP team has always been a true team. Collaborating together to create a document to guide the education and progress of Bridget. In the 13 years since, there really have been only two times that I feel I had to go toe-to-toe with the educators to remind them that while we are a team, I am the Captain of Team Bridget.

Looking back, when Bridget was younger the IEP was about trying to catch her up to her peers. As she aged, and the gap became too obvious to ignore the IEP became a document to relocate Bridget from the traditional school system to a specialized school that is more equipped to fulfill her significant needs.

As she gets older, the IEP becomes less about learning how to read and more about how to stay at a task for increments of time so that she may one day work at a vocation. It is about learning how to hand a card with her information on it in the case she gets lost. How to navigate a crosswalk and parking lot safely.

As her parent, my expectations are sometimes not in alignment with her capacity.

This is why each participant on her IEP team is important and must come into the room to collaborate with kindness.

This morning, before the IEP meeting I addressed the team with this intention:

If my expectations for Bridget are too low (like giving up on her learning to read), they need to tell me. If my expectations are too high (like her working at a job), I need to know that to.

I believe that at times the educators and therapists are afraid to tell the parent that while they adore your child, there is a reason they are not in the traditional public school.

As we worked through the IEP, I realized that Bridget has entered a new era in her life. We are working on function over form. We are working on making her safe, helping her communicate more effectively, and how to navigate a vocational site.

Bridget is learning how to use a visual menu at McDonalds and how to use a gift card to get her strawberry milkshake.

There are still academics being taught, but not in the traditional sense. Instead of learning algebra, Bridget is learning how to follow a recipe with visuals. Instead of learning how to read a novel, Bridget is learning how to follow a visual schedule.

I admit to this being a painful realization, but that pain is easier to bear when I remember this was the child that wasn’t supposed to survived.

And thanks to the time and compassion her IEP team being invested over the past 14 years…

Bridget has thrived.

Autism…it is not a political football

About 10 years ago, I wrote about Bridget’s autism diagnosis. How much I hated it, because I knew…. I just knew that if she was diagnosed with autism they doctors would stop looking at the why.

Thankfully, Bridget had a DOCTOR that looked at the whole child and knew that autism was just one diagnosis of many that made up my child.

I don’t write political posts but this Administration’s hypothesis that autism is a product of acetaminophen aka Tylenol is abhorrent to me. To have our president tell pregnant moms, for lack of a better phrase, to suck it up and not take FDA/CDC approved medication to stop a fever is ridiculous.

If acetaminophen is that dangerous it should not be on the shelves.

Then I remembered a former democratic president telling me that I did not need a mamogram.

Now I’ve had too many friends diagnosed with breast cancer.

Politicians should not be allowed to regulate healthcare.

They are not qualified.

We should be able to trust those who they put in charge, but very few administrations have actually put doctors on the front line (hell, Regan put Arnold in charge).

My child has autism

And 20 other health issues.

My mother’s instinct challenges and wins over politics.

But I should not have to feel guilty or fight politics as I am fighting for my child’s survival.

Ten Things

I am a firm believer that the more I recognize the good that has happened this week, the easier it is to deal with a week full of Mondays.

And this week has been a Monday. All freaking week. It wasn’t just me, either. Everyone I talked to, from friends, coworkers, customers and Bridget’s team said their week felt like one long freaking Monday.

Which brings me to the first thing to be grateful for

  1. That others acknowledge bad days. That when I say this has been the longest Monday, and it is Thursday they immediately get me and make me feel less alone.
  2. That my week started with brunch with two of my friends from high school. That we shared, laughed until we cried and shared the hard times. The times that in the grand scheme of things, are less than world hunger but more than noticing the milk has gone sour after your first sip of coffee. That the time went by so fast it wasn’t until we got home that we realized we forgot to take the group selfie. Again.
  3. That I’ve kept this basil plant alive. Those who cannot grow, buy their herbs from the grocery story and the fact that after multiple attempts to grow my own have failed, my Market Basket basil is alive and well.
  4. Wine, because let’s face it life is always better with Pinot Grigio.
  5. When I lost my shit last weekend after Bridget screamed she hated me (while hugging me) my husband didn’t try to fix me. Instead, he held me and said, this really sucks.
  6. That my mom is finally healthy enough to go out to dinner and ate her entire meal.
  7. That my sister-in-law read how I blame her mom for the “mothers curse” post and saw the humor (and agreed with me).
  8. That at Bridget’s IEP this week, her team were kind at keeping my expectations in check and understood my need to make Bridget as independent as possible before she leaves their school.
  9. That I have a village that remember all of Bridget’s appointments and check in to make sure I am okay. That they check in to share their own struggles so that I do not feel like I am always taking from them. That at the brunch on Sunday, they just assumed Bridget would be there and when she was not poured me a really big glass of wine and let me really relax for the first time in too long.
  10. That my week ended with mall pizza with Bridget and another best friend who didn’t care that we were at a food court. She laughed when shoe shopping for Bridget took 2.2 seconds and when we strolled the mall, she engaged with Bridget. Friends that bring Bridget out of her shell and into the world around us is priceless.

A week full of Mondays could leave me crying in my wine. But as hard as this week was? It was also full of more than ten things that brought a lightness to my week. The friends that make this unexpected life so much easier to navigate the speed bumps life keeps putting in our way.

What are you thankful for this week?

When you have a forever child

Full disclosure, I love memes. I find great enjoyment sending them to my coworkers when I see a nice OSHA or HR one. I giggle when I send them to my friends who get my sense of humor and also enjoy a good meme or two hundred.

What I like most about memes is that most times they put things into words I did not know I needed. Like this one I saw recently

Read more: When you have a forever child

Life as a caregiver of a child with special needs has no snooze button. It is getting up at the ass crack of dawn to give a timed medication. It is getting that same child up at 10p for another dose and hoping they use the bathroom at the same time, so you don’t wake up at 6am to a bed full of human waste.

It is watching the same IPad video over and over and over again. Any of you whose child watched Calliou or Barney or Bluey know what I am talking about.

It is helping your toddler get dressed in the morning, even when they are 16 years old.

It is packing a snack bag for any car ride, with a diaper bag in the trunk “just in case” you need it, even when they are 16 years old.

It is hiring a teen younger than your child to take her off the school van, since she cannot be left unattended.

This life means that you have parent-teacher conferences renamed to IEP and transition meetings until they are 22 years old.

It is being kept awake all night long while your child stims away.

It is answering the same questions over and over again. From is it going to rain, is it pool day, do I have school tomorrow to that question that cannot be answered: why is Princess Sofia’s amulet pink?

This life means cooking a second dinner, because you don’t want to be a short order cook but you also want your kid to just eat anything that has an ounce of nutrition in it.

On those nights that you are not making multiple meals; you venture to a kid friendly restaurant where you hope no one judges that second glass of wine.

When most teenagers don’t want their parents around, the special needs parent has to attend every gathering, every playdate and outing. There is no sitting in the bar while your kid bowls with their friends’ moments.

This life is totally doable, because there are also upsides.

But at the moment I am to tired to think about them. Instead, I am going to enjoy the fact that my 16-year-old with special needs child is in bed at 7pm and I have a quiet moment to watch the Real Trashwives. Until I have to wake her up at 10p for her next timed med.

While my friends with typical children have to leave their house at 10p to pick their child who it not yet licensed up from work.

In some ways this life might be more exhausting than others, but at other times so much easier.