Today, I am forty.
As we grow, we tend to lump our life into decades. The childhood years, the teenage years, the
twenties when you are finding yourself, then the thirties….the childbearing
years. I had my kids in my thirties, but
they were not the happy, go lucky, raise your normal kids type of years. No…. my thirties were more about dealing with
medical diagnoses of my children.
My thirties started with the birth of my oldest child, now
10, and her diagnosis of Cerebral Palsy and later Autism. It was the Autism that truly rocked our
world.
Growing up in a family of five myself, I was taught to do
what was right. (Not that I always did.)
I was taught to use my manners, be kind and work hard because that is
how you get ahead in this world. My mom
taught me to stand up for what I believe in.
My dad taught me to love fiercely.
And my parent’s relationship taught me to stick with my husband…even
when things get hard.
But then, life got ugly.
In my thirties, I started to see things for what they really were. I watched my beautiful, engaged, babbling
12-month-old daughter spiral backward in her development. By 18 months old, we had lost her to
autism. There is not much that can break
your heart like that. Having your child
there…but not there. Watching other kids
develop so quickly and leave her behind while she was lost in her own world.
But in reality, I’m sure all this happened, in part so my
soul could grow. I needed to learn to
lean on my husband for strength when I had no more. I needed to learn to trust him because he
loves her too. I needed to love
fiercely, like my dad, so I could see the truth. The truth in what really happened. I needed to work hard to get my daughter
back. I needed to develop the strength
to stand up to doctors who simply wanted to medicate my two year old. I needed to teach myself everything, just as
my mom has in her life, so that I could learn HOW to bring her back to me.
Little did I know that I would spend the bulk of my thirties
learning about gut flora, methylation, candida overgrowth, nutrition, adrenals
and mitochondrial dysfunction. If I had
known in advance, I certainly would not have majored in business and marketing
in college. I have spent the last ten years changing the way my family eats and lives life.
There have been many tears and long nights in the past ten
years….but I have also felt intense gratitude and incredible highs when she
started to come back to us. I now know
my daughter…. something I feared would never happen. I can hear her voice. She tells me when she is nervous, angry or
happy. She tells me that she loves me. She gives me unprompted hugs and tells me she
is sorry if she has made a day particularly hard for me.
During all this, I have had the honor of getting to know an
amazing group of mothers. They are
autism moms. And they have shown me the
way. They have taught me to read medical
studies on my own. They have held my
hand when times got tough and helped me find answers to my daughter’s
problems. And these answers,
incidentally, also helped my second child with sensory processing disorder and
my son with severe food allergies. And
now that my daughter is recovering, I have the honor of holding the hands of
newly diagnosed parents when they need me.
Needless to say, I learned more lessons in my thirties than
I have my entire life. And I feel
stronger for it. My gray hairs and crows
feet are earned. I guess
my parents knew what they were doing when they named me Kelly. In Irish the meaning of the name Kelly
is: warrior.
And now that I have looked back, it is important to
look forward. I try to take one day at a
time because when you live with autism, you never know what tomorrow will
bring. But I am optimistic. I am living in a time when parents are
demanding answers. When passionate
parents are healing their own children despite the odds. And hopefully, we will see a cure in my
lifetime. There are already promising
recovery treatments, although the results vary from child to child. Despite my wariness of the medical community because
of their denial of vaccine involvement and their insistence of the use of anti-psychotic drugs, I am excited to see what the next ten years will bring. Functional medicine and Epigenetics are on
the rise which is very promising.
As my husband always says…it is not what happens to
you…it is how you react to it. It is all
about attitude. And I love my children
fiercely and that will never stop. I
will continue to fight for them, enjoy them, learn from them and hopefully
continue to heal them. God willing. Here’s to the next decade of healing.
I just discovered your blog this morning. I am almost 36. :) At about age 2 I finally admitted that there was something VERY different about my #4 son. My parenting skills had not somehow just evaporated, I was not coddling/spoiling him...He is a very different creature. And so my research and work began. Just last night I saw for the first time a mention of MTHFR connected to ASD. Google searching those two terms lead me to this blog.
ReplyDeleteMTHFR was my nemesis from my child bearing days. MTHFR is the gene mutation which is the only probable cause of my 7 miscarriages. Insane to be meeting it again. I thought it was a part of my past.
Thank you for posting your journey here. It is helpful to have a bit of light shone on a curvy unfamiliar path
Thank you for sharing your journey as well. The scientific community is just beginning to see the effects of a MTHFR gene mutation.
DeleteI just landed on your blog from someone posting this on FB I think. Thank you for this. I"m right there with you. I'm not sure any of your details, but we are seeing Dr. Kendal Stewart in Austin TX. Our son is also recovering from SPD, ADHD, with high anxiety. Huge methylation and folate issues. I wish you continued healing on your journey with your family!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the kind words. So glad to hear that you have pinpointed the folate & methylation issues and treating them is helping. That's wonderful. Wishing you the best.
ReplyDeleteThat was beautiful :) In many ways I feel like you could have been talking about me! I also just turned 40 (LOVE IT!), I had my son who regressed into ASD when I was 30 so he is now tunring 10. He is mostly recovered now. Yes, my 30s felt like some nightmarish grad school experince of trying to learn biochemistry fast enough to help my kids (other son has many issues as well). Not what I thought being the mom of littles would be like! Glad to hear that your daughter is doing so well!
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