Thursday, May 17, 2007

My trigger, my son

Sorry this is a little long, and this is the abridged version...haha...

My oldest son L. just turned eight. He is intense. VERY, VERY intense. He has been this way since the second he popped out of my body. He was never really able to soothe himself as a baby and it's sort of continued to this day. This is a MAJOR MAJOR MAJOR trigger for me.

My son has been assessed as "gifted". This is great, but it is also a curse. I think one of the reasons he's gifted is because he takes a lot in. He has invisible feelers, he can pick up on the tension or the joy in a room. He grasps things easily and remembers everything! But it's a burden for him because he feels things intensely. He has moments where he gets "the thing", which is an overwhelming feeling of sadness or worry or anxiety or all of these emotions at the same time. I talk him "off the ledge" so to speak, or I have him draw a picture about it (which has resulted in him being a really great artist) or other things to calm him down. I held him back a year in school because emotionally he was not ready, he was hitting himself in preschool when he got stressed.

I will do anything for my kids and I've gone to great lengths to help my son. Books, therapy sessions, anything, etc. etc. I used to pray for HP to take from me whatever it took to help my son feel good and at peace and to please help my son.

My son is in a tailspin about something right now. Last night I talked to my therapist about it and I'm getting really, really sick of people telling me shit like, let him know you love him, give him reassurance, set limits, talk it out, don't talk it out with him blah blah blah. Eight years I've been doing whatever I can for this kid and it is never enough. His need is bottomless. No matter how much I give, it is never enough for him and he sucks me dry. I am left utterly spent. I need acknowledgment that his needs are special and unique and not the run of the mill bullshit you can hear on Oprah for Pete's sake.

My therapist says maybe he's anxious because I was drinking and couldn't address his needs. Bullshit. And I say no I didn't drink like this eight years ago. I did not drink then to check out. When my son is "off" it's a trigger for me. I'm looking for a way in sobriety to deal with it instead of checking out with a bottle of wine. For fuck sake!

I have a brother with a similar disposition. He was diagnosed as bi-polar or schizophrenic or a combo of the two. I haven't seen or spoken to my brother in three years. He doesn't want me and my other brothers to know where he is because he paranoid. I check the John Doe's in the state where I think he's living to see if there are any unclaimed bodies that might be my brother. He breaks my heart.

I am scared shitless that my son is going to take his first drink and FINALLY be able to soothe himself and become an alky like me, or he'll end up being committed like my brother was. My son is terrific and has a lot of really great qualities, but when something bothers him, it rocks his whole world. When his world is rocking, so is mine. I am too emeshed with him, I feel his pain and hurts.

Sorry for the long rant, I want the peace of mind, acceptance, spiritual solution many of you have found in sobriety. It's the only way I can deal with this particular trigger. I had no desire to drink over this yesterday. 75 kickass sober days!

7 comments:

Mary P Jones (MPJ) said...

Love your blog! Hang in there! I have a son on the autism spectrum, and it is frustrating... I get blame and lots of pat Oprah advice too from people who don't really know him or what our lives are like. What works on other kids does not work on my child. He's different.

I have noticed that depression, autism, anxiety disorders, ADD/ADHD, OCD and addiction all seem to run together in families. All you can do is keep faith and keep looking for answers -- there must be someone out there who can help you help your son.

Our first pediatrician told us we were just anxious parents when my son wasn't speaking at age two, but I knew he needed more. We kept switching doctors until we found some that actually listened to what we were saying.

Best to you with your son and best to you in recovery. Thanks for sharing.

Clarity said...

mpj-What a relief to read your comments. Asperger's has been mentioned and then dismissed by a number of "specialists". My son does not have the main symptons of Aspergers as designated by the DSM IV, but considering Asperger's wasn't even in the DSM until '94, that doesn't give me much confidence. The answer is out there somewhere, and you've given me much food for thought. Thank You.

Mary Christine said...

It sounds like you just described a boy with "nature" problems... and people want to address it with "nurture" solutions. My daughter came out of the chute "different" too. I was lucky she was a twin and her sister was just "fine", so when people wanted to say it was something I did, I would point to her sister. Hang in there. You love your son, that is evident... it is still frustrating and you are dealing with your own stuff.

A friend of Bill W. said...

I have a nephew with Prader WIllie Syndrome, very very draining on his Mamma...

Hats of to you for 75 Sober Days!!

You're in my prayers {{Clarity}}, you have a good heart and it shows in all you do as a mother.

You and I are the 'babies' here in the blog-world with very close sobriety dates so I like keeping up on your life, it's a virtual thing!

Prayers for understanding and direction ~ Shugg

Shadow said...

someone once said, only people who can deal with it, get special children. but i know how you feel. with the bean's add my patience is also stretched to the limit and beyond at times. did it contribute to me drinking? maybe. but it backfired, since when i was sober i was strict and stuck to the rules, when i drank he could get away with anything. which confused the shit out of him. and while i was in therapy, i asked about him going to therapy because of my drinking, and the therapist said to give him 6 months to see if he'd drop the child of an alcoholic behaviour. if not, send him to a therapist. and he has definately relaxed these behaviours, actually i noticed a change from about 3 months already. and now he doesn't seem to have any more hangups. unless he hides them really really well. lotsa luck and patience!

Trudging said...

I have an intense 8 year old too. Hang in there

lushgurl said...

Whoa Clarity, it sounds like you have your hands full! The good news is that you are clean and sober (75 days- WOOHOO). I know that my Angel has always been quite a challenge, and just when I seem to figure out what helps, she changes her M.O.! I believe that you will find a way to help your son, and I believe that you are a strong and loving mom- don't give up- the answer is out there.
love and HUGS