Order out of chaos

If you know Adler at all, you know that his love tank requires words of affirmation and quality time. Lots of it. Preferably all your time, attention, and energy, please and thank you. He does not enjoy being alone, playing alone, or doing things alone. Before Maddox, this was fine. He helped me with any tasks he could, and we played together. The end.

Enter a baby. We had prepared for this transition by requiring both formal independent play and spontaneous independent play, but I was unprepared for how much I would have to split my time. At first, it was easy with Maddox. Eat, sleep, poop, repeat. But as he got older, he developed an opinion and awareness of his surroundings. I have to feed him in a quiet, dark room, or the feeding becomes unproductive and frustrating. That takes up time, time that I used to spend with Adler, even if he was playing at my feet while I nursed on the couch. Maddox also requires quality time now, apart from holding him while he sleeps or stares.

Adler’s behavior directly correlates with the time he spends with us (me). I didn’t realize it for a long time, but as I’ve begun to work on my own responses to frustration, I have noticed that he is happier, more cooperative, and more content when he gets regular slots of time devoted to playing with me. He also LOVES predictability and order, and knowing “the plan.” It probably goes without saying that he is not a big fan of the plan changing last-minute.

After observing his need to play with me and knowing his love for plans, I made a simple daily schedule for us to follow. I have tried this before, but I always made it too complicated and didn’t stick with it. I would make a different outline for each day of the week, accounting for things like grocery shopping, library day, etc. But I decided that, since I’m NOT a huge schedule follower, if this is going to work, it has to be simple. So I made a routine that goes by half-hour to hour-long blocks of time for the whole day. If we are home, we will follow it, if we’re out, we will just skip whatever activities we normally do at home during the time we are out. I pulled ClipArt pictures off Google and made them as little icons to put next to each item on the routine, so Adler can have a visual of the activity. Super official. So professional looking, in fact, that I don’t want to share it for fear of making others feel inferior to my mad Googling/cutting/pasting abilities.

After completing the routine, I put off actually implementing it for a few days, knowing that once I told him what was happening, there was no turning back. And boy, was I right. We started last Monday. I showed him the schedule and he was elated. I walked through each item with him once: Wake up, breakfast and chores, independent play, play with Mommy, room time, read with Mommy, etc. He was so excited and all day, he kept going back to the schedule and asking me what was next. I had to remind him to stay “in the moment” and not keep trying to move ahead too fast.

The next morning, he went to the fridge and looked at the schedule. Pointing to each icon, he named what it was, in order, without making any mistakes. This kid’s photographic memory never ceases to amaze me. As he was naming them, he said, “…play by myself, play with mommy – that’s my favorite one…” I knew instantly that my gut was right about what he needed. Order and a clear time of when I would play with him. I made our block of time playing together to begin directly after Maddox’s nap starts, so there are no interruptions. I try my hardest not to do any chores or other things during this time.

We did our schedule most days last week, and it was a hit! It’s still hard for me to stick to it, but it’s good for both of us. I bring the flexibility – “It’s OK that its 10:00 and we are still reading, we don’t have to start each activity at exactly the right time.” He brings the discipline – “Mommy, what does our schedule say? OK, let’s do it!” We have found a balance, though, and it seems to be working.

He has stopped incessantly begging me to play with him at all times, even if I just played with him for a long time. He knows what to expect, and if I’m busy, I can refer him to the schedule to see what is supposed to be happening at any given time. Instead of saying, “no, I can’t right now,” or, “I can in a little bit,” or, “don’t ask me to play again, I’ve already told you I can’t,” I get to say, “right now is play time by yourself. In 30 minutes, it’s time for us to play together.” He knows that I’m not avoiding playing with him, and he also knows when I will be able to devote time to him.

He has also stopped having such a bad attitude and acting out. Not that these things have been fixed by any means, but devoting time each day to playing with him has helped in these areas.

All this has helped with my anger, as well. I don’t get so frustrated by the incessant begging to play, no matter how many times I explain that I can’t but will “soon.” I don’t get so tired of the whining and acting out, because it has lessened. I have learned that I do, in fact, enjoy the schedule and predictability, as well, as it helps me organize my day. I am able to get tasks fully completed because I know I have a set amount of time to do it.

Overall, this change in our house has been very positive. Adler has three scheduled independent play times throughout the day, two scheduled times to play with me, one scheduled reading session with me, and one scheduled time to play with Daddy after dinner. All of this togetherness and clear, defined alone time has been really good for him.

I’m so glad I was able to finally stop the madness, recognize what was going on, and find a solution that seems to be working! Hopefully we can continue working with our schedule. I’m sure we will change it as we discover what works for us and what is too much. I will just have to make sure to prepare Adler for any changes, or the whole thing will fall apart! :-)

Fail.

Well…on Thursday, I blew it. I yelled. OK fine, I screamed. Loud. I scared Maddox and woke Brandon up, so it was a major deal. Probably one of our worst conflicts ever.

Less than three minutes after waking up, Adler disobeyed. It was minor, but worth addressing. I put him in his room while I nursed Maddox. Halfway through, he started yelling from his room, which totally annoyed me. But I swallowed it and finished feeding Maddox, then went in to talk to him. And instead of being kind and talking with him, I snapped at him. Things went downhill from there. He got upset, and I realized what I had done so I re-grouped and tried to de-escalate, but it was too late. He was bent on being angry and refusing to listen, which irritated me even more. Before I knew it, I was SCREAMING at him to stay in his room. I slammed the door, jarring Brandon from his sleep and causing Maddox to cry out. Adler screamed through the door, “ORANGE RHINO!”

And I’m not proud, but in the spirit of being open, I will share what I did.

I opened the door and screamed, “WE ARE WAY PAST ORANGE RHINO!” And I slammed the door.

Yep. It was bad. Really, really bad. I totally lost it, and when my son tried to remind me, I didn’t listen. I just kept going through my rage.

Looking back, I know our pattern. He pushes my buttons, I get annoyed, I try to stay calm but begin trying to control him, he bucks at the control and begins pushing my buttons harder. I respond negatively, then try to de-escalate. He refuses to cooperate, now tunneled in on what he thinks or wants. His lack of obedience/repentance/humility/cooperation triggers my deep anger, and I lose it.

It seems pretty simple, but in the moment, I am blinded by my anger. I, too, get tunneled in on what I want, and I can’t see the larger picture. I can’t see that, maybe I need to just step back and let both of us calm down before addressing the situation. I can’t see that this one instance of rebellion won’t necessarily lead to a life of hard crime. I can’t see the cycle, and I let it continue rather than rising above it and breaking it. I need to recognize my triggers so that when they begin, I can instantly work to cope with them, doing what is necessary to stop the conflict. That could be counting to ten, leaving the room, waiting to address a behavioral issue until I am calm, or something else. But since I am the adult and I see the pattern, I have to be the one to break it. Adler is only doing what comes naturally to him and what he has learned from me. I have to re-train myself to handle this kind of conflict, so I can be an example to him and work towards changing this dynamic of our relationship.

Once I was calm, I went back into Adler’s room. I gave him a huge hug, and through tears, apologized to him for screaming. I gave no excuses. I told him it wasn’t right and I didn’t like to be that way. I told him I am working on changing but it will take time. Then I said, “Let’s start our day over. When we leave this room, we have a chance to start over and have a happy day by working on ourselves. I’m going to work on not getting angry today. What are you going to work on?”

To which he sighed and replied, “Nofing.”

Well. Baby steps. Someday he’ll get it.

Angry all the Time

Oh, Anger, my longtime enemy. You have helped me hurt so many people I love. You help me through meanness, yelling, and biting words, through cutting looks and audible sighs. You make me feel bad inside. I feel like a raging lunatic sometimes, and my mind succumbs to your wishes. I can feel my hands tingling, my heart racing, my chest tightening, and my jaw clenching. If I really let you take over, I can feel the remnants of you in my throat long after my screaming match is over. Just there, reminding me that I lost my cool and I let my voice raise enough to hurt someone else and even to hurt me.

I hate you, and I’ve had enough of you. I’ve had enough of myself allowing you to take over. Allowing you to respond poorly, and to try to control everything.

This. Must. Stop.

ANGRY ALL THE TIME

Of everyone who I’ve been angry towards, I think the person I have hurt the most is my son. Sweet, smart, loving, wonderful Adler has, in the past 8 months or so, endured a lot of anger from me. I want to be clear. I have never physically hurt him in anger. My anger manifests itself almost exclusively through words and tone of voice. But it is NOT pretty, and I would never want anyone to see me angry. I would be so very ashamed.

So why, if I don’t want anyone else to see me this way, would I be OK with my own son seeing it? He’s the one I care for, his is the opinion I care about. His is the heart I am trying to win, to shape, and to teach. Why would I yell at someone I love, when I would never consider doing it to a stranger, someone I don’t even care about? Why would I yell at a child, someone who still hasn’t learned how to process feelings and thoughts? How have I let myself get to this point?

These are the questions I have been asking myself lately. I think my negative pattern with Adler started when I was pregnant with Maddox. Towards the end of my pregnancy, to be precise. It was hot. I was big. Everything hurt. Nothing was comfortable. And Adler was heading towards his third birthday, that lovely time in a child’s life where opinions get stronger, independence gets more appealing, and emotional processing has yet to catch up. None of these things are excuses for beginning a negative pattern, but they are reasons that it could have happened. And that gives me something to go off of.

Anyways, at some point during that time, my relationship with Adler went from relatively stable and cooperative to more difficult, fraught with conflict and battles. I didn’t notice at first, and it slowly got worse, as those things tend to do. Once I did notice, I justified it, saying I was tired, Adler was becoming a “threenager,” it would all be better once the baby got here, etc.

But it wasn’t, and instead of working to maintain calm in our home, I let us get stuck in a negative pattern. I even blamed him, saying, if he would just listen, or if he just wouldn’t argue, it wouldn’t be this way.

It’s not like our relationship since last summer has been awful, it’s just been…bipolar. One moment we are getting along fine, the next we are clashing and I want to pull my hair out. We are too much alike. We are too different. There’s just a lot of room for conflict when I’m a stay-at-home mom who has never parented a 3-year-old before.

During the past two months, things have gotten a little worse. Brandon’s busy season with work is the beginning of the year. This year he has been traveling back to back, and when he’s not out of town, he has been working long and irregular hours. So I have been soloing this whole parenting thing about 90% of the time for a few months now, and let me tell you, it’s not for the faint of heart. It has been during this time of exhaustion that the negative pattern became even more of a habit. This past week, it escalated more when Maddox and I came down with a nasty bug that left him in constant need of my attention and knocked me off my feet. Not to mention, during the middle of our illness, Adler developed his own stomach bug for about 24 hours.

So here I was, sick as a dog and trying to care for two sick children alone, getting next to no sleep, and wishing all of this was behind me. Adler was on my last nerve almost constantly. I knew I wasn’t responding well and I needed to change, but try as I might, I could not pull myself out of my funk. I needed perspective, but in order to get that, I needed to remove myself from the situation and I couldn’t. So I felt trapped, which only deepened my funk. This caused me to respond negatively to poor Adler a lot of the time. By Thursday morning, I was fried. My mom was finally able to come and take Adler off my hands for a few hours. Miraculously, Maddox took a long nap during this time, and I was able to just sit on the couch. I decided to not worry or think about Adler or myself or overanalyze the situation or beat myself up, which I was very tempted to do. I just turned on Gilmore Girls and marathoned it for the whole morning. I ignored the pile of dirty dishes, the mountain of laundry, and everything else and just chilled.

By the time my mom got back with Adler, I had a more balanced perspective on life. I was not 100% better, but I knew Adler was not trying to kill me and I needed to remember he is only 3 and see him as such. I was able to welcome him home happily, and since then, have been better about responding when there is conflict.

After my Thursday morning chill time, I have been thinking about how to work on yelling and anger, and how to maintain a more balanced perspective. Saturday morning, I came across an article on Facebook entitled, “How I Learned to Stop Yelling at my Kids.” I clicked on it, and it referenced The Orange Rhino. So I clicked on that, and what I found was an amazing resource from an honest mom who recognized her yelling habit, didn’t like it, and decided to change it. She has since written a book about her journey, and offers resources to other parents who want to change. I was so excited – what an awesome find just when I needed it!

So, I’m taking the Orange Rhino Challenge. I am going to go 365 days without yelling at my kids. One of the things she says is to tell others, so I am telling ALL the people who may happen to stumble on this post. I am going to stop yelling at my kids. I will not use anger to get them to do what I want. I am not in control of them, I am only in charge of them, and there are so many other ways to cooperate with one another than out of anger. Just look at all the ways the Orange Rhino suggests!

I know I can do this, but I will need encouragement, accountability, and ideas. I plan to blog both about my journey to stop being angry/yelling, and my journey to reduce my anxiety. Really, just my journey to relinquish the control I’ve never had. I want to write it down so that I can externally process. I want to write it down so that I have accountability. I want to write it down so that I can remember what I was like and what I don’t want to return to. I want to write it down to see how God works to change me. And maybe, just maybe, my writing it down will encourage someone else.

Do you struggle with control, anxiety, anger, or yelling? If so, how do you combat these things?

Out of Control

It has been a long time since I have blogged.

I stopped mainly because I felt I lacked direction, and when I started writing, I wanted to have a purpose. I didn’t want to copy someone else’s ideas or try too hard and have a mediocre blog where I pushed stuff out just for the sake of publishing regularly.

I have often thought of starting again because I do love to write and I don’t want to lose that skill. But I didn’t. One, because of lack of direction, and two, because of lack of time. Or laziness, or lack of motivation, or distraction, or whatever other label you want to give it. The point is, it wasn’t important enough. But it has become increasingly more important due to some experiences I’ve had recently. I have considered journaling, but I am just not a journaler. Getting my thoughts on paper helps me process some, but writing to someone (or for someone) is what really motivates me. I am an external processor (which my husband just loves), and I need to share my thoughts with someone in order to fully understand them myself.

So you, reader, are my Someone. Not that I expect a million people to see this, but one might. Just having it out there on the great World Wide Web is enough.

This post will be long, so bear with me.

tonight

Reader’s Digest version of my life lately: Anxiety and Anger.

I am controlled by the desire to control, and always have been. Most of my life, this desire for control has manifested itself in anger. It’s the “thorn in my side,” you might say. I fought it for years before realizing it would probably never go away. At times, I have had to exert less effort to control my anger than at other times, and then it will rear its ugly head again. I have been discouraged by this countless times, feeling defeated when I relapse and realizing I will probably always have to be on my guard against anger.

It’s ironic that anger controls me, when what I want is control. But when I’m angry, that is precisely what I don’t have. I not only lack the control over my situation, I lack the control over myself to handle the situation graciously.

Over the past several years, a new control coping mechanism has crept into my life: anxiety. It started about six months after Adler was born, and by the following fall, I was struggling with anxiety attacks related to my asthma. Or maybe it was asthma attacks related to my anxiety. I will never know which came first in that vicious cycle, but it took anxiety medicine to help break it. My wonderful doctor helped me realize that taking medicine was not admitting defeat, but rather using a tool to reset my brain and regain control of my thoughts. I memorized a lot of scripture at that time, and my favorite was Isaiah 26:3-4, “You will keep in perfect peace those whose minds are steadfast, because they trust in You. Trust in the Lord forever, for the Lord, the Lord himself, is the Rock eternal.”

I was able to regain control of my thoughts, though anxiety has since been a little annoying bug that I have had to swat at off an on. It was during this time, however, that I connected my anger and anxiety to the root issue of control.

Fast forward to this past August, when my beautiful son, Maddox, was born. His birth went perfectly, and was almost exactly 12 hours. I had an epidural and a normal vaginal delivery. He shocked us by weighing in at 9 pounds 3 oz, almost 2 pounds more than Adler! Everything was great, until one week later, when I went to the doctor to check on my asthma. I mentioned that my calf hurt, and that, combined with my chief complaint of chest tightness, sent my doctor and nurse into a frenzy. Before I knew it, I was being wheeled to the hospital for a CT scan to make sure I didn’t have a blood clot. I was holding Maddox in the wheelchair and trying to get ahold of Brandon to come meet us there. I was a little scared at how serious the doctor was being, but also embarrassed that they were about to go through all this hoopla and find nothing wrong.

I was wrong. The CT scan revealed a small pulmonary embolism. I was immediately put on blood thinners. Talk about scary. I tried hard not to have anxiety about all of this, but it happened. It happened that week, and it happened two weeks later when my sister lost her baby boy at 31 weeks for no apparent reason. Why was my life falling apart? Why us? Why her? Why my nephew, sweet Rhett Levi? I told myself that worrying did no good, because, as we had just witnessed, no amount of worry would have prevented bad things from happening. Plus, I had not worried about those two things in particular. A host of other things, sure, but I never saw these coming. I could not worry my way away from problems, because there would always be something else unseen, unknown, un-worried-about.

Aside from the grief of losing my nephew, the sorrow of watching my sister grieve, and the uncertainty of my medical condition, I allowed worry and anxiety to creep into other parts of my life. Before I knew it, I was making up scenarios left and right about all the bad things that could happen. I was never paralyzed with fear, nor did I have anxiety attacks like I did a few years ago. But I did have fear, and I did let it control the majority of my thoughts.

Over the past few months, I have tried and tried to break this negative thought pattern. I have prayed, and begged, and tried to tell myself to shut up, and tried tried to change my thoughts. I have read Scripture and looked up anxiety blogs. I tried looking for anxiety books, but everything I found just seemed kind of surface-level stuff that was like, “Oh, just focus on God and then all your problems will be solved.” I have found that it does not work that way, at least not for me. I am either not spiritual enough or too skeptical or something.

So I began to think about how to better focus on stopping my negative thought patterns. Blogging again crept into my mind for several reasons. First, it would give me something to focus on. It would give me an outlet to get my thoughts out, or to write down small revelations I have had. Secondly, it would be public, and it would be a way to hold myself accountable to continue the process of discovering my anxiety and the reasons behind it, and discovering ways to change it. This idea has been brewing for a while, but until today, I had not taken action.

The reason I took action today, however, had nothing to do with anxiety. It goes back to my anger. That story is completely separate, and I will post it tomorrow.

Our Big Boy

It’s been a while (like, a year) since I posted an update specifically about Adler, so I wanted to take some time to do just that.

Adler just turned 16 months old at the beginning of December. He is changing very fast right now! He is currently going through a growth spurt, which, in our experience, comes with a worse temperament than teething. He is very tall for his age already, and I have a feeling he’s not going to slow down! He has 8 teeth and is working on some of his “big boy teeth” in the back. He still has his very blonde hair, which grows way too fast, and piercing blue eyes.

My favorite feature of Adler right now is his hands. They are so little and cute, yet they already accomplish so much. He has learned how to use them to talk and express himself. He says “more” with his hands the most, but his other favorite motion is to throw his hands up and shrug his shoulders as if to say, “I don’t know!” He does it when we ask him a question, when he is looking for something and can’t find it, when he doesn’t know how to do something, and when he does something but doesn’t get the desired result. He uses the sign for “more” to ask for food, toys, more reading, to stay at Grandma and Grandpa’s, to ask for anything he wants, and (my favorite) when I’m putting him to bed and he wants to stay up. He is very smart and has figured out that he doesn’t need to talk, as long as he can point and sign to get what he wants. If Brandon or I are sitting down and Adler wants something, he puts his hand under our leg to get us to stand up. He then takes our hand and leads us towards what he wants (usually in the kitchen). A few steps in, he turns around and puts his hands up, asking for us to pick him up. When we pick him up, he leans toward the direction he wants us to go. When he first started this, we laughed at him. Now that he knows it’s funny, he does it a lot!

Adler is very loving. He hugs us all the time. He gets very excited when we hug him and will just cling to us and bury his face. However, he is not so fond of kissing. If we ask for a kiss, he lowers his forehead to our lips. It’s adorable. But he refuses to actually kiss us. He blows kisses all the time-to us, to grandparents, friends, strangers, even inanimate objects. He has kissed toys and our phones, but never a person. Brandon is intent on getting him to give kisses and works at it pretty much daily. I really hope the first person he kisses is Brandon!

Although he babbles constantly, he does not say many words right now. His favorite word is “cheese,” and he pronounces it “chzzzzzzzzz.” He also says “keys,” which sounds like “chzzzzzz” and “shoes,” which sounds like “chzzzzzzz.” He also says mama and dada and apple. Apart from that, he has said a few other words very sporadically, but then will not repeat them. Like I said earlier, he has figured out that he doesn’t need to talk in order to communicate. That could be very bad for the future….

He loves to sing. Anytime we mention music or dancing or singing, he immediately starts saying, “ah, ah,” and swaying. We have a few specific times when we sing (clean up time, potty time, and our Patience song), and when we do any of those activities, he will let me know it’s time to sing by swaying. He is very musical-he already knows one song and even though he doesn’t sing the words, he has the tempo and melody down, which is crazy! He also loves to play the piano, and he will play one note at a time rather than just banging. We are trying to encourage this as much as possible!

Adler also loves to read. He pulls all of his books off the shelf daily. He will sit and read to himself, which is adorable because he points at pictures and talks to himself. He also loves for us to read to him. He will pick a few books that are his go-to books for a few weeks, and we get to read them over and over and over again. He points to the same things each time and wants us to talk about the same things we did last time we read the book. His current favorites are his Trucks book, Speedy Little Race Cars color book (Brandon and I both have every word of this one memorized), and My First Book.

He is very observant. He catches on to things very quickly. You can always tell when the wheels are turning in his head as he watches us. He is already imitating certain things we do. He is very particular about how things are done (in a typical firstborn type way). He hears and understands every word we say, even if we are not talking to him. He will respond to things we say correctly, which is crazy! He continually amazes us at how bright and observant he is.

Every day with him is more fun. It is amazing to see how much he has changed just in the past few months, let alone from where he was a year ago. I am trying to enjoy every moment during each stage, even though I am so ready for him to begin talking and doing “concentrated” activities (that last more than 2 minutes). He is delightful to play with and talk to and just be with all day. We are so thankful for him and we love him so much!