Social Skill Breakdowns
Earlier this week SLPs and other related service providers had professional development training on social skills and autism spectrum disorder. The presenters discussed the steps required for social engagement and friendship. People with autism have deficits in social communication and typically have difficulty making and maintaining friendships. During the course of the training, the presenters put into words some of the areas in which I am struggling socially due to grief.
A critical aspect of interacting with other people is
reciprocal exchanges, or the give and take of conversation. Conversations are
successful when people take turns asking and answering questions, typically on
the same topic. These days, this is a tremendous struggle for me.
Friends and acquaintances are good at asking me questions
and checking in on me. I respond to inquiries then have to actively remind myself to ask them questions as well. Last Sunday,
my husband and I were greeted by a friend at church. He asked about Christmas
and I answered, then started to walk away. My husband (whose social skills were
luckily more intact on Sunday) asked him about his Christmas. Oops.
During the training I texted a friend in the session, whose
son died during her second trimester of pregnancy, that “my conversational
skills often break down at the give and take stage.” She responded, “Oh man, I
know exactly what you’re talking about! Give yourself grace, my friend.”
It is incredibly easy to become frustrated, resigned, or
apathetic with my diminished social graces and forget to give myself grace. My
friends give me so much more grace than I give myself. When I don’t respond to
emails or text messages for many days, people understand. When I walk into a therapy
session in the classroom, trying to hold it together as the weather turned
cold, and totally lose it in front of all my students, I only get hugs. Hugs
from the students, the teacher, and the teacher reads aloud the book while I pace
in the back of the classroom with a wad of tissues and pull myself back
together.
If I had not had friends before Isabella died, I would not
be able to make or maintain friendships at the moment. By God’s grace, my
friendships have only deepened, despite me.
The week my husband went back to work after the funeral, I
was a total mess. I very quickly found that I could not be alone in the house
with so much unstructured time. Early that week we had this text exchange:
Husband: Did you
make it on your walk yet?
Me: No
Aw, lovie
You just have to
put shoes on and go, right?
Yeah
And a hat. And
socks.
My heart just
aches today.
Yeah, I’m sorry honey
It will keep
aching while you walk, but your body will have something to do too
Okay. I am getting up.
Shoes are on and I’m leaving for
the walk. Got my phone.
While on the walk we talked on the phone to discuss how I
would make it until he got home. I asked him to set up people for me to meet
with, because I did not have the energy. He did. For at least the three weeks
before I went back to work, I saw 1-3 people a day because I could not be alone
in our empty house, with my arms aching, and nothing on my schedule. I know I
was not good company, but God used that time to strengthen friendships and
create new ones. Despite me.
My social skills are slowly coming back. At least I usually remember
that conversations involve a give and take, even if I have to remind myself to utilize
this information. My memory is also returning, although if something is not on
my calendar, it’s not going to happen. Most days I have a filter on my comments
and don’t blurt out the first thing that comes to mind. Like the other day, someone posted a photo of her baby on an SLP Facebook group and said she wanted
some encouragement as she returned to work after three months of maternity
leave. I stopped myself from commenting, “Encouragement – your daughter is
alive.” My filter was engaged.
The only reason I met the friend I texted during training
this week was because we had both lost our children. I completely stood her up
the first time we were supposed to meet because I forgot to put the coffee date
on my calendar. She texted me while I was at a Pilates class. When I called her,
apologizing profusely, she understood, better than most people would. We
rescheduled and are now friends. Friends who understand what it is like to cry
in between therapy sessions, pull it together for the group, then later break
down because a mom of a student is pregnant or has a newborn.
Isabella’s death has forever changed me. Over time I will
continue to regain aspects I lost after she died, but I will never be the same
person. And that is okay.
Comments
No matter who you are, what you say, filtered or unfiltered, what you can or cannot do...all of it. And yes, forever is a big word.
I will love you forever, Bibi. And I'll love Isabella forever too.