Tuesday, August 23, 2011

It's the Big One, Elizabeth!!!

Remember Sanford & Son and Redd Foxx holding his heart and talking to his deceased wife anytime something happened.  Well, today is one of those days.  My hubby, best friend, business partner, fixer of anything, and love of my life turns 70 today!!!  Seventy!!!  WOW!!!  When I was a little girl, seventy was old - really, really old.  Today seventy is the new fifty. So, today's blog is a letter to my hunny.
Dearest Charlie - Who knew on July 4, 1981, when we promised to love and honor (remember, I had the obey part taken out of our vows) each other in sickness and in health, for richer or poorer, as long as we both shall live, that we'd both make it to two milestones this year - our 30th anniversary and your 70th birthday.  We've done a lot over these years.  Lots of laughter, lots of tears, lots of accomplishments, lots of disappointment.  But, overall, it's been an incredible ride.

     We've survived job losses, the lose of both of your parents and my mom, owning a business (or rather, it owning us) where we not only live together but work together every day, combining a blended family, taking our little company from one that had not made a profit to one that sustains us quite well today.  I've watched you give away two of your daughters at their weddings, hold grandchildren when they are just a few hours or minutes old, help my dad whenever he needs you, continue to work even when we are on vacation because there are just some things you need to do, fix a computer at our office - over the phone - while we are in Europe - by just having the phone held down to the computer so you could hear what it was doing, and be ordained as a deacon at our church.  WOW!!  And, that's just the beginning.
     When you gave up your career as a chemical engineer to come into my little company and become my business partner, I know you gave up a part of you life that was so important to you.  Yet, you realized the strengths you could bring to the company would make it grow and prosper.  Because of your dedication to the company, it has allowed us to travel all over the world with our best friends.  Will we ever forget that train fiasco in Italy with the Bohans and Tidwells??  Or the trip to Germany and Switzerland where we almost got stuck in snow in the Alps?  What about the Greek Isles, or the British Isles, or the Mediterranean numerous times, or Scandinavia and Russia?  The I, Snorkel Bob incident is indelibly etched in my brain when we were on Maui, as are the many man-on-the-street interviews between you and Jim.  Our trips to DisneyWorld with the grandchildren have all been so much fun, but so different with each of them.  Just watching you and Truman on the little scooter you needed at the time because of your leg injury was great.  Seeing the wonder in Ian's eyes the first time he saw Buzz Lightyear and realizing that he really did believe he was "real" was so exciting.
     Because we didn't meet until we were both adults, there was so much I didn't know about you.  What fun I had meeting your friends and seeing where you went to elementary school and high school, and where you lived in Greenville, SC, when we went to your 50th high school reunion.Yep, it's been a great ride.  It's so wonderful to celebrate this special day with you and to know that we have many more of these to come. 

     Thank you.  Thank you for sharing this life with me.  Thank you for your dedication to our company and to the travel industry.  Thank you for helping me through the worst year of my life when I lost Mom. Although you and I never had children together, our furbabies have been so important to both of us.  Thank you for loving and caring for Samantha, Gretchen, Abby, Liesel and Zoe.  Thank you for being by my side whenever I've needed you.  Thank you for loving me every day regardless of what's going on in our lives.  And, thank you for becoming the man that God wants you to be.  You make me proud to be your wife.      Yep, it's been quite a ride.  Now let's get back on that rollercoaster and see what the next decade holds for you.  Happy 70th Birthday!!! I love you more every day.

Miz Boo



Sunday, August 21, 2011

Multi-Generational Cruising with an Aspergian Kiddo

I’ll never forget the day my daughter, Angela, called me in tears because my grandson’s teachers thought he was autistic. Truman was three at the time, and it was devastating. Angela and Jim T – my son-in-law – immediately took him to his pediatrician who sent them to Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital. The psychologist who tested him didn’t see signs of autism, but did note “OCD” (obsessive compulsive disorder) tendencies. Truman was also given an IQ test and tested at 126…at three years old! There was no doubt that Truman was a smart kiddo.


However, Angela and Jim T noticed some other issues. Truman had never slept all night – ever. He would get focused on something, and regardless of what they wanted him to do, they could not get deter his focus. He was reading at age four. Genius? Maybe.

The time came for Tru to start kindergarten. Angela and Jim T were so anxious because they didn’t know how Truman would react in the classroom. He was beginning to show some ADD (attention deficit disorder) tendencies along with his other quirks. He was not making close friends like his butterfly sister, Maeve, who walked into a room and knew everyone instantly. However, Truman excelled in reading and math, yet his fine-motor skills were lacking and his handwriting was not up to par. He could spell, but writing so his teacher could read his ideas was a challenge.

Finally this spring, during Truman’s second grade year, Vanderbilt asked to do a genetic test on the entire family to determine is Truman had Asperger’s Syndrome. As it turned out, he is definitely an Aspergian, but there is no genetic link to either Angela or Jim T, and Maeve tested just fine. At last, a diagnosis.

Asperger’s is on the autism spectrum, but is at the extremely high-functioning end.

We’ve all done so much reading about this disorder in the past months, and found out that Bill Gates, Albert Einstein and Mozart were Aspergians. At the end of second grade, Truman was reading and comprehending on an eighth grade level. He excels in math and science and loves the chess club at his school. His handwriting is still lacking, but his theory is “Well, I can read it.” It doesn’t matter if anyone else can, including his teacher.

So, why am I telling you all of this? Because we just took Angela, Jim T, Maeve and Truman on an NCL cruise. This was the first cruise the grandchildren had ever taken. We knew Maeve would have a wonderful time and would meet and make new friends immediately. However, our concern was for Tru. Would he adapt to ship life? Would he want to participate in the kid’s program? We quickly found out that freestyle cruising is the best way to cruise with a kiddo who is Aspergian.

Jim T’s mom was with us, so the kids had all of their grandparents onboard. We had lunch the first day in Cagney’s, and just watching Truman order a steak for his first meal onboard was wonderful. He kept asking over and over “Is this FREE???” We explained that he could eat at Raffles, the Blue Lagoon, Windows, The Garden Room and numerous places on the ship at no charge. The Blue Lagoon became his restaurant of choice because they served chicken strips and French fries, his all-time favorite.

By the end of the first day, Truman had visited places on the ship that none of us knew existed. He knew immediately that the elevators forward of the ship had red carpet, those in the middle had blue carpet, and those aft had green carpet – details that none of us had noticed. He told his mom after the first day “In his cruise ship elevator riding experience that you can only push all of the elevator buttons at once if ALL of the passengers are ok with it, and he had not found that particular passenger group yet.” As Charlie – my husband – was getting off the elevator on Day 2, Truman pushed past him and was announcing “Come on, I’ll show you.” and was immediately followed by a posse of his new friends. Where he was going and what he was showing them has yet to be determined.

Freestyle cruising allowed the freedom that Truman needed in a controlled environment. He begged to go to the Kid’s Club every afternoon. Tru would miss dinner with us and eat after he had his Kid’s Club fix. This was a perfect scenario for an Aspergian. On the last day of the cruise, we were treated to a private bridge tour. Of course, Mr. Technical Truman was in heaven. All of the computer screens and the joystick that, according to him, was used to “drive the ship” were fascinating to him because they reminded him of his video games.

Cruising is such an incredible way for multi-generations to enjoy the vacation of their lives.  What's stopping you from taking a family cruise?