Battling Infantilization
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I haven't been on my facebook page much the past few days because I've been struggling with some things. Thinking my way through. ...or more accurately, thinking myself in circles. doubting myself. a lot.
There is not one single "age appropriate" toy there and I am ready to cry. Yes, I see the irony in that and I'll get to it. Just give me a minute because I'm still fretting over infantilizing my boy. Ok, so, I'm back online. any time I see that word, you can bet your bottom I'm clicking on the link because I want to know how to fix this. it has to be fixed. infantilizing anyone because of their disability is taking away their right to be a full person. it's dehumanizing them and cannot be tolerated. So, I see a link and I click on it. and way down at the bottom, I see a comment... "developmental delay or developmental disability do not mean developmental stagnation"
and... OH, LORD!!!! I stagnated my baby! (which is so not infantilization. You're never too old to be your mama's baby. I have come to the conclusion that if that is good enough for my other boys, it's good enough for him so he can suck it up and deal with it, "big boy" or not.) Protesting the sentencing to a special school in kindergarten because of the impact it could have on his future education, the school said to me in defense of their decision, "you have to consider the fact that he may never go beyond where he's at." and I believed them. and I went with it. after some good mourning, ya know, but still, I accepted that. and I get to the point that I'm cool with it most days and then this. What the hell am I doing to this child!? I have to ask now, am I shortchanging him by accepting who he is and not pushing for more? I decided against outside therapy because I want him to be a child. I want him to live his life, not work his life away. Was that the wrong decision? Did I not believe in him? Is it my fault that he has made no significant progress what-so-ever in his entire school career?
So, I go running to my friend, crying about my problems to her as usual. and she explains both infantilization and stagnation. He's not stagnated. Not in the least little bit. He makes progress every day. It may be slow progress, but it's still progress. Slow moving water is still moving water and therefore not stagnant water. and "infantilizing is about treating someone as a child regardless of their maturity...and recognizing that he enjoys the same things a younger kid would is being respectful to who is and not ignoring his maturity."
and this brings us right back to Christmas. Remember why the words "age appropriate" piss me off? No worries, I'll remind you...
"It has recently come to my attention that my oversensitivity to those words may be because there's not a thing age appropriate about this child- even less so as the years go by, and being told that his interests or his needs or his behaviors don't meet those specifications is being told that he is not the same as everyone else. He's not typical. He is different. He is abnormal. Even for a child that is autistic. That I should be doing everything I can to make him more age appropriate. More typical. More normal. Because he's not good enough as he is. I should be ashamed that I am not working hard enough to potty train him, make him eat with a fork, make him walk nice, make him use his words, make him play with toys that a 10-year-old plays with- don't give him what he wants because what he wants isn't right." and remember what I had to say about that?
"I'm not doing this. I'm not going to feel guilty. This is his life. He is who he is and he is perfect. Who gives a crap what he wants? what he likes? "Nobody puts Baby in a corner." This is my son. I make the decisions for him. and if I want to give him what he wants, well, then, I'm damned well going to give him what he wants. It doesn't need to be age appropriate, it needs to be Alex appropriate. He sets his own bar. He beats his own drum. Anyone who can't see the beauty in the rhythm he taps out... well, that's their problem. There's not a thing wrong with him, not a blessed thing that I need to change. Alex is Alex and I like him just so." In my effort to fight infantilization, I started fighting him. Who he is. I started telling him that he wasn't good enough. I won't do it. I'm walking away from a battle that does not need to be fought.
Alex is Alex and I like him just so.
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