And
continued and continued… And he wasn’t always just destructive. He was also
self-destructive. He had a permanent bruise on his forehead until he was at least
3. Then his sister, Peyton, had a bruise on hers, repeatedly actually. I
remember it well because with it comes a story. When he was in preschool I
stayed home with the kids during the day and worked part time at night. Doing
so, I was able to do a lot of volunteer work at the school so the teachers and
administration knew me well. I helped with field trips and parties. I tutored
older students. Because I always had Peyton with me, the teachers and administration
knew her too.
Peyton is Jay’s polar opposite. She’s outgoing. She’s outspoken. She talks to everyone who will listen. This was as true then as it is now. Whenever we were at the school, though she was too young yet to attend, she would draw attention to herself. One afternoon when Peyton and I went to pick Jay up from school Peyton ran up to talk to Jay’s teacher. She had a big goose egg smack dab in the middle of her forehead. The teacher asked what had happened and I explained that Jay had slammed the bedroom door – or tried to – when Peyton was standing in the doorway and popped her in the forehead with the door. “Oh, no!” she said.
A
week or so later, before Peyton fully healed, I was getting ready for work and
the very same thing happened again. Yes, I do know the odds of her being hit in
exactly the same place the same way again, but do you know what happens when a
knot is hit before it heals? It swells. It swells quickly, and it swells more
than it originally swelled. When Jay’s teacher asked the next day what had
happened she must have been hesitant to believe the odds because the following
week children’s services showed up at our house to investigate. Yes, really. I
was mortified.
I
had never been so thankful that Jay misbehaved as I was that day. While the
caseworker was there, he was a power ranger. Yes, you read correctly. A power
ranger. He jumped off of the back of the couch knocking Peyton down in his
path. He put the cat in the oven. He microwaved a soda can. All this happened
with two adults present. The boy was quick.
Needless to say, the interview ended quickly. Once the social worker inspected Peyton and found zero bruises on the rest of her body, only the fading bruise on her forehead, she told me that she could see exactly how that could’ve happened and was recommending no further investigation. She suggested that I go through the house and make sure there are no protruding nails or loose woodwork that could cause injury. (I call it the padded room effect.) She also referred Jay for a neurological evaluation. An office interview, EEG, Cat Scan and MRI later, we had an overly simplified ADHD diagnosis.
With
the ADHD recommendation came the recommendation for medication. I declined. I
had heard horror stories about overly medicated children. Best case being a
child that never learns to compensate and function as an adult. Worst case
being a child that is stripped of their entire personality or zombie-fied as I
call it. I wanted neither for my son. I believed that if I showed him enough
love and attention we could work through any challenges without medication. In
hindsight, I don’t know if that was the right decision.