Yo Bro, I Don’t Think This Is Working


Our house has never slept well, but this week has been a bot much even by our standards.  An entire week without sleep makes for a cranky household.  It is a bit scary what insomnia brings out.  It makes me wonder whether the boogieman was the product of insomnia or vice versa.  It is the whole chicken and the egg bit.  In our family this week, we have managed to cover all the bases for possible results of lack of sleep from the quick to anger to the hyperactive to the lack of energy or will.  We have had them all, and after 6 nights of children up in the night leading to J being up in the night, I feel safe saying nothing we have tried thus far is working!  Over the past few months/year, we have tried the keep the kids up approach and the put the m to bed early approach.  We have tried pharmaceutical solutions like melatonoin, and we’ve tried behavioral approaches like rewards and consequences.   Nothing works for long if at all, but this week has been the worst on record.
The irony in the whole week without sleep for our family is I have slept more this past week than any week in months.  My body’s reaction is just different now.  I shut down, and stay down barring a lawnmower like rip to get me going again.  Now we have had many such rips in the past week, but my body just takes the interruption and adds 5 times the sleep lost to the end.  In fact, J was kicking me to get out of bed on Sunday and deal with the dogs because I just kept sleeping, and it was an hour after they are used to me feeding them.   I just could not get up. 
All week long, I have gone to bed after I have cleaned the kitchen when K’s feed ends.  I have tried to take the hour I need to wind down, but stress and interruptions in sleep have kicked the snot out of me.  There is so little left in my tank, and it has left me inarticulate when talking about some moderately important issues with my kids.  I can only console myself realizing in their lack of sleep minds my saying exactly what I meant would still probably have gone over their heads.  As it was, I went over it all with them again after the fact.   The most memorable moment spawned the title of this post.
O in one of his angry moments tried to say why he shouldn’t have to put something together he knocked down,” Yo bro! This doesn’t work!”
I told him, “You don’t call me ‘bro.’ You are using that term entirely too much without any sense of when it is appropriate.  There are times where some may get offended.”  When he asked me who would get offended, I told him “The term bro is one which has been used for generations by Black men to describe other Black men.  You may have noticed I am ghostly pale.”  
When I said this, A started crying thinking this was something else which made her different from our family.  I calmly pointed out to her, “your old teacher and babysitter Mrs. J called me ‘Bro’ right?  She can do that because the term is really about closeness and implies a closer age gap.  ‘Bro’ is short for brother.  O could more correctly call his friend down the street ‘bro’ than me, his dad.” 
I would like to think that in a clearer mind with perhaps a little more time, I could have explained the term has more to do with shared experiences of the two people than their age.  I would like to think I could have better imparted the racial connotations in a way letting her know calling someone bro is suggesting you have a lot in common with him or her, and if that feeling is not shared, it may be seen as fake.  Being seen as fake is a hard way to have a conversation.  “Bro” use in slang implies race gives many of the same experiences and people of the same race have a certain common starting perspective from which to view what is happening around them.  Would she have understood in those terms?  I doubt it.  I barely do.
As for “Yo”, I could not get anything more across than saying it makes one sound like they cannot speak well.  When he said he heard another kid at school say it, I asked him if he heard mommy or daddy say it.  No.  I asked him if he wanted to bet whether he would hear us say it outside of quoting somebody else.
The entire conversation is one I spent wishing the words came easier.  At the same time, I know my kids need to have these conversations with us.  I do not want to shy away from needed conversations or teach my kids it is OK to turtle up when conversations are difficult.  All of this leads to unenviable spot we find ourselves in with regard to A’s therapist.  When she spends multiple weeks coming out of the office yelling at her therapist, we question the approach used.  Through the months of therapy, there just never seems to be any relationship at all between the two of them, and we can see an increase in her needs.  We will not pull her to find another therapist in the midst of the ongoing spat, but both J and I agree, “I don’t think this is working.”
Insomnia, it comes at us from all sides.
Sleep is for the weak…though without it we all grow weaker.

Tuesday update:

After waking up 5 times last night to try to calm K down from aborted puke attempts (can’t  with stomach tied to slow reflux), I can’t get get Romeo’s, “What light through yonder window breaks?”

I want to answer, “…and turn that freaking thing off or I’ll be throwing more than pebbles at the window!”

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All Time Undefeated


It seems I am so often writing about my experiences and how important I find the right perspective to be in dealing with the travails of the day.  As is so often the case, watching my kids and listening to them forced me to appreciate how hard maintaining perspective can be.  On Sat. O and A were playing out in the backyard on and around our swing set when I heard a scream followed by huge wracking sobs.  I ran outside to see what the problem was, and here is the discussion with O,
“What’s wrong?  What hurts?”
O: “It was a…it was a…It was a HUGE FLY!”
“I thought A was the only one scared of bugs”
O: “NO daddy!  You don’t understand it was a huge fly!”
“So if I stacked 100 of them on top of each other, would they reach your knee?”
O: “Daddy!  It was scary!  It was buzzing around me!”
(OK, this approach is not working)
“Ok, so it wasn’t biting or hurting you.  Was it like Buzz, the fly guy?  Could it have been talking to you?”
O, “NO!  It was scary and its eyes were ugly” with more sobs.
“Ah, so it was an ugly bug and a big one at that.  They can be scary, but you know what else they can be?  Do you remember the ugly bug ball?”
O, “No…”
A chimed in with a surprising smile on her face, “You mean the one in the song?”
“Yeah, that one.  Do you know with each dance party called an ugly bug ball, they name a king and queen for the ugliest bugs there?  Do you think the fly might get votes for king of the ugly bug ball?”  As they both looked excited, I suggested, “Why don’t you see if there are any other bugs out here that might get votes for king or queen of the ball?”
With that, terrified exasperation at the mere sight and buzz of a fly set off 6 hours over the remainder of the weekend flipping up paving stones to look underneath and combing though our flower beds looking for more to invite to the “Ugly Bug Ball.”
As good a part of the weekend as this was, there was a lot of difficulty as well.  I am not referring to the splitting headaches caused by 4 screaming kids.  I am not even talking about the long hours dealing with their worries, bumps and concerns of the moment.  All of the momentary issues, even the ones made worse with MS are but child’s play compared to the emotional gut shots.
We had to watch a kid we have loved and for whom we have done respite care for years go back with his birth mom despite being terrified of her.  I know we all have to learn as parents, but when her boyfriend isn’t taking care of him, we see her not talking with him as she drags him to the car and set him in the back seat (not buckling him to the car seat he needs).  We see him come back soaked in pee and terrified to go back because she will make him sit on the potty.  He even gets scared to see us holding underwear to give to the mom because she wants him potty trained ASAP.  He is not ready, and the fact he comes back to us each evening in different clothes than we sent him out in seems to argue in the same direction as his bad dreams and scared reaction to spending time with her.  When asked why he is scared, he never says.  When he comes back, it always seems to be in a euphoric state to be back in our home.  Our house is cool, and he is certainly loved as all of the kids compete for his attention, but why is our house so much better than where he has been the rest of the day?  In the end, all we can do is be thankful for the time we get to spend with him.  It is just sad that after tomorrow when he leaves our house, it is doubtful we will get to see him again.   At least as he goes, we can know all have benefited from the time he spent with us.  Let that be a salve against the hurt of seeing him go and the worries for his future well-being.   Our door will always open for him.
Thank you, Blue.
While Father Time sits undefeated upon his throne, all the conditions of today, good and bad, have the opposite record.  Therefore, if you are having a good day or have a chance for a good day like we had this weekend, make sure you enjoy it now. Conversely, if you are having a bad stretch full of misfortune, worry or sadness, take solace and bet on the undefeated champion to bring change.
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Our Family's Stories of Growing Up

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