We are fortunate enough to have a small vacation house about 3 hours from home. Every time we go there, I thank my lucky stars that we had this house before Bambam was born. He has been going there since he was 10 days old. To him it is just an extension of home, a place he is comfortable and free to be just him. And all his favorite things are just a bike ride away, the airport, the horse stables, the pool. Without this house, we would probably not have had a vacation in the last 6.5 years. And sometimes we just need to get away.
Last weekend we went to our beloved "fun house" as Bambam calls it. We hadn't been in over a month and were looking forward to a relaxing weekend. But it was not to be. The drive over, which normally takes a little less than 3 hours, ballooned to over 4.5 due to an accident that blocked the highway in both directions. Perhaps this should have been a sign to turn around and go home as we sat for over an hour without moving. But Bambam was a rockstar. He played with his airplanes and looked at his books and really did a great job of going with the flow.
Since we arrived so late, we barely had time to eat dinner, read a couple of books, and head off to bed. The first night's sleep is always a little bit shakey with the change in venue. But it usually only takes one night and then he's back on track. Not this time.
When we got up Saturday morning it quickly became obvious that hunting season had started. Gun shots went off frequently all day long. And Bambam fell apart a little bit more each time he heard one. His whole body would get stiff. If he was close to me he would grab hold and squeeze with all his might. There was crying and teeth grinding and basically an all out "fight or flight" alert all weekend.
It was painful to see my sweet boy like this. It felt like we had regressed 2 years. His anxiety level hadn't been this aroused in a very long time. His words were unclear, and when we could understand them they made little sense fleeting from one thing to another. Not even his favorite things could calm him. He was quite simply, a mess.
I did manage to get him to the pool Saturday afternoon where he found a quiet, empty corner and proceeded to jump in, get out, jump in, get out, jump in...over and over again, almost obsessively, seeking some comfort. And as I watched him, I cried. Sitting by the edge of a public pool, the tears streamed down my face as I watched my boy uncomfortable in his own skin, unable to help him, unable to provide him the comfort he was so desperately seeking. Sometimes I hate this.
And then finally, finally later in the weekend he found his words. "Guns are too loud, they scare me." And with that one sentence, a way to express what he was feeling, a way to gain some semblance of control, he began to come back.
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