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| Image credit: Photo by jessica.garro on Flickr Licensed under Creative Commons |
Most parents hear it at one time or another. Some variation on the universal theme of parent awfulness: "I hate you. I wish you were dead. I don't like you. I'm not going to be your child anymore. I want a new Mommy/Daddy. You're the worst parent ever." These pronouncements are usually inspired by something truly terrible we've done, like forbid our child from diving head first off a playstructure onto concrete. (Actually, a lot of people married to addicts (for whom the rest of this story may also resonate) hear that kind of thing too, and usually for the same reasons.) And those words can hurt, even when we know they're just a passing storm of anger and frustration.
But yesterday, when Austen screamed, "I don't love you!" it made me feel, well, loved.
Austen is autistic, and it comforts him when the little details of his world are neatly in place. One of these details is the need to have all words printed neatly in capital block letters; no lower case letters and no script allowed. If one of us should write something using any lettering that is offensive to Austen's discriminating eye, he will not rest until he has fixed it for us. Grocery lists can be found with each item crossed out and correctly rewritten above. Signatures on birthday cards are blacked out and bear neatly printed versions of the name instead. If you want to keep a document safe from Austen's pen, you should generally keep it out of his sight.
I've recently been reading over some old journals and letters while doing some 12 Step work, and my daughter Janie has enjoyed having me read to her about what I used to do when I was a child. Yesterday, I was reading to Janie when (and you can see where this is going, I'm certain) Austen, mistakenly thought to be safely occupied with something else, noticed that (shockingly) I didn't not print every item in my childhood diary in capital block letters. And this was an outrage. A crime. An atrocity. Austen wanted to fix that journal for me right away.
Of course, the answer to that was no. No, you cannot cross out every word in my precious junior high diary and rewrite it. I took the journal and locked it up safely in my room. At which point Austen told me to please walk away and not look at him. Nothing to see here. Move along. He'd just be over here trying to pick the lock. Just ignore him.
So, being the sharp and totally onto-him mother that I am, rather than walking away, I stopped and said, "Buddy, I really can't let you have that diary. I wrote it when I was very young and it's the only one I have. It's a part of who I was and who I am, and it's very special and important to me. If you cross out the words, you'll be damaging it, and I'll be sad and angry and hurt. I'll feel like you would feel if I wrecked up your electronics collection, which I know is really special and important to you."
And that's when the screaming started. "No! You must let me have it! Promise? You have to let me destroy it!"
"No, I can't do that, buddy."
"Yes, you can!"
Austen's anger usually comes from anxiety, so I took a guess as to what he might be anxious about and tried to reassure him. "I love you no matter what. I know I said I would be angry if you damaged something that is important to me, but I would still love you, always and always."
"Well, I don't love you!" he shouted.
"Do you feel that way because you're angry at me?" I asked, trying to help him label his emotions.
"No," he said, through tears of frustration, "Because I have to destroy your diary, and it will hurt you. And if I love you, I don't want to hurt you. But if I don't love you, it's ok. And I really need to destroy it, because it's WRONG in lower case! So, I don't love you!"
Oh. Wow. I'd really misunderstood and misjudged: the level of his need, the level of his empathy the level of his emotion. But all I could think right then was that this was the best "I don't love you" I'd ever received.

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