The phone rings and my stomach sinks when I see the caller ID. I already know what they’re going to say. I close my eyes, take a deep breath, and answer.
“Hi, it’s the school. Your son is having a hard time. Can you talk to him?” Or worse, “We need you to come pick him up.”
There it is. Again. I bring the phone closer to my ear and try to steady my voice, “What happened?”
Maybe he was overwhelmed by an assignment and ripped up his papers. Maybe he threw something. Maybe he had a meltdown so big and loud they couldn’t help him calm down. I hear phrases like “we had to clear the room” and “safety concerns.” I hear that edge in their voices, the exhaustion. And I hear the unspoken: Fix this. Fix him.
I swallow the lump in my throat, attempt to keep my voice level, and say, “Put him on the phone.”
He is breathing heavily when he comes on the line. He’s overstimulated, dysregulated, lost in a storm that has no exit for him. I remind myself: He is not giving me a hard time; he is having a hard time.
“Hey, buddy,” I say softly. “What’s going on?”
Sometimes I can talk him down. I can help him breathe, name what he’s feeling, make a plan to move foward. Other times, it’s already too far gone, and I have to come pick him up.
I get in the car and drive, already mentally preparing for the scene I’ll walk into. I’ll see my boy, tired, his shoulders hunched, pacing in circles, wary of my reaction. He’ll be worried that I’ll meet him with anger, disappointment, maybe even a consequence. But we’ve been through this before, learning and growing together by trial and error. Today, all I’ll have for him is tired understanding because I know this cycle all too well. Anger. Embarrassment. Shame. Sadness.
Anger at the school system that wasn’t built for kids like mine. That doesn’t provide enough support for under-resourced teachers and staff. At the hard reality that there are parents who don’t have to deal with this, who can go about their day without interruption, who don’t get the call.
Embarrassment because I imagine what they must think. That I haven’t disciplined him enough. That I have allowed him to get away with too much. That I’m one of those parents. That I should be doing better.
Shame because no matter how much I try to shake it, I still feel like I’ve failed. Failed to prepare him, to teach him the right coping skills, to make things easier for him, for them, for me.
And sadness. So much sadness that it feels like a heavy weight on my chest. Because I know my son doesn’t want this any more than I do. I know he’s struggling, that his brain works differently, that the world demands him to be someone he’s not, and when he can’t, they send him home. Again and again.
He’ll climb into the car, and I’ll ask him softly, “Rough day?”
And he’ll nod. He might cry. Maybe he won’t be ready to talk. As much as I want to reach for his hand and squeeze it, I won’t because he’s overstimulated and can’t tolerate touch. Regardless, I’ll say, “We’ll figure it out.” Even when I don’t know how. Even when I’m drowning in my own exhaustion, uncertainty, and frustration.
Because he’s my kid. And no matter how many phone calls come, no matter how many times I have to walk into that office, no matter how many deep breaths I have to take before answering the next inevitable call—I will show up. Every time.