Homework for Mom

This post by Alanna King originally appeared on her blog on September 8th, 2016

Max started grade 7 yesterday and he came home with a sealed envelope for me.  In it was a piece of paper with just one sentence on it:

Homework Assignment #1

In a million words or less, tell me about your child.

…and I knew it was going to be a good year.

Max will be 12 in a month and his feet are already bigger than mine.  His most identifying trait is his face full of freckles.  He and I have daily discussions about the invention that he’s going to make to save humanity. I’d be happy if he would just invent an app that would identify plants, but he always puts this grand pressure on himself. Every one of his passions involves science…plants, animals (he calls himself the animal whisperer), how the world is made…this summer’s favourite book was all about phobias. This is why we have daily conflict during the school year about catching up in math…because I’d like him to pursue whatever path he wants.  He doesn’t see the correlation yet between doing work today and how it will affect his choices later…but who does at age 11?  Still at the end of the day, he does seem totally worn out and I hate to see him cry. Last night he even offered to learn about Canadian history 3 times a week through Kayak magazine rather than math  So we’ll put math studying on the back burner for a couple more weeks.

Max swims once a week and is good enough now that I feel that I can watch from the side sometimes.  He loves the water, and sand and snow…anything tactile.  He loves building and has a table dedicated to Lego.  He has inventions in tape and paper and cardboard all over the house, so much so that we painted his room into a science lab last summer.  Of course one of his favourite games is Minecraft and I catch him watching Minecraft parodies on YouTube all the time.  He loves to laugh and has a great sense of humour.  He loves laughing so much that he can get stuck on a joke for days repeating it over and over to himself and then having this huge fake laugh-track laugh.

He has both an eidetic memory and also can’t remember where he put his shoes 30 seconds after taking them off.  He forgets to eat, forgets to drink, and forgets to sleep so routine is a big part of our life during the school year.  During the summertime, I invite him to cook for himself and he has a toaster oven that he uses almost exclusively for his various kitchen creations usually involving toasted cheese.  He only goes to bed because he’d rather not be lonely staying up by himself.  We had a good time on the weekend because at an old cottage we visited, they had a stack of retro comic books.  We really enjoyed looking at the old ads for 1990s video games.  He said to me the other day that he wishes that he had the technology from the 80s, like me,  because it was so simple…he likes the dials and tubes and buttons.

He gets attached to the dialogue of movies, tv shows and the stories that he reads.  There seems to be an uncertain veil between how those worlds are separated from ours, in Max’s mind, as he will often bring things that I haven’t read or seen into our conversations assuming that I’ll enjoy hearing about them just as much.  In fact, part of Max’s diagnosis is called hyperlexia, an attachment to letters.  In fact, I swear that he was reading before he could walk…that would place reading somewhere between 12 and 17 months of age…and those first words were the things we could read along the street on our way to the post office…”Open” “Closed” “Stop” “Canada Post”.  He tricked us all into thinking that language was a gift so I first enrolled him in French Immersion at the JK entry point in our board.  With a first year teacher and my inexperience as a parent, we didn’t realize that his language was regressing until January of that year and quickly moved him to the mainstream program.  The trick about Max is that although he can pronounce words easily and memorize their spelling, he takes longer to comprehend their meaning and even longer to communicate his understanding of what he reads.

It will be quite an adventure seeing what the year brings as the scope of what he’s learning broadens.  I’m looking forward to hearing about new friends as his school is a hub for the neighbouring communities for grades 7 and 8, so his peer group has just tripled.  Max has no trouble making friends but prefers to play alone mostly and can become really worn out in social situations. I’m hoping to engage him in a monthly teen group at Kerry’s Place in Guelph this year, where he has enjoyed a one week camp each summer. Still, it’s good for him because if he’s going to solve humanity’s problems with one invention, he needs to get to know humans.

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