It was brought to my attention that I never talked about Kyra's "possible Autism." So here I go. Partly because I think about
it every day. I spend an hour or more of every day thinking about
it and how to help Kyra either get past "possible Autism" or successfully live with
it.
I knew early on last summer that Kyra was lagging behind socially. Sure she was barely more then a year and a half, but I knew something was a miss. Instead of focusing on
it I chose to pass
it off as Kyra being quiet and shy.
She didn't talk to but a few strangers because she had a passive personality. She didn't speak more then one and two words at a time because it was a summer of Mommy and Kyra and we knew what each other wanted without having to always speak. I assumed this was typical of a stay at home mother/only child living situation. We only had each other, with a constant change in new and returning cast members thrown in for good measure.
I took notice when she didn't play with other children. She would gladly sit beside another child and play next to them, but never really had a true interaction with them. I'd take her to a park filled with toddlers and mine would be the one who wanted to swing for 45 minutes, watching, always watching, until it was only the two of us left. Only then would she request to stop swinging to run like a caged animal around the park. Climbing, sliding, running and jumping.
She has a friend her age whom she has regular play dates with, whom she always played side by side. There was one little girl Kyra took a liking to, she was a year older then Kyra. We'd have once a week play dates where this little girl was present. Whenever Kyra attempted to play with her, the little girl refused to play with her. Fussing, snatching toys, running to her mother because how dare someone interrupt her play. Typical 2 year old behavior. Other then those attempts, Kyra never cared to play with someone other then myself.
Because she was passive and shy.Also quite typical, the ability to ignore Mommy at all costs.
Kyra, look over here! Nothing.
Kyra, what's that? No response.
Kyra, I love you! Silence.
Kyra, Can Mommy have a kiss? "No."
A response. Good! She's not deaf.Kyra reads, for hours and hours at a time. Most of my day is spent reading book after book until I get cotton mouth. When I'm completely exhausted from reading I then entice her with attempts to play with her toys. Lego's, she likes. Eating crayons, she likes. Making a mess, she likes. Cleaning up any mess, she likes. Cooking with Mommy, she loves. Doing any of the following on her own, hmmm, its just so much better when she can mimic whatever I'm doing.
Imaginative play just isn't in her cards yet, I tell myself.
Strangers. She wasn't fond of them. Check out lady at Wal-Mart, waitress at a restaurant, lovely old couple passing by. They all made sweet comments, trying so very hard to get one of those cute toddler responses that just makes any one's day. Kyra gives them nothing. No smile, not words, not even a glance in their general direction.
What the hell is so interesting on the floor, I would ask myself.
Her second birthday comes. I anticipate hearing that she had gained some weight and
Way to go! Keep up the good work but she still needs to gain a few more pounds to satisfy me, which I hear. Then comes the questions. I know what they're looking for, a similar set of questions were asked at her 18 month appointment. Most of which were all answered "yes", but there were a few "no". Nothing serious, nothing to worry about. Not so much so this time around. I remember the questions, vivid even today, I still wonder if I said something wrong.
Does she play with her toys?
YesDoes she use her imagination?
Um, ya, I guess.Does she do things like feed her dolls, talk to them, do this and do that with them?
No. Well, ya, if I do it with her.But not on her own?
Not usually.What about when she's playing with other children?
Well, we've spent the summer in the sticks and she hasn't had many kids to play with until this last two months we've been home.But how does she play with others?
She'll play beside them, but not with them. She's shy.Does she look people in the eye when she talks to them?
Um, no. She's pretty shy, she'll just look at the ground or bury her head in my neck.Where's Daddy?
He's on deployment.When does he come back?
In a week.How long has he been gone?
6 months.What has her last 6 months been like? Did you stay at home for most of it?
No. We traveled a lot. (talking more to Kyra) We saw lots of her family in the Bible Belt, the Sunshine State. We went to the Land of the CornHuskers for two weeks. How long were you gone?
4 months.And there was probably a revolving door of family members and new people?
Ya. She usually doesn't get to see them but once a year.The pediatrician starts to perform the typical round of well baby stuff. Listens to Kyra's belly. Looks in her ears, mouth and eyes. Checks her growth charts. Tries to make small talk with Kyra. Gives her a flavored tongue depressor that Kyra, surprisingly, looks right at her and accepts.
Does she talk?
Yep.
How many words will she say in a sentence?
Two.Does she ever have three or four word sentences?
Not yet, but I hear it should be any time now.Has she ever said three or four words together before?
Um, she'll mimic 3 words from something I say. But she doesn't offer it on her own.You say Daddy is coming home in a week?
Yes, and we can hardly wait. Can we Krya?Okay. I want to brace you for the worst but give you hope for the best. She might have possible Autism. It sounds like she's had a crazy summer with Daddy suddenly leaving, you both traveling so much. Her life in these last 6 months has been a whirl wind for her and I think she might have just been caught up for that. However, by the time they turn two they should be using their imagination more, they should be past playing beside others and be actively playing with children their own age. We also tend to see them easily using 3 and 4 word sentences by this age. These can all be early signs of Autism but it' difficult to diagnose. In the Navy it's hard on younger children when the one parent is there one day and the next time they wake up a Daddy has left for another mission. Combine that with a fast paced summer, I would like to believe this is why Kyra is delayed with many of her social skills. But just in case, keep a close eye on her progress when her Daddy returns and the months that follow. If she doesn't improve within 6 months, please return for a follow up. Otherwise we don't need to see her again until she's 3.
My heart sank. I never felt so alone in the world. I'm sure I told my mother in the time before the boat came home but I have no memory of the conversation.
I watched her like a hawk when Jeremy walked off the boat. I put her down on the pier, pointed him out and gave her a good shove in his direction. Jeremy bent down, gave her a hug, asked her "Did you miss Daddy?" and Kyra, never looking at him, pointed to the submarine and spoke, "Daddy's boat." I could have cried right then and there. She spoke to her father. She remembers him!
I told Jer that night about everything her pediatrician said. He all but rolls his eyes at me and says something along the lines that he doesn't think she's autistic. He was never mean or rude, but in utter denial that this could be a possibility. The denial, I'm certain, was his front for blaming himself.
If he hadn't left on deployment, none of this might not have happened.Jer's parents came in for a visit. On one outing to the park, Kyra swinging, watching the other children play, I told my MIL and BIL what was going on. They both said it wasn't true and I should find another pediatrician. Kyra was just fine, she didn't have Autism, she just does things in her own time. This from a woman who hasn't seen Kyra in a year, and a man who hasn't seen her since the day she was born.
Really, why would you trust the pediatrician who has seen her on a regular basis or the mother who has left her for only one week in the last year? Sure, we must be loosing our minds, over exaggerating.
Alone. I had all these "family" members around me but I was totally and completely alone.
Late at night I would Google my way through Autism. All the early warning signs, watch videos comparing an Autistic child to a "normal" child, read the differences in many spectrums of Autism. Every new check list of signs I came across, half the boxes were marked. Half.
A month after "possible Autism" I saw my first glimmer of hope. Kyra spoke her first sentence. Jeremy and I were thrilled and no one understood why. No one celebrated with us. That was okay though, because the sentences didn't stop there. Slowly, at first. Then more and more. Before we knew it sentences were a part of her every day life.
I enrolled Kyra into as many classes as we could afford. Dance, gymnastics, swimming, toddler time at the library, anything to get her socialized. The week before Thanksgiving I saw my second sign, Kyra ran over to a group of 3 girls in her gym class and started kicking a ball back and forth. When they ran to a cylinder rolling thingy Kyra ran too, together they rolled this cylinder thing back and forth. I smiled and watched, silently hoping no one would interrupt her play.
A week before Christmas, Jeremy and I had our first dinner out sans Kyra. It was supposed to be my birthday dinner, but the topic of conversation for the hour and a half surrounded around Kyra and "possible Autism." We went home that night and I showed him all the research I had done and he finally agreed, its a possibility. But we had hope. It had only been three months and already she was starting to speak sentences and playing more easily with other children. We'd take her to the park and the swings were slowly not being used as a place to watch others, but more a few minutes to observe before she hoped off to run to slide.
January comes and another milestone. When we say "Kyra, look over there!" she looks. When we ask "Kyra, what's that?" and she answers. The biggest bit came at the end of January when one morning she climbed in bed with me. As I pretended to still be asleep she climbed over the top of me and planted a kiss on my lips. I opened my eyes, smiled brightly and said my usual morning greeting of "Hi, beautiful! Are you bright eyed and bushy tailed?" Every morning since, she wakes me up with a kiss. How I hope this morning ritual never grows old for her.
The last weeks in February brought our latest bit of good news. Kyra began to acknowledge strangers. No more is the gazing at the floor, but she looks people in the eye, smiles and occasionally she'll answer questions and proceed to ham things up.
Even better, she's using her imagination. She started out pretending to put rocks in her cereal. With no warning, no idea what brought this on, she started pretending. When my MIL came for another visit, Kyra continued with the pretend play. She often has a "little baby alligator- wah wah" in her hand. She'd pet it and tell you it was sleeping, then pick up one for me, then MIL. My MIL looked right at me and said, "See, I told you she was fine. She's not Autistic."
So there you go. Our worries that Kyra might have "possible Autism" is no longer. She still doesn't always talk to strangers, but she's looking at them now. She still doesn't listen to me when I call her name 18,000 times, but my presence is acknowledged. She doesn't feed her babies, play Kitchen on her own for more then 10 minutes, and generally just doesn't play on her own- with the exception of building with Lego's and reading books, but she has pet alligators, puppies and today, caterpillars.
Really, if you spent every day- morning, night, and noon- with this little ray of sunshine, then you'd see the differences she's made. Even though I'm so very proud of her, I can't help but blame myself for the way things panned out.
If only I hadn't left New England the same day her Daddy disappeared from her world.
If only I wouldn't had traveled so much. All this heart ache might, just maybe, could have been avoided if I just thought.
If only, if only, if only....
Then I find myself throwing that pity party and realize I'm not psychic. I did what I thought was best. And as a mother, that's all I can do.
The hardest part of all this wasn't the "possible Autism" but the being alone. The few people I tried to confide in didn't even consider the
possible, but shoved it off. Dismissed the opinion of a pediatrician I trusted, dismissed what I've seen, what I knew, what I researched. Because of them, I was alone in my fight to help Kyra catch up to "normal" all over again.
Remember that. Then next time someone comes to you with a
possible, don't shove it off. Don't leave them alone. Alone is the hardest place to be when you're dealing with
possible.