I heard the first sniffle but decided to ignore it.
As well as the second … and the third.
These sniffles are often a precursor to an explosion but I was hoping that wouldn’t be the case this time.
It was late. I was tired.
I didn’t want to do this.
In fact, I said that to my son … “Please, let’s not do this tonight.”
But, for some reason, the computer he was using would not connect to the internet, which meant he could not watch the YouTube videos he fixates on.
Which means … his button got pushed.
And before long, those sniffles led to the explosion I feared … an especially ugly one.
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I am not especially skilled in technology but over the years, since I have a son with autism who is obsessed with technology, I have gained a certain amount of knowledge. Given some time, I can usually problem-solve and determine if it is a problem I can fix, if I need to call tech support, or if I actually need to take the computer somewhere for service.
On this night I struggled to problem solve but found it impossible given the behaviors and noise level. My ears were ringing from the noise, my body fatigued from the day, and my head aching from the unintentional blow to the face when I got in the way of a flying elbow.
I was sure it might be an easy fix but I just could not figure it out and given my son’s loud behaviors, I couldn’t risk calling tech support for guidance.
I tried to calm my son. I tried to explain that if he would just calm down, I could call and get help but as long as he screamed, I was not able to call.
I couldn’t begin to fix the problem as long as he continued in his behaviors.
He raged on.
He asked for ‘Internet’ over and over and over again.
But he would not do what was needed in order for me to address the problem.
I tried explaining that only that one computer wouldn’t connect to the internet. He still had his I Pad and he could use my lap top. There were options.
But he would not listen to the other options available to him.
He was just too angry to listen. Too determined to have things be a certain way.
Finally, I sent him to his ‘calm-down’ chair. It is simply a set place to get himself together … calm down … get behaviors under control.
When he finally reached a point of hovering just under the crisis line, I sank into my own ‘calming down’ spot and began to plead with the Lord. “Please Lord, I can’t do this again. Could you just make that computer work so we could have peace tonight?”
Oh how I long for peace.
But I’ve been down this road before and I know that God doesn’t smooth the way out for me very often. Usually there is something to learn … something for me to teach my son … a connection that needs made … a skill to develop.
So, I followed up my plea with, “But Lord, if that peace and an easy answer isn’t what you have for us tonight, then please guide me in what to do … and provide the grace and strength that is needed.”
Because I was fresh out.
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My son stayed just below the crisis point but still fixated on the uncooperative computer.
I mostly stayed silent because I knew he wasn’t ready to listen.
But I watched and waited … wondering how the night would play out and mentally steeling myself for a disrupted night of sleep.
He finally reached a point of coping by accepting my computer as a temporary replacement. I placed it beside his computer so he could still sit at his desk and watch his videos.
Yes, he was coping with the situation … but he was still obsessing.
Trying to control and determined how things should be … but not trusting.
Not trusting the woman who protects and looks out for him every moment of the day.
Not trusting the one who has guided him through many a trial and challenge.
Not trusting the one who loves him most dearly.
Choosing to rage and stomp in anger … instead of trusting.
As a mother who is generally patient and compassionate, it was enough to irritate me.
“Honestly,” I told the Lord, “if he would just listen and trust me, life wouldn’t have to be this stressful.”
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My son has autism and his obsessive, controlling nature is part of it … but it is also part of his sin nature. He is determined for things to be a certain way. He is also very smart and able to learn … but we still have to walk through these behaviors almost every time something happens to disrupt his sense of control.
As his mother, I long for him to simply turn to me and allow me to walk him through the challenges of this life without all the drama and anger. I love this young man and I work constantly to teach him the needed skills to live the freest and fullest life possible.
His autism is not his greatest obstacle … his anger and need for control is.
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Friend, you likely do not have autism, but I wonder if you can relate to my son’s struggle?
I know I can.
I want life to be a certain way. To look a certain way.
There are certain things that I want to be in place so I feel safe and loved.
I don’t like disruptions and truthfully, I really hate it when I am reminded that I am not in control.
However, how we respond in the challenges, disruptions, and crises of life is a pretty clear indicator of our level of trust in the Lord.
Are our responses similar to those of my son? Do we fly into an immediate rage and stomp about in anger? Do we panic and assume the worst is about to happen? Do we seek control over others and the situation? Do we rant and destroy others with our tongues in this place of anger or fear?
As our Father in heaven watches, what do our responses to these temporal situations tell Him? I wonder if He feels the same frustration I sometimes feel with my son?
The same grief as I watch him struggle with the same thing over and over?
The same desire to see freedom and growth?
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I have spent a lot of time over the years pondering my relationship with my son and my relationship with God the Father. But this week, I considered how deeply I long for my son to trust me fully. To rest in my care and guidance. And I had to ask myself, how much more does God the Father desire for me to trust Him in all things? To rest in His sovereign care and guidance?
I work to be a good and Godly mother to my children but my best efforts will always be tarnished by sin. But God’s love is holy and pure, untouched by sin.
“If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give what is good to those who ask him!”
Matthew 7:11
My thoughts on this topic are still developing so I am sure what I have written is a bit jumbled. But I will share anyways because I wonder if this line of thought might also be helpful for someone else? Maybe it would be helpful to consider how you respond when life gets disrupted and seems to spin out of your control? Perhaps it would be good to ask the Lord how responsive you are to His leading and discipline? How obedient to His call? How trusting of His guidance and plans for your life?
What a gracious and long-suffering Father He is.






