Monday, July 9, 2012

M-i-s-s-i-n-g

The fear, anxiety, horror...the unexplainable emotions that must run through a parent's mind when their child is missing. It's something that is hard for me to even process. Over the fourth, a five year old boy named Scott from Prescott, WI went missing. This little boy is not just any boy..he's a boy with autism. The dread, fear, anxiety and horror just escalated a thousand times.

Thank God that Tim and I have not had Parker go missing. He does run off all the time and is unpredictable in public. Even when he is in a grocery cart, he will randomly stand up and desperately try to crawl/jump out. He's ripped his hand out of mine in stores and I have had to chase and have breifly lost track of him. Even for those brief moments of him not in my sight, my heart sinks and I feel like I get punched in the stomach with a wrecking ball. I start to breathe hard and fast. My head goes back and forth radically scanning every place in my sight searching for him. I have blogged a lot of being in robot mode a lot of the time being Parker's mama and when this happens...I go into my 'Sara Conner' mode. I'm basically a terminator that is blind to anything and anyone in my way of locating him. It's hard to know how to address it with him running off and how it scares Mama and how it's not OK to run away like that. Usually it's hard to know what sinks in with him and what he dismisses. It still doesnt deter me from every single time in a parking lot I tell him to always hold my hand and watch for cars. It never deters me from telling him to always stay with me in stores when he doesnt want to be in the cart. I am a broken record when it comes to talking to him about his safety and I always will be. We live in a townhome and on a dead end tiny street where our few neighbors are the only ones that can even go down the street just to get into their driveways. That still doesnt deter me from not allowing him to ride his trike past 1/2 way down the driveway or in our tiny street because I know he wouldnt understand why he can't do that at any other driveway or street. I am a brick wall and broken record when it comes to his safety. We even have door alarms/chimes on every door that we constantly have on. We have the chimes on during the day and switch the alarm mode on at night. We have door knob covers that deter them from being opened but Parker has begun breaking them. He has a thing with repeatedly opening and shutting doors and when he gets in that mode, he will break the covers so that he can do so. There's never a real moment of relaxation when it comes to his safety in general (wrapping things around his neck, swallowing things etc) but the thought of him wandering away without me being there terrifies me to no end.

Now when I saw the articles and newscasts about Scotty disappearing, I had the same reaction and feelings that I get when Parker runs off. The wrecking ball to the gut, the tears, the anxiety all flooded to me. With our record setting heat and with his home being close to the Mississippi, I just felt fear and instant tears. I couldnt even talk to Tim about it because when I did, I started to tear up. He got out of their home because a repairman was at the home and didn't lock the door behind him. "He's nonverbal like Parker. He wont answer people calling his name. This heat will dehydrate him. Parker loves the water. What if this little boy wanders to the bank? Especially in this heat, he will want to splash in it. He got out by something his parents didn't do...it was by some repair guy. How will people know to approach him and will he seek comfort in them or will he be scared of them? How will this effect him after they find him? Being poked at the hosptial, riding in an ambulance, having people run to hug and hold him.... Oh God I hope they find him." I know the autism community can be extremely divided on things but when it comes to things like this...you feel the same feelings as the parents. With an autistic adult or child being missing, there are things you are petrified about  that parents of missing children without autism don't necessarily think about. They will respond to their name being called. They will approach people for help. They know not to go into a strangers car, they know to search out others and adults. Not usually the case with missing children or adults with autism.

It's been hard for me to even write about this until now...almost a week after Scotty went missing. His parent had to endure all day and all night and into the next day without their son. Without knowing anything, hoping and being desperate he would come home to them. I can't function even a few minutes of Parker being away or out of my sight let alone that amount of time. Scotty was found near the river by a dog named Autumn and his owner came running to their side. I have thought about getting a dog and training it for tracking Parker, God forbid if he should ever wander away from us somehow. The only thing is that with an actual service dog, the cost is out of the question. Who can afford a $10,000+ dog? I know we cant. Even having a harness attached to a therapy dog which connects to Parker so that he's always with us and not on a child "leash." If any of you have had to use a "leash" on your child, you know what kind of awful glares and comments you get. I always am feisty with people who make comments and stare. Bitch please, if all you have to do is judge me on the safety precautions I have to take with my son...F-off. :)

All in all, Scotty is home safely with his parents but the emotions of that day will be with him and his family for a long time. They still even are with me. I know there is a wristband for autistic children to wear as a GPS but Parker won't allow anything on his wrists or ankles. He wont even keep band-aids on. It's something that Tim and I will have to consider about his safety...what's right for him and what's most effective for him. A tracking therapy dog? Save up and get a certified service dog? Get a chip to put in his shoes to locate him if we ever had to? These are the things we are thinking about for our little "Scotty." And even though people in the autism communtiy can be very divided on topics, the feelings his parents endured are felt throughout. The outpour of volunteers who brought Scotty home is a testament to that.

I am so deeply thankful to the volunteers who brought him home safely and I cannot say how relieved I am for his family. I'm so glad you are home, Scotty. And as for what Tim and I believe is best for Parker's safety? That has yet to be concluded...

Below is the link to Scotty reunited with his rescuer and words from his family:
Scotty's Story




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