Monday, April 24, 2017
What a conversation in the car reveals
Experts recommend conversing with your children in the car, when they're at ease (minimal eye contact!) and likely to open up to you. This is a good tactic with Sabrina, once I make her put away her phone. It is wondrous to do with Max, because we are now capable of conversing.
"Don't you love living here?" I ask as we drive around our neighborhood. It's beautiful this time of year, particularly the cherry blossoms in various shades of pink.
"No!" he says. "Florida!"
Max would like to move to Florida, he's been telling us.
"Ah, yes," I say "You would like to move to Florida."
"Yes," he acknowledges.
We are not alone in the car. The ghost of Max's past is right there in the backseat. When Max was a tot, it pained me not to hear babbling in the back seat. I remain grateful for our chats on the road.
"Max, would you like to live there alone when you grow up or with someone else?" I ask.
"Someone else," he says.
"Like a friend?" I ask.
"Yes!"
"Although you also want to get married, right?" I note.
"Yes!" He names a girl in his class he has a crush on.
"OK, but maybe it's too soon to know if she will want to marry you, so maybe there will be another nice girl," I say.
He ponders that.
"Who will help you if Mommy and Daddy aren't there to help you?" I ask.
We're at a stoplight. I watch his face.
"I don't know," he says, and my heart twinges. Because he is a teen, he wants to be independent and he is becoming increasingly aware of what's holding him back.
"Max, if you want to live on your own, you need to learn how to do things on your own, like take a shower and use the bathroom," I say.
"Yes!" he agrees.
I know Dave and I need to keep encouraging and enabling him. It's all too easy to do things for Max, especially when he resists doing them himself because it's hard. Still, he's becoming more self-motivated.
"Will you miss us when you move to Florida?" I ask.
"Yes!" he says, happily.
And I kind of love that he's all ready to move away.
Car conversations have been great for my NT girls (now 16 &18). Being non-verbal, I haven't had that with Luke (now 14). However - for the past year or so if he is unsure of where we are going or wants me to know if he is unhappy he will put his hand on my shoulder (he sits behind me). Even more exciting, in the past 2 months he has started to ask for McDonald's using his iPad. It has been when I have picked him up from his after school program -- I heard the "Community", "Restaurants", "McDonalds" and know to turn the radio off. Then the familiar "Double Cheeseburger", "1", "2" "3", "Sprite". (He counts to 3 to let me know he wants 3). I take him every single time.
ReplyDeleteThis is so poignant, Ellen. I love everything about it. xo
ReplyDeleteFlorida has amazing marine life, but the mosquitoes are annoying!
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