Itās no secret that parenting is damn hard. It brings out the worst in you and unearths some of the best a person can give. This piece is about the latter.Ā
The Patience of a Saint
āDani has the patience of a Saint,ā Candy, a teaching assistant Iāve worked with for years, has said about me a number of times. My line of work demands abundant patience indeed.Ā
I went into teaching because of Diego and only began my special education career when he was 12. I entered the profession already armed with saintly patience, forged by years of intensive practice in replacing my impulse to scream and cry with the habit of breathing-in-breathing-out.
I learned from dealing with innumerable tantrums, with jabs at my heart when Diego was excluded, with the exasperation of trying every which way to get Diego to grasp that two cookies plus two cookies make four cookies -and failing miserably.
I became patient by learning to accept that I canāt control others -not Diego, not my husband, not teachers, not society. All I can do is try my best to influence them.
Same thing with results. Yes, I try to influence them. Ultimately, however, I canāt control them.
Iāve also become quite skilled at observing an event dispassionately before responding. I fail more often than Iād wish, especially around my husband, but Iāve become good enough at it to be deemed as having āthe patience of a Saint.ā.Ā
I donāt react. I respond.
Just this week, I broke the news to Diego that there will be no Alumni Day this summer at his beloved Riverview School. He had been looking forward to it like only Diego looks forward to events. He would talk about it daily, ingeniously inserting the topic whenever possible.Ā
āWhen do you start school?ā Abuela might ask me. āAugust 23,ā Iād say.
āThatās after Alumni Day. Weāre going to Alumni Day!ā Diego would make sure to remind us.
Anyway, Diego was sad, anxious and upset when he found out there would be no Alumni Day, and I rode out his grief with saintly patience.
Another subskill of patience is what I call selective hearing, and I excel at it.
When Diegoās in a high mood, his non-stop talking sounds like radio chatter. Itās relentless, yet Iām able to tolerate it. I tune it out and hardly hear it at times.Ā
Selective hearing proves particularly handy when anyone close to me says something out of frustration that I know they donāt mean. I donāt hear it until weāre all in a position to talk about whatās going on. I wait patiently until the right time, or a better time at least.
Likeability By Proxy
Diegoās a sweet person who delights family, friends, and especially strangers.Ā
āHi, Iām Diego from the United States. Where are you from?ā he says to people in the elevator when heās on a trip. Wherever youāre from, heāll have something pertinent to say about the place.Ā
Madrid? His cousin Ivan, who was born in 1996, lives in Madrid!Ā
Thailand? His friends Maria Cecilia and Jose Abel went to Thailand and rode on elephants and The King and I is in Thailand!
He spits out fun facts, gives compliments, prays for you, and makes funny remarks.
Most people he knows look like a stunning actress or a gorgeous actor. Claudia, for instance, is Nicole Kidman, Ireneās Jennifer Garner, and Tia Rosannaās Christina Applegate. I’m Tina Fey and Tia Lole’s Marge Simpson. Hmmm š¤, I guess we can’t all be stunning.
Yes, Diegoās exceedingly likable. Because Iām his mom, some of the likability rubs off on me.Ā Ā
Shhhhā¦ You might not know this, but Iām a b*tch from time to time, as my sisters will confirm. Diego smoothes out my b*tchy edges, and folks are more apt to give me a pass because, they figure, I must have had something to do with how adorable Diego turned out.Ā
Then thereās how much I do for Diego and how much he loves me. It is heartwarming if I do say so myself. But I’m no different from other mothers with adult children with special needs, mind you. Their family and friends admire what great parents they are.
Guess what, though? Weāre no better than other parents. Our children just never ceased to be dependent. They also never stopped loving us in the trusting and physical way young children love their parents. Itās exhausting sometimes, but what can you do?
You donāt know any different. You love your child. Also, you have no choice. So you adjust to never being done being a caregiver.
The Real Me
Innately, Iām not uniquely patient or likable.
Thanks to my parenting journey, I now fall in the above-average range of the patience curve. I donāt know that I consider myself a patient person, seeing as it still takes a lot of effort to behave like one. Even so, it’s a worthwhile effort.Ā
Being likable? Well, thatās just a lucky freebie that comes with the territory.
Post about the very worst in me: I Am Simply Human