In It | This Is How We Make It Through [Podcast]

 

By Understood

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In this episode, hosts Amanda Morin and Bob Cunningham hear from families about the (sometimes unexpected) ways that joy creeps into everyday life — even on the most challenging days. From learning to ride a bike (as an adult!) to making fart noises at the dinner table, this is how families with kids who learn and think differently make it through.

 

Transcript provided by YouTube:

0:00
[Music]
0:04
hi i’m amanda morin a writer and
0:06
in-house expert for understood.org and a
0:08
parent to kids who learn differently
0:10
and i’m bob cunningham i’m a career
0:12
educator and a parent and i’m the
0:14
executive director for learning
0:15
development at understood and we are in
0:18
it this is a podcast from understood on
0:21
this show we hear from parents and
0:22
caregivers and sometimes kids and we’ll
0:25
offer support and advice for families
0:26
whose kids are struggling with reading
0:28
math focus and other learning and
0:30
thinking differences
0:31
today we’re talking about finding joy
0:33
and beauty in everyday life while also
0:35
managing the challenges that come with
0:36
raising kids who learn differently
0:38
the idea for this episode started with
0:40
an article i read in the new york times
0:42
by andrew solomon his name may be
0:44
familiar he writes a lot about families
0:46
that are different in some way this
0:48
article was about the work we as a
0:50
society need to do
0:52
to overcome these sort of pervasive
0:54
negative and kind of uninformed views of
0:56
disability
0:57
and there was one line in it that i
0:59
especially love as a parent of kids with
1:01
autism and adhd
1:03
solomon wrote
1:04
the fact that you wouldn’t have chosen
1:06
something doesn’t mean you can’t find
1:08
joyful meaning in it and boy did that
1:10
resonate with me
1:12
[Music]
1:23
it’s nice to start talking about the
1:25
great things about having kids
1:27
regardless of whether they learn and
1:28
think differently because a lot of the
1:30
time we’re talking about what we find
1:32
difficult and to be able to talk about
1:36
what’s really just joyous in having kids
1:39
i think is something every parent
1:40
probably should be looking at at some
1:42
point or another
1:43
but first bob tell me what joy means to
1:45
you
1:46
so for me joy is
1:50
that little bit of overwhelming feeling
1:53
you get right so it goes beyond just
1:55
being happy
1:56
or being excited it’s that kind of sense
1:59
of being overwhelmed by what is
2:02
happening that makes you feel so happy i
2:06
you know i think your definition of joy
2:08
is very similar to mine i don’t think of
2:09
it as sort of that everyday contentment
2:11
that you know things are going well it’s
2:13
that moment that makes you like laugh
2:15
out loud
2:17
so once we started talking about this i
2:19
was reminded of a family my kids and i
2:21
got to hang out with over the summer
2:23
lindsey and kevin and we’re just going
2:25
to use their first names today they’re
2:27
raising two kids who learn and think
2:28
differently and when i found they and
2:30
their family were going to be passing
2:32
through
2:33
my
2:34
town in maine i suggested we meet up
2:36
and we all went out to lunch and our
2:38
time together was it just made a really
2:40
powerful impression on me first of all
2:42
our two boys are very close in age never
2:45
had met and they were just joyous
2:47
together
2:48
and then there was this one moment
2:50
after lunch when kevin and his son sam
2:52
just started skipping down the street
2:54
like they didn’t have a care in the
2:55
world
2:56
kevin do you remember skipping down the
2:58
street like that i do yeah and we we
3:00
just had a good lunch and we uh we were
3:03
he was feeling silly
3:05
and i think what’s important to say
3:06
about that is that he used to not be
3:07
able to skip you know he he wears braces
3:10
on his feet and that was a challenge for
3:11
him to get to the point where he even
3:13
could skip so when he wants to skip now
3:15
i’m there i want to skip with him i know
3:17
i know how hard he worked to get there
3:18
and how much fun it is for him so
3:20
i take those chances whenever i get him
3:22
sam is eight years old his sister maggie
3:25
is 12. when asked to describe maggie
3:27
lindsey says write off that she is
3:28
ferociously brave she is the person who
3:32
will do parasailing
3:34
400 feet in the air with my mom
3:37
maggie loves art theater soccer and
3:40
science lindsay says she has what’s
3:42
called a language-based learning
3:44
disability so for her her working memory
3:46
and her short-term memory
3:48
are smaller than other kids and so for
3:51
her what that means is it’s sometimes
3:53
hard for her to comprehend or to take
3:55
multi-step directions
3:57
and sometimes it’s really hard for her
3:59
to express herself
4:01
maggie’s brother sam has a different
4:03
personality lindsay says he’s super
4:05
silly very emotionally expressive and
4:08
all heart people at school call him the
4:10
mayor because he goes around and says hi
4:12
to everybody sam has some difficulty
4:15
with reading like his sister but most of
4:16
his challenges are physical he struggles
4:18
more with motor skills
4:20
kevin and lindsay talk about their kids
4:22
with so much warmth and humor and pride
4:25
but they say it took them some work to
4:26
get there both kevin and lindsay loved
4:29
school when they were little and success
4:30
came easily to them so they figured
4:32
their kids would be the same when
4:34
maggie’s kindergarten teacher first told
4:36
them she thought there was some sort of
4:37
problem they were floored
4:39
we were blindsided uh with that news in
4:42
kindergarten and it really really took
4:44
us back um you know there have been
4:46
never been any signs in preschool the
4:48
the teachers always said oh she’s such a
4:49
delight she’s got a great attitude she’s
4:50
doing just great uh they didn’t catch
4:52
any of this stuff because she put on
4:54
such a brave face and so it really it
4:57
surprised us and also we didn’t know how
4:59
to deal with it because it was not
5:00
something that we ourselves had been
5:02
through right
5:03
what was it to you when it looked like
5:05
school wasn’t going to be as easy for
5:06
her as it had been for you oh it’s
5:08
definitely disappointing i mean i mean
5:10
because you know we had a certain
5:12
you know when you have kids you have a
5:14
certain vision of how things are going
5:15
to go and it’s always rosy and
5:17
optimistic right
5:19
but but parenthood is a series of steps
5:21
where you realize that your kids are
5:23
like everyone else so they’re not
5:24
perfect uh and we’ve had steps like this
5:26
before both both maggie and sam uh have
5:29
vision problems so they had to get
5:30
glasses when they were really young and
5:32
that was our first moment of oh wait our
5:34
kids aren’t perfect you know and it
5:36
seems like that’s just a stupid thing
5:38
now but at the time just megan getting
5:40
glasses was heartbreaking for us now
5:42
it’s the tiniest thing we didn’t think
5:43
about it you know uh the news in
5:44
kindergarten was a was an even bigger uh
5:47
blow to that idea uh that that this
5:49
wasn’t uh the path that you know we’d
5:51
imagine for our kids first maggie and
5:54
then sam later on
5:55
and yet you know that’s the path we’re
5:58
on uh and you can
6:00
get upset
6:01
that
6:02
that it’s not the perfect way it’s gonna
6:04
be or you can realize this is who your
6:06
kid is and you’ve got to meet them where
6:08
they are
6:09
it sounds like they’ve redefined your
6:10
expectations of what parenting would be
6:12
does that sound accurate 100
6:15
i i think in
6:17
in two ways i was thinking about this
6:19
idea of joy and i think you know we live
6:21
in a university town that sends tons of
6:24
kids to ivy league colleges and you know
6:27
the conversations at the school board
6:28
meeting and around town are just about
6:30
how stressed our kids are and
6:32
um there’s a great author um that calls
6:36
it the checklisted childhood like we’re
6:38
doing everything we can to sort of build
6:39
our kids resumes so they get into the
6:41
perfect college we have the perfect job
6:43
so i would say one of the most beautiful
6:46
ways um and one of the most freeing
6:48
things that having the kids we have did
6:50
was it sort of threw all of that out the
6:54
window i like i feel very free that
6:57
our kids do not have to compete with
6:59
other kids and that is not saying we’re
7:01
lowering our expectations at all for
7:03
kids it’s saying what we’re going to do
7:05
is really figure out the kids we have
7:07
and what’s going to make them thrive
7:10
and so it doesn’t matter if so-and-so is
7:12
going to this college and so-and-so is
7:14
going on to do this in some ways it was
7:16
like
7:17
so
7:18
relieving to not even have to be a part
7:21
of that conversation or to feel
7:22
influenced by it because i think we
7:24
learned very on like
7:26
we have to know the kids we have and the
7:28
way that they’re going to be the most
7:29
successful is really figuring out what’s
7:32
right for them
7:34
but parenting their kids hasn’t just
7:35
been a matter of adjusting expectations
7:37
it’s also allowed for some incredible
7:39
growth like when lindsay saw maggie
7:41
struggling to learn how to ride a bike i
7:44
never learned how to ride a bike
7:46
and the reason why i never learned how
7:48
to ride a bike was not for lack of
7:50
trying or my parents trying so we did
7:52
the traditional thing where my father
7:54
held on to the back seat of my bike and
7:56
you know what’s supposed to happen is
7:58
you’re supposed to be writing and then
7:59
all of a sudden your dad lets go and
8:00
you’re supposed to have this great
8:01
moment where you realize you’re doing it
8:04
um
8:05
and what actually happened to me was i
8:07
just kept falling and falling and
8:09
falling
8:10
um and i did not like to fail as a kid
8:13
and so i decided i was not going to ride
8:15
a bike because my father was clearly
8:17
sabotaging me which doesn’t make sense
8:19
now but anyway fast forward to maggie
8:23
learning how to ride a bike i’m 38 years
8:25
old she’s trying so hard
8:28
and you know i feel like such a
8:29
hypocrite because i’m telling and then
8:31
this is so true of so many things in her
8:33
life where i’m pushing her to be brave
8:35
and bold and
8:37
do all these things when i’m not really
8:39
doing them myself so she and i basically
8:42
made a deal
8:44
that if she learned how to ride a bike
8:46
without me holding on to it that i would
8:48
go out i would buy a bike
8:50
and i would learn to ride and so that’s
8:53
exactly what we did
8:55
um it was not pretty her um elementary
8:58
school had a big hill that goes down
9:00
sort of you know a street that goes down
9:02
a big kill to her school and so i used
9:04
to make her she really wanted to ride
9:06
bikes to school so i would make her go
9:08
to school a half an hour early because i
9:10
didn’t want any of the adults to see me
9:12
flying down the hill on a bike screaming
9:15
and terrified and potentially falling so
9:17
we would go early
9:19
until i built up the confidence um to to
9:22
just be able to ride normally and now we
9:25
now we ride all the time and so i’m
9:27
really grateful to her that you know i
9:29
can’t tell her to be brave and tell her
9:31
to keep trying when it’s hard if i don’t
9:33
do it myself
9:35
we heard from some of you about how you
9:37
found joy raising kids with differences
9:39
here’s beth
9:41
patrick
9:42
was born with down syndrome but he was
9:44
also born with a heart defect and he had
9:47
to be
9:48
have open heart surgery at nine weeks
9:50
old and i had two other older children
9:53
jack and mary kate but i wasn’t sure if
9:55
patrick was my last child or not
9:58
and so every part of his babyhood felt
10:01
so special and i savored it and i felt
10:05
gifted with that
10:06
slow unfolding it it felt like those
10:10
slow motion videos that you see of a
10:12
flower unfolding
10:14
in fact
10:15
i remember so clearly
10:17
one time watching him spend an entire
10:20
day figuring out how to open a kitchen
10:23
cupboard
10:25
and as he was doing that i thought
10:28
you know jack and mary kate just figured
10:29
this out so quickly i never even noticed
10:32
when they figured it out they i mean it
10:34
was like i opened my eyes and now they
10:36
know how to open the cupboard here i’m
10:38
watching you figure it out all day long
10:42
and by the end of the day he figured it
10:43
out and it was such a special
10:47
moment to get to see him really figuring
10:50
these things out
10:51
i wasn’t upset with him that it took him
10:54
longer i just thought it was cool that i
10:56
could notice it
10:58
[Music]
11:05
so i can remember a mom
11:08
talking to me at length
11:10
about her son and her son had
11:12
a lot of difficulty with a lot of things
11:15
especially around school
11:18
and that transferred into a lot of
11:19
difficulty with a lot of things at home
11:22
and so one of the things that he started
11:24
to do when he was kind of a young
11:26
teenager is he really jumped into
11:29
cooking fortunately for him his mom and
11:32
dad realized like oh this is really
11:35
turning him on like he’s really excited
11:37
about this right so they encouraged it
11:39
they started to take him places to learn
11:42
more about cooking
11:43
and the mom was you know talking to me
11:46
about this over a period of months and
11:48
then over a period of a year and stuff
11:51
and i can vividly remember kind of the
11:53
last conversation i had with her about
11:55
it and it had entirely shifted
11:58
from
11:59
how into cooking her son became to how
12:03
into cooking she became
12:05
um and this was somebody who never
12:06
really liked to cook and was a very busy
12:10
executive and i remember her saying in
12:13
the end
12:14
if it hadn’t been for how excited he got
12:17
i never would have figured out that i
12:19
actually love cooking oh that’s so cool
12:21
so like she found joy through him
12:24
finding his passion yeah
12:26
and you know and i think that’s so
12:28
important because we need to find those
12:30
moments of joy like whether it’s from
12:32
our kids whether it’s in our kids or
12:34
those kinds of things
12:35
and we definitely heard that from
12:37
lindsay and kevin
12:38
but
12:39
i don’t want to give the impression that
12:41
lindsay and kevin are superhuman and
12:43
always patient and loving and
12:44
understanding parents
12:46
because that’s setting the bar pretty
12:47
high and they are the first to tell you
12:49
that it’s not moments of beauty and
12:51
grace all day every day i know we had a
12:54
we’re having dinner one time it was one
12:55
of those nights where where where both
12:57
kids were acting up for whatever reason
12:59
and i’m not even sure it had anything to
13:00
do with their the differences but it
13:02
just you know it was like a stressful
13:03
night we’d all had kind of a crappy day
13:05
and we were you know all in a sniffy
13:06
mood
13:07
it was a very serious tense moment and
13:09
lindsay just stopped she was about to
13:11
lose it and she put her mouth to her
13:13
upper forearm and made a fart noise and
13:15
it was
13:16
hysterical it just it cut through the
13:18
tension of a table and we all just
13:21
started howling it was just stupid and
13:23
silly and it just brought us all back to
13:26
what are we upset about what are we
13:27
doing here they’re kids have fun with
13:29
them
13:31
such good advice right they’re kids very
13:33
good advice and you know we heard from
13:35
another parent michelle whose 17 year
13:37
old son avi has autism
13:39
michelle tells us she’s gotten a lot of
13:41
joy out of raising avi and she actually
13:43
credits him with making his three
13:44
siblings kinder people and with bringing
13:47
lots of music and dancing into the house
13:49
but that doesn’t mean she never
13:50
struggles
13:52
you know it’s a it’s an interesting
13:53
balancing act because i want to allow
13:56
myself
13:57
the permission to be human and to say
13:59
sometimes this is really hard because
14:00
sometimes it is really hard
14:02
and i feel like not allowing myself to
14:04
understand that and experiencing that is
14:07
not fair to myself
14:08
you know and i don’t want it to get pent
14:10
up and turn into resentment so usually
14:13
like in those moments when i feel that
14:15
way
14:16
my husband or i were very good at
14:18
bouncing off of each other so neither
14:20
one of us are allowed to be in one of
14:21
those slumps at the same time if i’m in
14:24
a slum first he’s not allowed to be and
14:25
vice versa that’s number one number two
14:27
is that we’ll often remind ourselves of
14:30
something that avi has said or done that
14:33
will just turn us into laughing within
14:34
minutes so somehow we try to bring in
14:37
some of what who avi is and remembering
14:39
that great sense of humor and
14:41
remembering that great fun-loving
14:43
musical happy kid and that kind of helps
14:46
bring us out and i always try to remind
14:47
myself
14:48
that i think abby’s biggest problem with
14:51
autism is us
14:52
meaning we are working on trying to fit
14:55
him into a world that he doesn’t
14:57
naturally fit into
14:59
but if he’s not being pushed to fit into
15:01
that world that he doesn’t actually fit
15:03
into and he’s being allowed to play
15:06
dance and sing and do what he wants and
15:08
it doesn’t matter if he does that in the
15:09
middle of a grocery store because we’re
15:10
not worried about appropriateness
15:13
he’s fine and happy you know sometimes
15:15
trying to remind myself about that happy
15:17
kid and not focus on whatever that issue
15:20
is that’s bothering me at the moment can
15:22
often usually just pull me out
15:24
[Music]
15:32
she’s so right about the grocery store
15:34
and you know when you have kids with
15:36
stuff going on other people think that’s
15:39
difficult for you or you need pity kevin
15:41
he really bristles at that notion
15:44
when maggie gets down about herself and
15:46
and the challenges she faces we’ve
15:48
actually pulled over the car one time to
15:49
be like look
15:51
all your friends have something to deal
15:53
with too that one is emotionally fragile
15:56
and cries on the soccer field anytime
15:57
the ball gets taken from her that one
16:00
you know can’t focus on this and that
16:02
every kid is imperfect right and we just
16:05
happen to know the way in which ours are
16:07
imperfect that doesn’t mean they’re
16:09
broken or bad or wrong it’s just that
16:11
they’re different right and every kid is
16:13
different and so
16:14
these parents who i think look at you
16:15
like like oh well you must be dealing
16:16
with that yeah but you’re dealing with
16:18
something else i know that your kids
16:20
have some issues too and if you don’t
16:21
know it yet it’s coming at some point
16:23
right
16:25
don’t look at me look at your kids
16:27
so that’s kevin’s message to folks who
16:29
aren’t raising kids who learn and think
16:31
differently and here’s lindsay’s message
16:33
for those who are that joy you’re
16:35
cultivating isn’t just important for you
16:38
i think if we send them the message that
16:40
there isn’t room for joy or that this is
16:42
so hard
16:44
or such a life sentence like whether we
16:47
realize it or not our kids are picking
16:49
up on that and
16:50
you know i think they’re working harder
16:52
than most adults we know because they’re
16:55
grappling with so much and so
16:57
you know i think it’s key to their
16:59
survival having that release and being
17:02
able to create those moments
17:04
you know i think one of the ways that
17:07
i try to keep my perspective on this is
17:09
like dealing with my own stuff um
17:12
getting help talking to other parents
17:14
finding a community of parents of kids
17:16
who learn and think differently so that
17:18
i’m not processing that stuff with them
17:20
that’s not fair to them i think you know
17:23
our job i think my
17:25
my parents were the ones who sort of
17:27
said your job from now on is to be a
17:29
detective
17:31
and to watch them and to figure out what
17:32
they’re good at and figure out what
17:34
brings them alive and to lean into that
17:37
and so i guess that was the only closing
17:39
thought is just
17:41
how important our job is as parents to
17:43
make those moments of joy and to make
17:45
things light and to sort of be
17:47
detectives and figure out what gives
17:49
them joy and to
17:51
to do more of that
17:53
[Music]
18:08
lindsay makes such a good point about
18:09
the need to deal with your own stuff
18:12
right for sure and it’s it’s not only
18:14
our own stuff
18:15
it’s also
18:17
kind of just the way we expect things to
18:20
go right and we expect things to go a
18:22
certain way because that’s how it went
18:24
for us right that’s how it went for us
18:26
when we were kids that’s how it went for
18:28
our other child
18:30
that’s how it went for
18:32
the kids we watched our friends raise
18:35
that sort of stuff so you get your ideas
18:37
about the way it should go
18:39
it’s not going to go
18:41
the way you expected it to go
18:43
necessarily it’s not i think we have as
18:45
parents a lot of influence on it but if
18:48
you go into it thinking you’re gonna
18:49
control it you’re way off the mark and i
18:51
think we have less influence than we
18:53
actually think we do sometimes
18:55
i find myself having those moments where
18:57
i’m like wait a minute
18:58
why did i say no why am i not letting
19:02
you do this
19:03
thing that
19:05
it doesn’t matter if you do or not it’s
19:07
it’s these things as parents we have to
19:09
sort of let go of
19:10
um and then just like finding the humor
19:12
in it the other thing is look you know i
19:15
have to remember my wife has to remember
19:17
all of our listeners have to remember
19:20
parenting’s a long game right it’s uh
19:22
it’s what happens over time and each
19:25
moment is far less important than you
19:27
think it might be
19:29
so if something doesn’t go well or you
19:31
don’t react the way you think you should
19:33
or you have you know spent
19:36
the last couple years really focusing on
19:38
what’s wrong and what’s a problem and
19:40
how can we help and what can we do
19:42
better it’s never too late to sort of
19:44
say
19:45
hey let’s start you know every week
19:47
we’re going to talk about one thing
19:50
that was an experience of joy for all of
19:52
us
19:54
[Music]
20:02
you’ve been listening to in it a podcast
20:04
from understood our website is
20:05
understood.org where you can find all
20:07
sorts of free resources for people
20:09
raising kids who learn and think
20:11
differently
20:12
we also really want to hear what you
20:14
think of our show
20:15
go to u.org podcast to share your
20:18
thoughts and also to find resources
20:20
that’s the letter u as in understood dot
20:23
o r g slash podcast you can also rate
20:26
and review us on apple podcasts itunes
20:28
spotify wherever you download your
20:30
podcasts from it’s a great way to let
20:32
other people know about init and if you
20:35
like what you heard today please tell
20:36
somebody about it send it to somebody
20:38
who needs to find a little joy in
20:40
raising their child or just send a link
20:42
to your child’s teacher
20:43
you can also subscribe to in it on apple
20:45
podcasts follow us on spotify or keep up
20:48
with us however you take your podcasts
20:50
between episodes you can find understood
20:52
on facebook instagram pinterest or
20:54
youtube and you can visit our website
20:57
you that’s theletteru.org
20:59
our show is produced by julie suberin
21:01
and sarah ivray mike erico wrote our
21:03
theme music and laura kushner is our
21:05
executive director of editorial content
21:08
thanks for being in it with us
21:17
[Music]
21:33
you

This post was previously published on YouTube.

***


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The post In It | This Is How We Make It Through [Podcast] appeared first on The Good Men Project.


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