Friday, May 27, 2022

Gen Z Rocks!

There’s a lot to admire about Gen Z.  They are the generation coming up the ranks now and are between 10 and 25 years old.  Most of our grandchildren are “zoomers” and I’m glad that’s another name for them because they remind me of us Baby Boomers when we were young.  We were the generation that brought down a President (Lyndon B. Johnson) because of the unpopular Viet Nam War.  I don’t remember seeing such a movement with Gen X or Millennials as I’m seeing now with young people.

Gen Z kids are a lot more tech savvy than us old fogey Boomers.  They’re as passionate, if not more, than we ever were about wars, the environment, racial injustice and other social issues.  Three examples right off the bat:

Greta Thunberg who, at 15, staged a one student protest about climate change that inspired many more young people to speak up and DO something.  She has an abrasive quality to her manner but that’s perfectly understandable: she’s tired of the bullshit denials and platitudes of those who won’t legislate and change how we use our resources.  She will be a formidable young woman.  She is 19 now and will go far.

Then there’s David Hogg, survivor of the Margery Stoneman Douglas school massacre in 2018.  After that, in spite of being stalked by the lunatic Congressfool Marjorie Taylor Greene, has organized protests against gun violence and has become a gun control advocate.  Right now, he’s involved in organizing marches in several large cities this June 11 to protest gun violence.  He’s 22 years old now and a student at Harvard.  I would like to see him run for public office.

I don’t want to leave out Malala Yousafzai of Pakistan, the girl who would be educated and was shot in the head for it.  She’s a human rights activist now for women’s rights and is 24.

Other Zoomers:

Amanda Gorman, the youngest US poet laureate, who recently wrote another moving poem in the aftermath of the Uvalde massacre

Athletes Simone Biles, Naomi Osaka, Chloe Kim, and Lydia Ko

More actors/actresses and singers/musicians than I can name

Zoomers have protested injustice against people of color and LGBTQ.  Kids walked out of their classes this week to protest the lack of response from our do-nothing Congress about yet another massacre of children so close on the mass murder of elderly black people.

I am thrilled to see so many Gen Z entering into politics.  I will vote for them and I look forward to positive changes they will make.

Confused by all the generations?  Check out this link:

https://www.kasasa.com/exchange/articles/generations/gen-x-gen-y-gen-z

 

Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Asperger's

I’ve recently been in touch with a mom who has a son with Asperger’s Syndrome.  It isn’t called that now, I know, but it’s the one I’m most familiar with and first heard in the 1990s.  This mom thinks that she’s got Aspie characteristics herself and is trying to decide whether or not she wants a diagnosis.  She believes she will feel even more stigmatized and isolated than she already does if it's so.

When my eldest was about 7 and in second grade, some issues came up and Rich and I sought out a therapist for him.  We found someone we liked and she began sessions with our son.  After a couple of them, she took me aside and asked if I’d ever heard of Asperger’s Syndrome.  I hadn’t.  She explained what it was and then said she thought my son had those characteristics.

My blood went cold.  Autism?  My brilliant baby boy?  Surely not.  He was very highly verbal and creative in his thinking.  He had lots of neighborhood and class friends.  Yet.  His voice had an atonal quality to it, often sounding flat.  No inflection.  When he played with his Match Box cars, he would lie on the floor on his side and line them up.  He didn’t have the cars crash or speak.  He’d lie quietly and move all the cars up, then back.  Up, then back.  I look back now and wonder how I didn’t see it.

The therapist also said he had ADHD, the type with constant motion.  That was something we understood a bit better.  We met with school administrators and their psychologist got involved to see if my son needed an IEP.  The answer: no.  My son, they felt, needed to be in the gifted and talented program and the IQ they felt he had meant no IEP.  They did, however, give him a 504 plan because he also had dysgraphia.

As he grew older, I noted my son becoming more reclusive.  I found out he was ostracized at school beginning with middle school.  I discussed it with the school counselor who implied that it seemed to be my son’s fault.  His response to being bullied was to humiliate those kids during class, correcting them grammatically and when they got their facts wrong.  He never complained about being bullied.  In fact, he seemed to be cool, calm and collected about everything.

Even when Rich passed away, my son was emotional only that day.  After that, when I asked him how he was coping, he would answer matter-of-factly, “Dad is dead.  That’s not going to change and there’s nothing I can do about it.”  A grief therapist told me that she couldn’t help my son because he wouldn’t or couldn’t open up about his feelings.

As I learned more and more about Asperger’s, I realized that Rich had similar characteristics.  He was so shy and very uncomfortable in social situations.  He avoided them whenever he could.  He was highly imaginative and creative, with an amazing memory for facts and bits of trivia.  I read that autism can run in families.  Yes, I could see it.

My middle child, my older daughter, had difficulty with change right from the get-go.  She was very sensitive to noise.  She was 3 years old, riding her trike one afternoon, when our neighbor pulled up in her car.  My daughter called, “Please turn off the car, Miz Alice.  It’s too noisy!”  We laughed about it then but it wasn’t so funny when school started.

From first grade throughout her school years, she didn’t want to go.  She would cry and tantrum.  She’d say she was sick and wanted to stay home.   During the elementary years, we were in walking distance of the school.  We’d come onto school property and she’d stop, just like a donkey or mule you’d see in cartoons or comedies.  We had to do something to help her and we turned to my son’s therapist.  My daughter began to see her too and actually was prescribed liquid Prozac by the agency’s psychiatrist.  They felt she had a generalized anxiety disorder and depression.  The medication helped a little.

As she entered her teen years, though, she began to have explosive anger outbursts.  She didn’t like change, she didn’t like crowds, she didn’t like noise.  She didn’t want to take medication.  She said it killed her creativity.  She was devastated when her father died and was inconsolable.  She was so stressed, she came down with mononucleosis.  A new therapist thought she might be bipolar and prescribed medications for her but it was hard getting her to take them.

After I remarried Ted, I realized I had a lot of my own issues that needed to be handled again.  I told my therapist about my kids and she said, “Hmm.  It sounds like your daughter may have Asperger’s too.”  The agency psychiatrist there interviewed my daughter and came to me afterwards and said yes, she had Asperger’s too.

Neither of my kids wanted to seek out services that might have been available to them.  They didn’t want to be labelled.  Both of them have long since graduated and are managing very well.  My youngest child does not have Asperger’s.

There was an online personality quiz once and I took it out of curiosity.  It turns out I have Asperger characteristics too.  I thought about it.  I am introverted and feel socially uncomfortable around people I don’t know well.  I get claustrophobic in crowds so I stay on the periphery of a group, even if it’s family.  I seek out places to soothe myself when I get overwhelmed at a gathering. 

Like my daughter, I didn’t want to go to school although I did very well in my classes.  I did the same thing she did: fought going and would claim to be sick to my stomach.  My parents would have to forcibly drag me to the car and put me in it to take me to school.  That was the dreadful year I was ostracized and bullied for being different.

Interesting.

Anyway, the bottom line is there’s no stigma to autism or deafness or any other physical or emotional difference from “the norm”.  The answer is exposure and education.  If people understood about all our differences, I believe they wouldn’t be so afraid and hateful.  I’m very glad there’s an Autism Awareness month and a Deaf Awareness month and all the rest of them.  It would make living together so much more tolerable if we were all more accepting of our differences.

 

Monday, May 23, 2022

Safe In My Heart

Today has always had special significance for me because it was the day my first husband, Rich, died.  The song that I think of most today is a song called “My Heart Will Go On” from the movie Titanic.  The lyrics are:

Every night in my dreams
I see you, I feel you
That is how I know you go on

Far across the distance
And spaces between us
You have come to show you go on

Near, far, wherever you are
I believe that the heart does go on
Once more, you open the door
And you're here in my heart
And my heart will go on and on

Love can touch us one time
And last for a lifetime
And never let go 'til we're gone

Love was when I loved you
One true time I'd hold to
In my life, we'll always go on

Near, far, wherever you are
I believe that the heart does go on (why does the heart go on?)
Once more, you open the door
And you're here in my heart
And my heart will go on and on

You're here, there's nothing I fear
And I know that my heart will go on
We'll stay forever this way
You are safe in my heart and
My heart will go on and on

 We both loved that song as well as another called “I Hope You Dance”.   We both had a fascination with John Edward, the psychic, and promised that whoever "went first" would come back and try to communicate with the other.

Until I began dating Ted, I had a lot of communications from Rich.  Some people would just say this is coincidence but for months I would wake up around 4 a.m. and either “My Heart Will Go On” or “I Hope You Dance” was playing.  Sometimes my printer would turn on and print out a little heart symbol.  Other times, my scanner would go on and Rich’s picture would appear on my computer screen.  These things would happen when I was in another part of the room.  I’d lift the lid of the scanner and nothing was there.  Sometimes I’d catch a flash or an impression that he was there in the room or car with me.

I started looking for widowers to talk to after months of grief and loneliness, and I signed up with Match.com.  Ted’s profile came to me one day and I was struck by his physical resemblance to Rich.  Oh no, I thought, and deleted the profile.  Interestingly, I didn’t try to locate widows on LI or even in NY, which is where I was living.  I was looking for out-of-state friendships because my loss was so new.  I didn't want to date yet.

My membership in Match.com was about to expire after the trial period, and I decided not to keep going with it.  I was discovering that most widowers were looking for relationships and wanted to hook up with women much younger.  Then Ted’s profile showed up again and I heard Rich whisper, “Give him a chance.”  I felt like I’d had an electric shock.  I read the profile and decided I would contact him.  The rest, as they say, is history.

The last time I saw Rich was in one of those dreams that feels like it’s really happening.  I was falling asleep and he sat beside me, picked me up and pulled me onto his lap.  He started rocking me, holding me close.  He said softly, “I have to go now.”  When I woke up, I felt rested.

What I have now are warm and loving memories of Rich, and that’s how it should be.  My heart went on with Ted and I love him.  Rich lives on in a piece of my heart and always will.

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