Noah is a very capable child. He really is. However, he is also the teenage boy who consistently forgets deodorant and zipping his fly. He is often too lazy to tie his shoelaces, and he is King of the Half-Finished Chore. 'Sloppy' is his preferred style, no matter what I encourage him to choose when we shop (our latest excursion found us in trendy mall shops, me begging him to pick something out, ANYTHING!), often choosing whatever is easiest to throw on in the morning without much (any) planning or thought. He would often rather take the easy way out, than put forth the extra effort and feel the success that comes with hard work. I am often in his face about the deodorant and other things, lamenting "How can you forget such important things?" It hit me--he has never remembered such things, so chances are better than good he may not ever. Even with signs hanging in various key places around the house, things are forgotten. Even with chores and tasks spelled out, step by step, never changing, posted where he can see them as he does them--yep, they still don't get done. We try to drive home the point of doing a job right the first time, taking pride in hard work and being pleased with a job well done--but I'm certain we sound like the teacher from Charlie Brown. "Wah wah wah wahhhhhhh." There are days we are knee deep in teenage attitude; then there are other days when I catch a glimpse of the young man and gentleman he is becoming. He stands nearly eye to eye with me now, but the times we see eye to eye are becoming fewer and farther between. Welcome to the bipolar years....
Shawn and I talk a lot about things we want to be able to allow Noah to do, but we just don't see the maturity necessary for such activities. We worry that Avery will be able to accomplish these things before Noah, and how we will handle that. Sometimes, we worry we are concentrating on the wrong things--okay, so he stinks and is only half dressed, but look at the initiative he took with XYZ. Maybe we are looking for maturity in all the wrong places. Maybe, if we give him the opportunities, the maturity will come.
This is life with Noah. Much of it, as with any child, is two steps forward, four steps back. And you start over the next day. For me, I have to work hard on acceptance and just loving him where he is. I work hard to mold him into the man I know he can be, and I'm hard on him because I know he is capable of so much more. I know he is better than how he sometimes behaves. I know it is in him. He reminds me a lot of myself, and sometimes that makes things harder in raising him, but it also helps me remember what he needs from me as his mom--as well as what he doesn't need from me.
And lately--I've discovered, it really is in him. He can do this. Even better, he's discovering it's within him, himself. I'm watching prayers being answered right before my eyes.

I will be honest with you here--even more pleasing to me, was seeing Noah go back to the finish line and cheer the other runners through, and meeting Avery at the end of his 1 mile run to cheer his little brother through. He jumped and shouted for the younger children, showing himself to be a good sport and possibly even a good leader. Possibly, some of those talks we have about setting the example and being a good role model, and how younger children look up to older children, are getting through! Also, a young man from the high school Noah will attend next year, a cross country runner who placed fifth, came over to congratulate Noah and talk to him about joining when he gets there. That was truly a God moment, as Shawn and I have been dropping major hints and getting nowhere... After all, we are just the stupid parents! But now a peer has said, "Hey, great job, you should really do this!" *thumbs up*
As a congratulatory gift, Shawn gave Noah a GPS watch we've been saving aside, and helped him get set up on with a running app Shawn and his co-workers use. He's also been promised a PS4 for Christmas for breaking the 30 minute time... I hung his medal and certificate on his brag wall, up there with his horse ribbons and trophies. We want him to see how proud we are of him, and take pride in all of this himself.
Oh, and he's researching and rebuilding a 1970-77 era console radio/record player/cassette player we found at a thrift store for $20.....
Much of being a mom is reminding yourself that, in reality, they are only in each stage for a little while, even when it seems like an eternity. Embrace your child, and understand the nuances of each stage. They WILL come out of it, and as long as we continue to guide them, they will come out of these trials and stages with flying colors. To see your child succeed, and concentrate on those successes, rather than the things he forgets, half accomplishes, or won't do it all--that's the important thing. And just let go of the other crap. And pray. Pray a lot. Daily reminding myself that yes, Noah IS ONLY 13--and not just on the spectrum, and not just a boy. He's 13. He's only 13. And man, he is blowing it away.
Sign me--Proud Mama.