I ingested this book in one sitting. To say it was a bit of bibliotherapy for me is to put it lightly. It was also a heaping dose of tough love. My son is 13 years old and was diagnosed on the Autism spectrum at the age of 6. Though, I didn't have to endure a totally clueless society as did Ms LaSalle; I have felt the sting of a world that marches around with little colored ribbons attached to their lapels for any disease, syndrome, or affliction that they can physically see. For those, they will adapt, reach out, and bend. But, when the challenge is one that pits you against others, however, by seeming rudeness, total social isolation ensues, brought on by your own self just as much as by others, (yes, even me, his own mother.) I have read countless books, articles and journals about Aspergers syndrome, always with "how do I get to the bottom of my son" in mind. I thank Ms LaSalle for her stark, bold-faced honesty. Tough love indeed is how I read the story. For this is the first one that I read as "not how to fix him but how to fix YOU, his mother. I can identify with her disappointments, her humiliations, (especially with those public gastrointestinal upsets). I wish I could say that I did not, but I do. I can follow a string of therapies, interventions, and diets throughout his life where I felt I have relentlessly tried to "help him fit into his world." Not that I haven't appreciated his strengths, but I remained focused on the deficits and just how are we going to fix that? "Yes he has the IQ and ability to hold his own in any conversation with the likes of Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, but he can't tie his own damn shoes!" I will heed the warning in her and Ben's journey, particularly with it's tragic episodes in the jail and psych wards, and stop seeing only my son's possible potential, but see him as he is right now, here, today. Of course, we are lucky that we live in a world more advanced in knowledge than the one Ben grew up in and Ethan and I benefit everyday from those very therapies, interventions, and diets and will continue to benefit from them. Yet, I saw a glimmer of their story in myself where by constantly trying to change him, I am hurting him. Through their story, I hope I can live more in the present with my son and revel in his whole self.
Thank you, Ben and thank you, Barbara, for sharing your story with me.