First Day of School, Part I
You expect there to be some tears on a day like this, your kid’s first day of school. Today, it was India’s, and while I didn’t expect her to have too much of a problem with it – especially since we took her in, hung out for a bit, and picked her up – I figured Salomé might get a little emotional. I certainly wasn’t expecting Isaac to be the one to lose it, though! India’s been his partner in crime since she was born, from the initial weeks at home with Salomé in Virginia; to the first couple of months back in NY, home with me; to the previous and current daycare providers, they’ve always been together. This morning, it hit him that they were separating and it hit him hard.
“I’m going to miss my sister!”
He was genuinely torn up and it was both a sad and heartening moment. I’ve often wished I had a sibling I grew up with so closely.
India took to her new school like it was nothing, as much a testament to how far she’s come in the few months since she was diagnosed as autistic* and, specifically, the effectiveness of the ABA therapy. Watching her bond immediately with her teacher, Maddy – or is it Mattie? – and exploring the classroom so fearlessly left a shit-eating grin on my face, the kind of reaction I often find myself supressing whenever her progress really stands out, for fear of getting my hopes up too far.
All in all, an extremely positive day. (It’ll be interesting to see what Salomé says, as she’s blogging at the same time I’m writing this.)
Tomorrow, Isaac vs. the Crucifix. Should be interesting.
*Does one “have” autism, or is one simply autistic? It’s a question Salomé and I disagree on, and something I find particularly fascinating. To me, you “have” cancer, or diabetes, but autism is something that becomes definitive. Like schizophrenia, or senility, etc. Neurological disorders seem like a completely different animal from biological ones.
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Written by Guy LeCharles Gonzalez
Guy LeCharles Gonzalez is the Chief Content Officer for LibraryPass, and former publisher & marketing director for Writer’s Digest. Previously, he was also project lead for the Panorama Project; director, content strategy & audience development for Library Journal & School Library Journal; and founding director of programming & business development for the original Digital Book World.
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well considering that something neurological would change your conciousness (how you percieve the world and thus interact with it) then it would make sense that it was definitive as opposed to cancer which in a sense exists outside your conciousness. A square is still a square…but then again having cancer might change your perspective on the world so thus being definitive….
All in all glad the kids had a great first day. They look positively adorable! 🙂
Okay I know he’s crying, but that picture of Isaac is absolutely adorable!! I’m sniffling right now! (DAMN THESE HORMONES!)
I agree, my good man. Your child’s first trip to school is a milestone. I found your recount of the day both enlightening and heartwarming. Cheers!
Autism is a neurological disorder. A disorder is something you HAVE. Therefore India was diagnosed with autism not “as autistic”.