We work hard for every step Kreed takes. Sometimes he fights against new skills and we work harder. He fought against a communication device and raged and cried and hit and kicked and bit. Until the night he finally realized it helped him communicate. Now it's been a slow process to teach him language is more than requests. Some days he has clarity we've never seen and other days he refuses to communicate at all.
He's not a kid who magically learned to type and held it in all these years. I wish. And we have tried. But it isn't in the cards for Kreed. His combination of medical conditions make using his hands incredibly difficult and painful. His only method of communication is also painful for him due to his neuropathy. We will never have a speaking miracle because the nerves involved in speaking have been damaged for years. Every step Kreed takes is literally painful for him. And he's locked inside his head unable to fully communicate everything he is thinking and feeling and at times refuses too even when given the tools to do so.
So we fight and he rages and we continue to work to get him to communicate and be present with us. Some days his medical conditions make it too painful to even get out of bed. Those days we feel so disconnected from him. I miss the days of health he used to have even when he drove us crazy. Watching his body work against him is heart breaking and watching him in so much pain is even worse. But still, we work and help him gain skills. I hand him his clothes to put on, he throws them back. I hand them again and he puts them on. I tell him clothes go in the hamper and to learn to do the laundry. We work hard to give him his independence. He doesn't always want it, but in the end we know it's important and he always feels better when he learns to do things for himself.
We don't do what's easy for Kreed. We do what's necessary for Kreed.
The kind of autism Kreed has doesn't lend itself to celebrate his neurodiversity. In moments of clarity Kreed talks about his autism and is angry. It stripped him of his ability to speak and his ability to be independent. Which is why we work so hard to make him communicate and teach him independence. As much as he will hate it at times and not want to do anything, in the end, it is his goal, as well as ours.
And we celebrate. We celebrate every conversation we have with him. Every new step toward independence. Every moment he smiles with his amazing dimples. Every new phrase he learns or new communication attempt. Or if he learns to talk about his medical conditions. When he learns to play new games. We celebrate if he's happy. That's the end goal. That Kreed is happy in his life. That he finds his own path and is happy in his life. His body is riddled with pain and his mind gets clouded by all his medical conditions and he can't always find his way out. So we celebrate low pain days or no pain days. Or days he is truly with us. Those are the things we celebrate. It may not be super miraculous to other people or headline news worthy, but it's amazing to us. It's amazing to him. We are so proud of our boy for all he has accomplished despite 10 equally debilitating medical conditions. When we hear others with similar medical conditions but can speak about it, most say they don't even know how they get out of bed every day. And Kreed does. Every. Single. Day. And he fights againt the pain and fights for his life. Every. Single Day.
People want acceptance and awareness but so often there isn't much acceptance or awareness of those that remain nonverbal and can have extreme behaviors at times. Kreed stands for those kids and adults. We never stop helping Kreed find his way, no matter how many times he hits, kicks or destroys things due to frustration and pain. He deserves to have the best life possible and deserves for us to never stop trying to help him and help him find his way from the pain and the brain fog and to continue to teach him so he can better communicate and be independent. True acceptance and awareness means acknowledging that kids like Kreed exist who won't make the headlines and live a very hard life full of uncertainty and lack of awareness, communication and independence. And realizing that we must fight to teach them those things.
At the end of the day though, we celebrate Kreed. All his uniqueness. His humor. His unconditional love. His friendship. His communication and drive toward independence. We celebrate Kreed. For exactly who he is and what he has accomplished. Kreed doesn't have that kind of autism most people read about, but what he does despite the odds against him is amazing and he does stand for hope for others with his kind of autism.
We don't do what's easy for Kreed. We do what's necessary for Kreed.
The kind of autism Kreed has doesn't lend itself to celebrate his neurodiversity. In moments of clarity Kreed talks about his autism and is angry. It stripped him of his ability to speak and his ability to be independent. Which is why we work so hard to make him communicate and teach him independence. As much as he will hate it at times and not want to do anything, in the end, it is his goal, as well as ours.
And we celebrate. We celebrate every conversation we have with him. Every new step toward independence. Every moment he smiles with his amazing dimples. Every new phrase he learns or new communication attempt. Or if he learns to talk about his medical conditions. When he learns to play new games. We celebrate if he's happy. That's the end goal. That Kreed is happy in his life. That he finds his own path and is happy in his life. His body is riddled with pain and his mind gets clouded by all his medical conditions and he can't always find his way out. So we celebrate low pain days or no pain days. Or days he is truly with us. Those are the things we celebrate. It may not be super miraculous to other people or headline news worthy, but it's amazing to us. It's amazing to him. We are so proud of our boy for all he has accomplished despite 10 equally debilitating medical conditions. When we hear others with similar medical conditions but can speak about it, most say they don't even know how they get out of bed every day. And Kreed does. Every. Single. Day. And he fights againt the pain and fights for his life. Every. Single Day.
People want acceptance and awareness but so often there isn't much acceptance or awareness of those that remain nonverbal and can have extreme behaviors at times. Kreed stands for those kids and adults. We never stop helping Kreed find his way, no matter how many times he hits, kicks or destroys things due to frustration and pain. He deserves to have the best life possible and deserves for us to never stop trying to help him and help him find his way from the pain and the brain fog and to continue to teach him so he can better communicate and be independent. True acceptance and awareness means acknowledging that kids like Kreed exist who won't make the headlines and live a very hard life full of uncertainty and lack of awareness, communication and independence. And realizing that we must fight to teach them those things.
At the end of the day though, we celebrate Kreed. All his uniqueness. His humor. His unconditional love. His friendship. His communication and drive toward independence. We celebrate Kreed. For exactly who he is and what he has accomplished. Kreed doesn't have that kind of autism most people read about, but what he does despite the odds against him is amazing and he does stand for hope for others with his kind of autism.