Tag Archives: organisation

The 5am Lie In

I remember sitting in a horseshoe of chairs at our first National Autistic Society Early Bird course. It was the introductory session and we were going around the room giving an insight into each of our children.

Questions were asked to each couple in turn, with each question starting with someone different each time to allow us all to share.

“What is sleep like?” said the lady to my husband. He was first in the small group to answer the question.

“It’s hard” he said, “Rhys goes to sleep happily in the evenings at 7pm, but is then up really early around 04:30am”. We are constantly tired.

The question was then posed to the next couple who shared their struggles with sleep. How their son didn’t fall asleep until ten or eleven o’clock at night, and would then be up at about two am.

The answers from the group continued with responses including the need to lie down with their children for hours till they finally fell asleep, only to be up after a few hours.

As the responses were shared, me and my husband looked at each other from the corners of our eyes. Our sleep difficulties seamed miniscule to these other parents. We were always guaranteed an evening of peace, even though it was often an exhausted one due to being awake since four or four-thirty.

My husband held his head in his hands, embarrassed at his honesty of our son’s challenging sleep pattern. Wishing he could wind back the clock and not be the first to have answered that question.

We laugh about it now. We laugh because even though we are lucky with sleep (in the autism world) every couple of weeks Rhys does start the day at 2am. On those days we just trudge on and go to bed early.

I do however have a little laugh to myself when I overhear other parents sharing their early morning wakeups of six-thirty or having to wake their kids up who are still asleep at eight-thirty.

The thing is, you can take a child to their bed, but you can’t make them sleep (unless you have some magic melatonin!). I have however learnt over the years to just go with it. When Rhys wakes up he is ready to start the day. One day that may be five, other days it will be two in the morning!

Some days I snooze through the demand for the Gruffalo. Other days I get up and use the time to my advantage, because clocking up a few hours house work or a few chapters of my book puts me on the front foot for the day.

If I mope around in a half awake mess for the rest of the day, I don’t feel like the day has been totally wasted. I will have done my bit.

Other days we get lucky and Rhys sleeps late.

Oh how I love a lie in untill 05:30am 😁

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In Its Place!

“Rhys look” I say pulling one of the baskets forward.

All his number toys are in one place, where he can just help himself. The other baskets have been categorised into different groups of cars, puzzles, art supplies and movement toys.

Rhys places his hands into the basket, taking out his skittles. Placing them on the surface in front of him, he lines them up from one to ten in ascending order.

“Ten green bottles, hanging on the wall…” he starts to sing, knocking each skittle to the floor as it ‘falls off the wall’.

After Christmas every year, I always get a burst of motivation. As the new year creeps in, I reassess and look at what new goals can be set as targets and where improvements can be made to what we are doing already.

Sorry, I am one of those annoying people!

I got a book this year called The Organised Mum Method(TOMM). And before you ask, it was not from my husband as a hint of my disorganisation, but a gift to myself of how to improve on what I already do. The reviews were great and if there is anything I like better in a book, it is a plan and a step by step process to follow.

So far I have decluttered a quarter of the house, and over the next few days, the entire house will be complete. Everything will have its place, and there will be a lot of rubbish and charity shop drop offs, but come the first of January, I will have a clean slate to start the year with.

Sectioned off to make things easier to find.

As Rhys finishes his song, he looks in the boxes once again and pulls out his number cards. His face is full of excitement, it is like his own little Christmas, where he finds the toys he loves, all in one place. He can now play with a variety of toys, including those that have been forgotten amongst an unorganised mess.

However I am confident that screams for number three or number seven will still happen. And every time he will either be sitting on it or it will be right next to him.

That’s just life.

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