My son was his usual self today. Loud.
Slamming his bedroom door, kicking the walls, slamming the fridge,
freezer and dishwasher doors. (See previous blog post where he broke my new
oven by slamming the oven door.) First
of all, it’s extremely annoying for me.
But that’s not the half of it.
What’s worse is the feeling of dread, waiting for one of my neighbors to
call the cops, like that ever accomplishes anything. (Please see previous posts for the history of
the neighbor-police drama.)
There was a knock on the
door. I tiptoed over to the peephole and
saw a woman with her hands on her hips.
I was already on the verge of tears because of Todd’s behavior, so I
couldn’t answer. I wasn’t in the mood to
get yelled at. If she wasn’t there to
yell and just wanted to patronizingly ask me to control my child, I probably
would have snapped and verbally ripped her a new you-know-what, so I didn’t
answer to door because I didn’t want that to happen.
There was a second knocking on
the door. I called my husband at
work. He suggested I call the police and
tell them what was happening. What could
they do? Call the police to report someone knocked on my door?
The ironic part was that each
time I finally got my son calmed down, the door knock would get him all worked
up again.
Finally, there was a loud
pounding on the door. I knew who it was
before I looked through the peephole.
Officers! Hi guys! Wow, slow day,
they sent three of you to deal with my criminal 5-year-old. This time, they were very kind, compassionate
and understanding. Not confrontational,
judgmental, accusing, as they have been in the past. I told them I understand they have to respond
to all calls. However, I personally
would only contact the police in regards to a crime and I felt my tax dollars
were being wasted by their trip out to my home when they could be out actually
doing their job by oh, apprehending actual criminals. I told them all they were accomplishing was
making me feel worse than I already did and they were sympathetic to that. I told them I had given my son some melatonin
and was waiting for that to kick in.
No crime was committed. The noise ordinance in our village states
that in order for it to be a nuisance violation, the noise has to be willful
and wanton. Legal Terminology 101: For it to be willful, I would have to be
encouraging or making my child be noisy.
Wanton implies it could be stopped, but I’m choosing not to stop
it. Neither is the case here and I
confirmed that in my meeting last month with the Chief of Police for my
village. (See previous blog post on that.) I understand noise is annoying to
others, but I’m doing all I can, really!
Calling the cops is just selfish and malicious – it accomplishes
absolutely nothing. Have I made it clear it accomplishes absolutely nothing?
I assumed the people who called
were the renters next door who call several times a week. The police told me, believe it or not, this
time it wasn’t them. This only leaves
our neighbors upstairs, who are usually nice and are moving July 18th. All this time they’ve never called and now
they can’t suck it up for 17 more days?
They’ve even told me before that they would never call on our kids
because we’ve never called about their noise.
They have a dog that yips all day.
They are young and blast their music a lot. One time, the wife was out
of town. At 2:30 a.m., we heard power
tools going in their unit – woke up the other neighbors too – we were all out
in the lobby and you could get a contact high from the pot smell wafting out of
their condo and reggae music blasting that was louder than the power
tools. No one called the cops that
time. But my autistic 5-year-old? That somehow calls for police action.
Devil’s advocate – maybe the wife
was truly concerned when we didn’t answer her knocks and wanted to make sure we
were ok. That’s what the cops said, “we
want to make sure everyone is ok.”
My husband was so upset over all
this, he ended up going off on a customer at work and was sent home without
pay.
What are we going to do? We’ve been for sale for over 2 years. Can we sue for harassment? I certainly feel like we’ve been subjected to
mental cruelty and emotional distress.
I have wonderful friends and the positive
feedback was helpful when I was bitching about all this on Facebook. I wondered if I really should share so much
on Facebook, was I putting too much out there, but decided I have to. If people don’t want to hear about it, don’t
read my posts. But I really feel I need
to put it out there – let anyone know who cares to know what our family goes
through. We aren’t the only ones – I know
families of my boys’ school friends who go through a lot as well. I want people to know what our experience is
like so they hopefully won’t pre-judge others they come across that are like us
and hopefully cut them some slack.
3 comments:
No, I think you're right to share it. No names are used and you have to vent. I'm so sorry this keeps happening. Hopefully, someone will buy the place soon.
Hi - thank you for your post. I have an autistic son age 10 and am in the same boat as you. It is very difficult. I just started blogging about my experiences in hopes of raising awareness. http://lifewithautistickid.com
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