We ate foods that we don't always eat, things that smell different and have textures that we had never tried before. We even went to a 'stranger's' house to visit people I've known since I was a child, but haven't seen in almost as long. My sons have never met them before. Everything was different.
The boys did great! Both of them; the younger protecting the older and guiding him through the social graces of interacting with kids much younger than he is. It's funny, how the younger will take time to teach the older in public, but in private will mercilessly pester him about his peculiarities.
For Jackson, going to the house of a stranger is uncomfortable to say the least. He biggest concern is; 'Will they have a wireless network?" which loosely translated means, "Will I have my security system in place?" For Jackson, the Internet is as close to his security blanket as anything. And I suppose, if I think about it, it really is a sort of 'blanket' albeit an ethereal one. The Internet provides him a comfortable, quiet place to go when he's feeling vulnerable, in jeopardy or too overwhelmed by the newness of his immediate surroundings to cope. As well, he is able to access this familiar space, this coverage, this comfortable space in some fashion from almost anywhere he may be or may ever go. He's always got it with him. It's perfect, He doesn't have to remember where he put it down last or look for it too hard. He knows it will be there for him. The Internet is like a virtual comfort zone that exists in a language he understands. As well, it has the capacity to answer the barrage of questions that only he can come up with as quickly as he can think them. No human can equivocate this. It's a 'home' when he's away from home.I used to do battle over the Internet. I used to insist that he 'turn it off,' or 'do something else.' I simply wanted him to be able to walk away from his computer or his iPhone and I never understood with such clarity (as I did yesterday) just what this cyber-thing means to him.
Of course, I tried all the wrong strategies to help Jackson be comfortable in new places or away from home for any length of time. None of them really worked, because they didn't address his need to have something familiar with him in a way that he can manage and that doesn't make him appear to be too 'odd' or 'extreme' when he's in new social situations.
Again, Jackson has found his own way and insisted that this be something he's allowed to navigate. Again, I am in awe of his ability to adapt in a world that sometimes makes very little sense to me, let alone to someone who views it from an entirely different perspective.
Again, I've learned that the best way to help Jackson mature and make sense of his world is to be confidant in his ability to determine how best to go about that - to let him find his way and accept his choice - understanding that I don't know everything and his own sense of self is usually far more intuitive than mine.


