| George
and Sam
One mother tells of life with her
two autistic boys.
by Charlotte Moore
PARENTGUIDE News June 2007
My eldest son George is about to celebrate his 17th birthday in his
own unique way. George will enjoy aspects of his birthday— he
can tolerate receiving presents now, and he’ll appreciate the
increased chocolate intake— but he won’t “celebrate”
being 17. If anyone mentions his age, time passing, growing up or being
a teenager, George cover his ears and screams.
George is autistic. He hates change. He particularly
hates to be reminded that he himself is changing— “I won’t
be a grown-up! I’ll stay little!” Of course, George is no
longer little, whatever he says. He’s 5’10”, and he
shaves.
My youngest son Jake shares a birthday with George; he’s about
to be 9. Jake, who is not autistic, loves to pore over pictures of himself
as a baby, and he’s always asking me for funny stories about his
early days. Jake is aware that he has a past and a future, as well as
a present. He has ambitions— a premier-league footballer, and
a rock star in the off-season months. He thinks of names for his future
children— the twins will be Diagona and Dandelion. More realistically,
perhaps, he chats about whether he’ll feel brave enough to leave
home and go to college. Unlike George, Jake can locate himself in the
temporal and structural framework that the majority of us follow.
George is frightened by change, because, like many autists, he’s
not good at sequencing— steps in life don’t follow logically
for him. Instead, each one is a leap into the unknown. He’s acutely
self-conscious— “Don’t talk about me!”—
without a secure sense of himself. He used to panic at attempts to get
him to play make-believe; he was scared that if he pretended to be a
monkey, a soldier, a monster, he would become that thing and cease to
be himself. He won’t accept photographs of himself as a baby—
“That’s not me; that’s Sam!”
Sam is my second son. He’s 15, and he’s autistic, too, but
he and George are as different from one another as either of them is
from Jake. Sam has no interest in the subject of time and age, no understanding
and no worries. Sam doesn’t know that he’s older than Jake,
younger than George. He lacks an ability to compare himself to other
people in any way. Sam’s not really interested in people at all,
though he prefers some to others. When I show him photographs, he comments
with pleasure on familiar objects— “blue ‘jamas,”
“ironing board,” “Daddy’s car”—
but he won’t identify people, himself included, unless prompted.
Sam’s obliviousness cocoons him. George, with his limited, confused
interest in human behavior, is far more anxious than his asocial brother.
Officially, Sam is the “low-functioning” one; he can’t
read or write, he has limited speech, he amuses himself by destroying
toys or stuffing things down the toilet, whereas George can talk quite
fluently and has basic academic skills. But I’ve often felt that
it’s more comfortable to be at the low-functioning end of the
spectrum. If, like Sam, you live in the realm of physical sensation,
largely shutting out the rest of the world, you only get upset when
people intrude on your autistic privacy. If, like George, you’ve
got one foot in the autistic and one in the neurotypical world, life
feels uneasy and dangerous.
Raising my three sons is a balancing act, trying to respond to their
very different needs and be fair to all three children. I’ve known
George and Sam were autistic since they were 4 years old. I didn’t
find it hard to accept the “autism” label, nor did I feel—
as many parents do— that I had “lost” a normal child
to autism. With hindsight, and with the experience of having Jake, I
can see that my sons were born autistic, that my belief in them as typically-developing
babies was mistaken. What I found harder to get my head around was the
fact that autism is a profound, lifelong condition, and that it affects
everything. The full implications are only just dawning on me. My friends
with teenage children are adjusting to the idea that soon they’ll
be living in empty nests. My nest, however, will remain crowded. George
and Sam make progress— communication skills have improved; they
now sleep through after years of broken nights; eating habits aren’t
quite as dreadful as they were. But looking after my boys still isn’t
very different from looking after toddlers. It’s not possible,
as things are, to envisage an independent future for either of them.
I don’t mind, actually. They limit my freedom, especially as regards
to travel and work. Their insanitary habits exasperate me— George’s
current obsession is rubbish bins— but they can be funny and charming;
they’re innocent and free of malice. I don’t have to worry
about drinking, drugs, huge phone bills, unsuitable all-night parties.
We have no rows about homework— I’m spared the problems
faced by many of my friends. But it’s still strange to reflect
that my youngest child will leave home and earn a living before his
brothers make a simple trip to a store on their own.
What effect has it all had on Jake? Well, the age gap helps. Jake was
born into autism; he’s never known any different. And his brothers
are so much older that it’s inevitable that a different set of
rules would apply. As the much-indulged “Benjamin” of the
extended family, Jake’s never had to struggle for supremacy—
he achieves it effortlessly. Mostly, he’s brave and tolerant and
compassionate about his brothers. He’s scared of spiders and the
dark, but he’s not frightened of an enraged Sam smashing windows.
He enjoys doing well at school, but he never belittles George for his
lack of intellectual or sporting prowess. He wishes he had siblings
who could play with him, and he loves spending time with cousins and
older friends who match his brothers’ age, as if he’s striving
to fill a gap. He’s not— yet— embarrassed or ashamed
of them; he has friends to play at the house almost daily. I asked him
whether any other children ever said unkind things about George and
Sam, and he was startled. “No,” he said. “Why would
they? What unkind things are there to say?”
If I had my time again, I’d do a few things differently. I’d
tailor the environment to suit the boys’ needs, rather than striving—
as I used to— to make them fit into my world. I wouldn’t
bother with children’s parties, or Christmas or group activities—
I’d cut out the things that neurotypical children enjoy, but which
are boring, baffling or nerve-wracking for autists. I’d never
let a scrap of junk food into the house. I’d have run an ABA-type
program at home from the start. And I’d have borne in mind from
the start that no phase, no habit, however aggravating, lasts forever—
there is progress, there is change. George and Sam are autistic through
and through, just as Jake is “normal” through and through.
My job is to respect and value each of my sons for who they are, not
wish they were someone else.
Charlotte Moore is the author of George & Sam
(St. Martin’s Press). The book is neither a textbook nor the “story
of a miracle;” it’s a personal account of the highs and
lows of family life with autism.
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