With a Grateful Heart

“Give thanks with a grateful heart”

Best I can do is to give thanks with an overwhelmed, aching heart.

I am pausing today, as best I can, from the responsibilities that have felt so monumental and insurmountable lately.

I was thinking this morning about the message I want to send my grad cohort in our active discord channel. We have a specific channel just for wellness, where we open up about difficulties and encourage one another. And I think what I want to say is this:

I know it feels like the competency we are all feverishly working on right now is the most important thing, THE piece from our grad school program that matters the most.

But it’s not.

While it IS important (and while I AM overwhelmed and anxious about it all), the most important thing I am taking from this program is this:

Look what I did. Look what WE did. We persevered through some of the most challenging, busy times of our lives, juggling so many balls. And when they fell, which they inevitably did, we had each other to pick them up and hand them back to us. I will take a lot away from this program, but my most important thing are the lifelong friends I made along the way.

Relationships. We learn a lot about developing rapport and building relationships with the people we work with in our field. You can’t help people unless you are in relationship with them. It’s the foundational thing.

In life, too. It’s what everything else is built upon. The most important piece of this existence.

The greatest of these is love.

Detective Work

Kiran did me a favor this morning by not waking up with a fever. He has still hung onto a gunky cough from his illness two weeks ago, and he woke up last night a couple hours after going to bed. Which is exactly what happened two weeks ago before he woke up with a fever the next day.

So I was bracing myself to lack balance once again during a busy and stressful time.

He has also been acting weird about putting weight on his right leg. But only periodically and only at home/for us (school hasn’t noticed, not even when he was working hard for PT and respite care providers haven’t noticed). I have taken him to the pediatrician so many times for this type of symptom, to have a partner in the detective work, but I am giving it more time this time.

Then, this morning, he was the most feisty he has EVER been while I was trying to brush his teeth. So now I need to investigate to see if there’s a loose tooth or a sore or if it’s that darn front tooth that won’t break through the gums bothering him.

When you have a non-speaking child with intellectual disability who is still working on vocabulary and communicating, you find yourself in the detective role a lot.

And it’s exhausting.

Regrowth

Fall is my favorite.

Walking the dog today, crunching through the colorful fallen leaves, I was reminded of the beauty of the season.

There is beauty in change. There is beauty in shaking off the parts of yourself that will not serve you in the season of life you’re in. There is beauty in regrowth.

Falling Flat

I took a mental health day yesterday. I didn’t look at my computer once.

Our competency prompts dropped on Wednesday at 6 pm, and I haven’t even read them yet. This is my final big academic piece for my masters program.

I am so burnt out.

I am so unsure of what I was ever even thinking, doing this.

I have no idea what it’s going to look like, logistically, for my family, for me to work full-time.

My brain keeps reminding me we have figured it all out, every step of the way, and we will keep figuring it out.

I am not alone in this. I wonder why that still feels so foreign to me?

I thought passing the Praxis and crossing that off my list would feel more monumental. It seems like everything is just falling flat lately.

So I took time to breathe and rest yesterday. Reset my brain and jumpstart my heart.

And it wasn’t enough – but it’s what I could do.

The Neverending Existential Crisis

Am I enough?

It is that question I think we all hold deep within ourselves.

Am I doing enough as a mother? As an advocate for my son?

Am I giving enough…to my partner? To my family? To my friends?

Is what I am studying and striving for important enough?

If I fail… Will I still be enough?

Memorization

Sometimes, after you nap, I crawl into bed with you. I let you pull me into a big hug with your assertive insistence, and we snuggle. I sing along with whatever song Echo is playing (we had to name the dot in your room Echo because calling her Alexa made others in the house answer), and you insist on me singing straight into your ear.

And I memorize the moment.

I think about all the sweet heart warriors – and other warriors we know battling other difficulties – that have since become angels, and the tears already in my eyes from joy quickly get mixed with tears of heartache.

I don’t think you will ever outgrow your mama’s snuggles, but there may come a time when they aren’t possible anymore nonetheless.

So I take an extra moment, sometimes. I realize somewhere in our snuggling that you are actually holding me instead of the other way around. Slowly, skillfully piecing back together the places life has torn me apart. Your love is one of purity, with not a single string attached to it. With your hugs comes healing.

And I memorize the feeling.