Just after posting my celebratory hurrah about our South Haven Adventures last week, I get home and decide to compound my success by being a ‘good parent.’*
“C’mon son. Let’s go for a walk.” I say.
I’m thinking of a brisk stroll, fresh air, and then getting back to the house to tackle some work. It is a good game plan.**
As I have mentioned before, my son is a runner. He would explore a lion’s den given half a chance. Like Austin Powers, his middle name is “Danger.” Unfortunately, this evening is no exception. As we walk, he keeps pointing out buildings he would like to ‘visit’ and even writes house numbers down on his papers when I don’t seem to pick up on his subtle signals when he tries to drag me to the front door.
The night is turning colder when I spot the Grand Villa in the distance. This is a local restaurant which goes by the nickname “The Dungeon” because of its subterranean locale. If I had seen their website beforehand, I might have taken heed of the warning they post in their tagline:
“THE DUNGEON IS WAITING FOR YOU”
Teeth chattering, I haul my child away from the housing complex he is lunging toward—a nondescript giant block of apartments in what once was a large family home. Seeing as my son is now 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighs as much as an overindulged Great Dane, this takes some effort.
I lure him in with the promise of chocolate milk.
Twenty minutes later, warm again and well quaffed, we gather our things to go. Then I consider the nearly mile-long walk back to the house…in the cold…and decide the bathroom should be our first stop. I send my son into the men’s room and wait for a few seconds…before deciding I’d better make sure myself and pop into the ladies.
I swear I peed in less than a minute and was back out to wait for my son. A MINUTE. That’s all it took. My clever, devious, Machiavellian boy was gone.
You can pretty much predict the rest. After a frantic and futile search of the area, I’m on the phone with 911. While talking with them, I see a police car pull up alongside the road. I hail them while I’m on the phone with the operator.***
Now I’m babbling at two different sets of people—neither of whom can understand me—when someone calls out:
“We’ve found him!”
Another police officer escorts my happy, oblivious-to-the-chaos-he-causes boy to my weeping embrace.
My son is returned safe and sound and, though he had broken into a home, no one is hurt. A few papers are stolen and have to be retrieved. He’d even had time to scribble calendars on the back as a memento to the family he invaded. I hope they frame them.
In those interminable minutes he is out of my grasp, I imagine enough scenarios to make my heart stop a thousand times. I am honestly surprised it doesn’t kill me.
Once home, my child goes to bed with no complaints. I think on some level he recognizes mommy has had it. I turn off my phone and tune out the world and spend the evening overwrought and shaking.
The next day, I find the energy to call my mom.
“Hey, mom…Little Man is okay, but I have to tell you something that happened last night. Understand, I can’t take any comments about what might have happened. I still feel so emotionally raw I can barely breathe.”
My mom knows about loss. I had a sister—Robin. She died of crib death before I was even born. As a result, mom has had a super-charged paranoia about any dangers we faced as kids and I think this has multiplied exponentially for her grandchildren.
I re-live the night before as factually as I can without breaking down. She lets me vent. It is what I need—a shoulder to cry on without judgment. It is phone call catharsis at its best. Mom says she’ll check in on me later, but she has something to do first. I ring off feeling a shade lighter than before.
My mom stops by that afternoon, carrying a cooler. I unpack it while she tells me a story of her own. When I get to the table with a warm bundle wrapped in a towel, she is drawing me a map as she talks:
“When I was a little girl, my father took me to the ice cream shop at the Occidental Hotel in Muskegon. It’s torn down now, but it was located between Clay and Webster Street downtown—it’s in the same area the Frauenthal Theater and the culinary school are now.”
I pull up my computer to help in the search for yesteryear landmarks. We have a doozy of a time since mom—who has a much better sense of direction than me—apparently can’t reorient her mind to the north-on-top directionality Google maps insists on presenting.
“Anyway, they had a famous hot fudge sauce that I absolutely loved. We didn’t go out very often so it was a big treat to go there. So I made this for you!”
As mom is saying this, she’s unwrapping the towel to reveal a small Corningware casserole dish wrapped in plastic wrap with a band of duct tape for extra insurance. (She’s not messing around with spills!)
“After you told me about your adventure, I thought you could use a treat.” Mom says.
She makes me sit down with a big bowl of ice cream and a dollop of the chocolaty, silken sauce melting over the white caps of vanilla-y goodness.
She then tells me more about our connections to the famed hotel with the equally famous sauce.
“Do you remember the lamp your father brought back when they sold off the property and its belongings?” She asks.
I would have been eight in 1975, and home furnishings weren’t a high priority in my experience, so I shake my head and take a bite. I swallow her memories with each taste.
“It was a heavy iron lamp and we put it in your room with the flowered Crosscill bedspread and curtains—you remember those?”
I had loved that frilly bedroom set up until I left for the Army. It was gone when I got back home four years later and I truly mourned its loss. I nod and lick the spoon. No words are necessary when you have hot fudge. Mom continues to wax nostalgic about the past:
“I was nineteen in 1959. I remember going to a Valentine’s dance there once–sponsored by the Elks, I think. A boyfriend, Jack Boles, took me to a ball at the hotel when we were dating. Do you remember the beautiful dress you borrowed for school that was stolen?”
This I distinctly remember. It was my first experience with theft. I borrowed it for a theater skit for a character in the show. It was gorgeous red dress of some kind of stiff but silky material. I have never quite forgiven myself for losing that dress.
“It was a play, Mom. We were performing at the elementary school. The dress disappeared from the prop and costume boxes before we finished the shows.” I interject. I’m apologetic—it’s a script we’ve enacted whenever we rehash the event.
“It had a square bodice and the style was so grown up. The sheer overlay matched the underskirt perfectly. Do you remember the fabric?” Mom holds her hands out as if measuring the width of a belled skirt.
“It had a swirly pattern—nothing distinct, like paisley, but more like the swirls you see when oil floats on water.” I say.
[A hunt online produced similar styles but nothing is exactly like what she had:]
Now it’s her turn to nod.
“Yes! I wore it when I was in the beauty contest at the ball—you’ve seen that picture, right?”
It is a small, black-n-white snapshot of three women in ball gowns. Mom was the first runner-up. In the photo, she stands to the left of two other women—all dressed up and carrying bouquets of now, long-dead flowers. It was a night of beautiful memories.

The fudge sauce is slowly disappearing as we reminisce. We look online trying to find a photo of the ice cream parlor that existed before The Occidental Hotel was imploded in 1975 to make way for a parking lot. But all we can find are details of the implosion. The article is an epitaph for a leveled landmark torn down in pursuit of a mall that would later close of its own fiscal demise.
The ice cream is gone and I scoop up the remains of the cooling, lava-like gooeyness to store in the fridge.
“Be sure to hide it from the boy or he’ll eat it all!” Mom warns before giving me a hug goodbye.
It’s after she’s gone and I’m cleaning up that I realize what she’s done. It is what all mothers do—try to make it better. When you skin your knee, she offers a kiss. It is a little sugar to take away the bitterness that life sometimes hands you. I may be an adult, but I am not immune to the sway of childhood remedies or memories—be they mine or my mother’s. The sweetness cannot stop the pain, but it can make it better. And when those remembrances come with chocolate sauce—it surely does.
Asterisk Bedazzled Footnote:
*Being a Good Parent—a laudable goal that, when I try to do it on purpose, results in immediate failure.
**Life is out to get me most of the time and rarely needs a good reason. Still, I thought, in light of my good intentions, the universe was being a real shit not to reward me.
***No matter how many times I have called 911, I do not improve with experience. I am just as hysterical and useless each and every time. I owe sincere apologies to the people who man those phones…and probably a fruit basket.
———–You read this far bonus—————–
I just had to include this photo. It is the entire line up of contestants from that long ago Valentine’s beauty pageant.
Oy. I knew it ended well – or you wouldn’t be taking the time to write a blog post – but my heart was in my mouth when he disappeared! Sending a hug, my friend.
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It took me a week before I could write about it. But I needed to say it–so people recognize this kind of thing happens and think before reacting to a non-verbal child or young adult entering their home. At least, thats my hope.
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I would encourage you to start writing regularly on the subject, and see if you can market the posts to other broader venues, like Huffington Post. You write well and your experience is important to share.
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That’s not a bad idea. But, I am a little concerned about turning this into an autism blog. Also, some people argue that it is taking advantage of my child and promoting his issues for my own purposes. I’m leery of that kind of abuse.
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Well, I’d be sorry if this turned into an “autism blog” because your life extends beyond autism. I like the fact that you write about more general topics. But there are other venues – that’s why I suggested Huffington Post.
Also, WHO says you would be taking advantage of him? I mean, has someone ever actually said something that absurd, or are you just second-guessing yourself, overthinking your motives? “Promoting his issues for [your] own purposes” … Seriously? Have you found some magical way of making money out of your blog? Or … maybe people send you chocolate??
On a serious note … I can’t think of anyone better qualified to write about parenting an autistic child than the parent of an autistic child. And what struck me about your most recent post was how relevant it was to the rest of us. I’m interested in autism and read a fair amount about it, but it had never crossed my mind that I might come home to find a stranger in my home, who maybe acts a little weird, who is not high or bad but merely autistic. People (including cops!) need to know that this is something to add to their list of “what’s up with that guy” when they’re trying to figure out how to deal with unexpected behavior. Just my opinion… 🙂
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I do value your opinion. I also appreciate anyone suggesting I might write for pay. (Secret dream and all that.) Actually, the opinion about taking advantage of my child comes from the autism community itself–stating it is an abuse of privacy and dignity to write about embarrassing and personal details for the whole world to see. I try to keep this in mind and limit his exposure.
I will think about Huffington though. But I heard they don’t actually pay writers for their work. Still, it would be nice to be published at all! So, thanks for planting the seed.
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Ja, thinking about it from that perspective, I can see that one would have to tread very carefully. I think you have the skill and wisdom to do that, however, so look forward to reading some of your work in a more public venue… 🙂
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The feeling of a lost child is the worst feeling ever. There aren’t any words to describe the panic. It has occurred to me many times, that all those times I was panicked over my lost one, I was so out of my head it’s amazing I didn’t lose the other three! Moo is … I think she may secretly have wings, or the power of time travel. Errant children, thumbs down.
Mommy-make-nice over ice cream, thumbs up.
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Thank you. While it’s terrible that you know what I’m talking about, it’s good to know I’m not alone!
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That dungeon is still waiting…. 😀 LOL
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It can keep! 😝
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Kiri. I’m in tears. Weeping at your beautiful story.
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Thank you. I hope a few are tied in with your own memories as well. We are one big web, after all.
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Wonderful post, wonderful story – make that stories! And the fudge sauce sounds amazing. 😋
I once called 911 because of a missing child, only to discover her IN THE HOUSE! She was in the corner of a dark closet, sound asleep.
I don’t think there’s anything more humbling than motherhood.
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Parenting while wearing a swimsuit in public comes to mind, but that’s probably just me!
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What a chilling experience… but of course reading it i did expect it to go well… and what a great way to be pampered with such bliss.
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Next time I’ll opt for bliss alone, hold the terror.
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Man, hot fudge is amazing. Try adding peanut butter next time….
Glad all ended well.
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