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We’ll call him Billy
The stop sign just up the street from our house does more than control vehicle traffic. It controls a little piece of my kids’ lives. A stop sign should add an element of predictability to the cars passing by. It should slow them down. It should make drivers more aware of pedestrians and the kids who swarm the neighborhood.
It doesn’t.
If anything it makes traffic less predictable. If we lived on a straight stretch of neighborhood road, with no impediment to travel at all, you could count on fewer variables. In fact, it would be quite simple. Cars would either be traveling fast or slow. With experience, you could judge relative speed and ETA – not that you’d ever want to take the ETA for granted.
The stop sign makes things a little too interesting. It means some cars MIGHT stop. It means some MIGHT slow down a little. It means some MIGHT do the impatient, yet afraid of a ticket, “roll-through.” It means some MIGHT shoot through the intersection like a stray bullet in a shootout.
Now imagine you had an autistic child – even high functioning like Beth. With her attention issues, how would you feel about her stepping from the relative safety of our driveway into the zone of mortal unpredictability that is a neighborhood intersection? The stop sign, combined with her Aspergers, keeps Beth on our side of the street by decree. Violations are dealt with swiftly and severely.
Fair or not, this paranoia rubbed off on Adam.
Our intelligent six year old boy is deprived the opportunity to explore his habitat. Kids come to find him, not the other way around. When kids get bored of our yard they move on, but Adam doesn’t.
We are terrible parents.
There’s one kid who came around a lot. He’s a kid Adam likes quite a bit. He’s older than Adam, but you couldn’t tell from his behavior or apparent education level. Billy is autistic and doesn’t function as well as Beth.
Billy lives with both parents but they both don’t seem to be around much, or so we hear. He’s watched mostly by a baby sitter – a neighbor who’s been willing to help the family. I’ve talked to his mom on the phone several times, and Cheryl and I have spoken with the babysitter in person. Many of the kids in the neighborhood met them too, and their opinion includes words I can’t or won’t repeat here. I won’t dignify their comments with any further details, other than to say some are really bad. You need to know this much to understand my feelings about Billy and the neighborhood.
I only know Billy’s parents by the sound of their voice. They’re rarely around when we are, working long hours. I wouldn’t be surprised if it was to pay for Billy’s care. I know first hand a child with special needs can be a challenge – under the best of circumstances. I also know how cruel kids (and adults) can be to someone who’s different. I may not have much first hand knowledge of Billy’s home environment, but I see how the neighborhood treats him, and poorly is putting it kindly. My untrained eye sees a good kid at heart, in the process of having that goodness beaten out of him (if not literally then figuratively).
I tried to show the patience and kindness he may not get from the rest of the neighborhood, while showing him respect by speaking to him as I would an adult. I tried to make our house a safe haven, a place where he could come without fear of judgement, based on a label purchased in bulk and carried like a yoke. I believe I succeeded at both.
Like I said, Billy seems like a good kid, so it’s not hard. His mother says Billy doesn’t play with other kids, he plays in the vicinity of other kids. For some reason he does play and interact with Adam. In fact, unless something comes up requiring problem solving, written language, or interacting with anyone but Adam, Billy seems almost like any other kid.
I’d been letting Adam play out in the front yard with Billy, giving him more freedom to explore the neighborhood on this side of the stop sign.
I haven’t met a kid who likes rules, and Billy is not an exception. He was constantly asking if Adam could come across the street with him to his friend’s house. I’m a mean, terrible parent, so I always said no.
Billy and Adam were playing on the front porch when some neighborhood kids rolled past. Adam and Billy knew most of them. Adam was friends with most of them. Adam makes friends pretty easily. Billy does not.
Before I knew it, Adam followed Billy and his other friends across the street, and the trouble was just starting.
Despite deposing all involved (except Billy, who wasn’t available), I still don’t know exactly what happened. There were some rather fantastic, inconsistent stories, but Adam and his friends tell one consistent story:
Billy tripped over a toy laying on the sidewalk, blamed the other kids, and blew up. He swore at the other kids. He lashed out physically at a couple. He told Adam he was going to call the police on him.
Like I said, I don’t know what happened first hand, but Adam came home hysterical, worried the police we’re coming for him. All of the other kids said Adam wasn’t even around when Billy fell.
I want to be understanding, but I’m disappointed in Billy. It’s not just the fight I’m worried about (Billy never touched Adam), but both he and Adam knew I didn’t want them crossing the street. I know it won’t be the last time Adam faces pressure from his friends to do something he shouldn’t (like walking off without permission), but Billy is four years older than Adam, and I wonder if it creates more pressure.
Since then Adam and Billy reconciled. They weren’t allowed to play out front anymore though. However, they played together like nothing happened… for a while.
Then Billy stole something.
At first we weren’t sure and I wanted to give him every benefit of doubt. A six year old and an autistic kid do not make the best eye-witnesses. However, it became apparent Billy probably did steal it, and it was pretty expensive – something we couldn’t ignore. We haven’t seen or heard from Billy in a few months now. Cheryl told him he could come back when he returned the item, told us what he did with it, or give us some idea where it might be.
He hasn’t come back.
I feel terrible. What if he didn’t take it? We can’t be certain. We didn’t see him take it. He didn’t admit to taking it. Adam says he took it, but he’s six. He usually accuses someone of stealing any time anything goes missing. Beth said Billy was playing a hiding game with Adam – and Adam was not a willing participant.
I feel like we’re just as bad as the rest of the neighborhood.
There’s a balance to be met, and I’m not sure where it is. We have a responsibility to our families as well as our community. Billy is part of our community, but without that sense of balance I’m lost. I’m haunted by the thought of our community discarding a lost child.
I wonder if it’s time for another chance, or a first chance to prove we were wrong to assume the worst.
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In the UF years
People romanticize snippets of the past and I’m no different. If you listen to me talk about my UF years, you’d think:
1. I got straight As.*
2. I spent four years in Gainesville with Cheryl, a time overflowing with love, joy, learning, and fulfillment.
3. Ambrosia came with every meal. They only had enough to serve it as a side though.**
4. Classmates followed me on campus, collecting things my feet had trod.
5. Steve Spurrier begged me daily to join the team and solve his dreadful kicking game.***
6. I reigned over the Florida Gym like I was the king holding court, with stifling defense, dazzling dribbling, and a clutch, 3 point shot that would make Larry Bird get down on his knees and kiss my ring.
Obviously it wasn’t all that, to borrow a phrase from my daughter. I’ve got my finger on the pulse of teen culture, yo!
I had a theory about the good old days. I wasn’t just thinking about my good old days, but the concept – those periods in life we’re most likely to hold dear to our hearts. I won’t claim I came up with it first, because it turns out I didn’t. I only claim it occurred to me independent of outside influence – other than raw evidence. When I heard some of my private thoughts in class at UF, allegedly from people who had the same thoughts before I was born, I felt a little deflated. But go ahead, call me liar. I double dog dare you!
Lest I confuse or bore you further, here it is. Although we selectively remember the good times from our “good old days,” those days don’t become good and old unless there are a fair number of mostly forgotten bad days in the mix.
Forgetting those classes at UF for a moment (I did a long time ago), the only flaw in my theory (that I could see) was it relied on one study with an admittedly small test group and no control for comparison. Can I count that as one flaw or do I have to go with three or more? Some would even stoop so low as to call my evidence “anecdotal,” because it came solely from my personal experience – or my recollection of it after the fact.
Well! You do know you’re free to stop reading anytime you like, right?
I imagine “THE good old days” is a moving target, changing as we grow older, having more days in the sample for comparison. However, for the moment mine are my days in college – as I’ve suggested before, in this same post even! I “image” they are a moving target because at the tender age of thirty-nine, I have a lot more data to collect.
Emotional ups and downs filled my college years. I started dating and got engaged at UF, but I also spent some of the loneliest days of my life at UF. If you can believe it, Cheryl was actually dating someone else when we started school. (Yes, I was a rebound guy.) I had the closest friendships of my life, and I pissed each and every one of them away. (I think it’s why I’m a little dismissive when someone says I’m a nice guy. I have evidence to the contrary.)
For every moment of bliss, I can come up with it’s equal and opposite… if I try a little harder.
Do you know what you’re thinking? I know what you should be thinking: “Why the hell would you work so hard to remember the bad times? Can’t you just deal with a few fleeting moments of serenity and nostalgia and leave well enough alone? Are you one of those weirdos who enjoy pain?”
First of all, believe it or not there are some personal things I keep private, thank you very much!
Mostly I’m just curious. I did spend the better part of four years studying the mind and how it works. Well, actually I studied what a few folks not named Freud THOUGHT about its mysteries. No offense to the Freud dude, who may have had more issues himself than he studied and wrote about. I did two research projects at UF focused on memory. The formation, use, and retention of memories fascinated me for some time, particularly after my grandmother with Alzheimer’s died (while I was at UF).
I wonder if good, even great can get bland – in a way. Say you have a great day. What does it entail? I’m not talking about vacations or events, I’m talking about real, every day life. How is it different from other good days? If you string a bunch together, is the difference enough to remember the specifics of a particular day for a week, 6 months, or years? I think the answer for most people is no. I think our mind makes short cuts whenever it can, building a construct of “a good day” from hundreds of good days. Our minds learn things which typically make up “good days,” and our recollection of the specifics fade – after they’ve been classified, ranked, and processed – added to the mind’s algorithm used to reconstruct a “memory” of a “good day.”
Now think back to the good times you had to work for, when life was a little more roller-coaster than merry-go-round. Those days have contrast, the memories like the after-image of a flashbulb in a darkened room. It makes me wonder if we have to suffer a little to find happiness with any depth to it, rich enough in emotional texture to stand out in our mind.
Study this post and you’ll probably find more holes than my memories. A four year degree hardly makes me an expert. I haven’t even tried to explain the repression of bad times in this post. In fact, I don’t believe all of them are all that repressed. But that’s ok. Light lacks contrast without darkness, and many (if not most) of us can choose to see more light than its alternative when we’re given the gift of time. It’s enough to make me think a little differently about my depression. A few times I’ve climbed out of the hole to find great memories ready for the making.
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*Actually, that one’s true.
**I meant to imply the mythological definition of ambrosia, not “beebread,” or “a fungal product used as food by ambrosia beetles,” as a pesky dictionary might suggest.
***I was actually pretty consistent from 40 yards off a tee behind my house in high school, using our narrow, 8′ swing set in lieu of goal posts. However, I never played a down of organized ball. I was always the guy with the “biggest leg” on my soccer teams though.
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Friend request
You’ve heard me talk, countless times, about the posts in my growing pending pile. Many have never escaped. In fact, it takes a pretty strong post to dig itself free and find you here. Now imagine what I don’t post.
Well, as chance would have it I’ve been working on a post about nostalgia and the years I spent at UF.
Today, I received a Facebook friend request from an actual, pre-internet age… friend… from UF! It’s a rare, precious thing. It’s someone who went to my wedding no less!
The downside is you’re gonna have to wait for my essay on nostalgia. This little bit of emotional over-reaction will have to tide you over.
I know. I feel your pain.