iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Ocean Robbins

GET UPDATES FROM Ocean Robbins

What My Autistic Twins are Teaching Me About Love

Posted: 06/13/11 09:34 AM ET

I come from a family of achievers and changemakers. For generations, we've been accomplishing big things. Now my wife and I are parents to 10-year-old twins who have autism, and who often struggle to make it through the day. Our family has been through plenty of agony and disappointment over the last 10 years, and yet our twins are teaching me something important about life, about love and about what it means to be human.

I am learning about a love that is not tied to performance or accomplishment. I am learning about love, just because.

My family story is a bit unusual. My grandfather founded Baskin-Robbins ice cream company. My dad, John Robbins, grew up with an ice cream cone shaped swimming pool, and the constant task of sampling and evaluating new flavors of ice cream. He was groomed from early childhood to join the family business. But when he was in his early 20s he walked away from the company and from any access to the family wealth to follow his own rocky road, moving with my mom to a little island off the coast of Canada. My parents grew most of their own food and lived on less than $500 per year. In time our family moved to California, and my dad went on to become a bestselling author, writing "Diet for a New America" and many other books. The media called him the "rebel without a cone." We received more than 100,000 letters from enthusiastic readers thanking my dad for his work and saying how it had touched their lives.

When I was growing up, I was precocious. I organized a peace rally in elementary school, started a home business when I was 10 years old, and was founding and directing a seven figure non-profit organization by age 16. I knew my dad was very proud of me, and he appreciated my accomplishments very much. But he would often tell me that he loved me for who I was, and he appreciated all that I did because it was an expression of me. I always felt his unconditional love and support and I also knew that he didn't want me to be burdened by overly high expectations. He probably told me a hundred times that he would love me just as much if I were autistic.

Now I'm a father, and my kids actually are autistic. When my wife and I became pregnant with identical twins, we imagined them as some kind of dynamic duo that would be by our sides helping us change the world by the time they were out of diapers. But at age 10 ½, they are still in diapers and instead of discussing world events together, I spend hours answering their obsessive, repetitive questions.

I have found out that although we have very different children, my dad and I have something huge in common as fathers. We both love our children unconditionally.

I am learning to delight in being with my kids. Not because they appear to be on the fast-track to enormous worldly accomplishment. And not even because they are kind, loving, and good-hearted people. No, sometimes I love my kids just because. Just because it is mine to do. Just because I choose to fill my heart with an ineffable, unstoppable and totally undeniable love that persists and sustains no matter what my children do. The ocean refuses no river, no matter where that river has been or what it might have picked up on its journey. So, too, as if in some great law of nature, I am learning about a love that is utterly unconditional. Of course, as a dad, I have hopes and fears for my kids. When they do something generous or wonderful, my heart swells with pride. When they struggle to write their names or scream uncontrollably for an hour, I can feel depressed and overwhelmed. But I am learning about a love that is bigger than all that.

As unconditional love has found its way into my heart, as I have contemplated what it means to really love someone just because they are, I have found myself wondering what it would mean to direct that concept inward. What would happen if I loved myself just because? Could I imagine loving myself just as much if I suddenly woke up one day autistic? Is love for oneself or another a strategic investment in what we hope they will accomplish, do for us or bring to the world? Or is it enough to just, simply, love someone?

Ocean Robbins is an author, speaker, facilitator, movement builder, and father. To learn more about his work or to sign up for his email list, visit www.oceanrobbins.com. To learn more about his family's journey with the Son-Rise program click here.

 

Follow Ocean Robbins on Twitter: www.twitter.com/oceanrobbins

I come from a family of achievers and changemakers. For generations, we've been accomplishing big things. Now my wife and I are parents to 10-year-old twins who have autism, and who often struggle t...
I come from a family of achievers and changemakers. For generations, we've been accomplishing big things. Now my wife and I are parents to 10-year-old twins who have autism, and who often struggle t...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 26
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
07:23 PM on 06/18/2011
A truly inspiring story, especially in today's day and age when too many parents are actively pushing their kids to excel at everything and forget to love them for who they are!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Heather XW
08:47 PM on 06/15/2011
Very thoughtful article! Thank you for sharing.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shawna LiskSprester
04:21 PM on 06/14/2011
Interesting and beautiful thoughts about love. I know some of my friends either work with or have autistic children and wanted to share.
12:43 PM on 06/14/2011
Love to read anything you write,Ocean! Loving 'Just Because' is a skill I've been trying to learn for a long time. We expect so much from the love we give out, there is something to be said about giving love and expecting nothing in return. It is the greatest gift.
photo
librainstars
even the smallest things in life make a difference
10:03 AM on 06/14/2011
Great story. JUst what I needed to read this morn.
quoted " But he would often tell me that he loved me for who I was, and he appreciated all that I did because it was an expression of me. I always felt his unconditional love and support and I also knew that he didn't want me to be burdened by overly high expectations. He probably told me a hundred times that he would love me just as much if I were autistic."
You and your dad are very wise men. Your father sounds like he knew what true love is. To accept one as they are.
There is no greater gift than "unconditional love and support" My son has PDD. I have Dyslexia.
My grandfather gave me unconditional love. He taught me well. Its a great gift as I said.
You have a gift as I know you know with your boys. They are lucky to have you.
08:17 AM on 06/14/2011
Mr. Robbins, you have moved me to tears this morning. "The ocean refuses no river, no matter where that river has been or what it might have picked up on its journey."

Thank you for sharing your story and it is a wonderful story to share the week of Father's Day. My children attended the birthday party this past weekend for one of their best friends and he potty trained only a few weeks ago at age 11. Your sons are in good company because many of our children train late.

God Bless and have a wonderful Father's Day.


Sockitmama.com
12:02 AM on 06/14/2011
Your beautiful children may yet make the world a better place. I'm so happy to read you're story because I know many people will benefit from reading it. So, many of us know someone with a disability or have one ourselves.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Kim Stagliano
Author All I Can Handle I'm No Mother Teresa A Lif
07:10 PM on 06/13/2011
Agree - my three girls have full autism. They have indeed taught me how to love - and how to fear yet survive and how to fight. Another boy died today - autism, wandered, drowned. John Burton was his name. He was 7. Autism is more difficult than most imagine - if they think about it at all. For the family and most of all for the person with autism. My girls (16, 14 and 10) are bright, engaged in their own way and deserve safety, a full life and unconditional love from everyone who will guide them through their lives. Dad and I won't be here forever - that's the fear part. And so I fight for them.

My best to you and your boys.

Kim
Author: All I Can Handle I'm No Mother Teresa: A Life Raising 3 Daughters with Autism.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kathleens
Wealth doesn't create jobs. Jobs create wealth.
03:22 PM on 06/13/2011
Thank you for such an insightful post.

The lesson and the wonder of having children is total acceptance of who they are, and letting go of the notion of who we thought they might be. It's the beauty and the inspiration of unconditional love. You and your boys are very lucky to have one another.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:07 PM on 06/13/2011
What a beautiful story! We also find life demanding raising an autistic child, but when he makes us laugh in spite of ourselves, we realize, unconditionally, what a treasure he is:) Thanks so much for sending this message out to parents, no matter if they have an autistic child or not: unconditional love makes the world go 'round!
02:37 PM on 06/13/2011
Very cool thanks Ocean, I just became a father also. I am curious if there was some triggering event that made you realize your boys are unconditionally worthy of your loving, or was it a gradual process? something you always knew and are embodying more and more ? Have you tried loving yourself just because yet ? What happened ? When I love myself unconditionally for no reason my heart is filled with peace and joy and forgiveness and I see all beings being loved unconditionally whether they are conscious of it or not. My mind becomes a tool in service to heart.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Ocean Robbins
Author and speaker, www.oceanrobbins.com
03:55 PM on 06/13/2011
It's been a gradual process, although certainly there have been defining moments along the way. Times when my existing ways of coping just couldn't cut it, and a breakthrough in acceptance and inner peace was necessary if I was going to survive, and do my job as their dad. Loving myself just because is a powerful place to glimpse or touch into, and I am weaving in more and more.
02:26 PM on 06/13/2011
Thank you Ocean for this incredibly inspiring article. I know it has caused me to re-assess how I am interacting with the people I love in more than one occasion since reading it the first time.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Heather Box
Writer and Activist
02:08 PM on 06/13/2011
Ocean, thank you so much for sharing. I constantly spin in circles wondering if that unconditional love is actually buried inside all of us for everyone? I think it is. How awesome would our lives be if we could touch that ineffable, unstoppable and totally undeniable love that persists and sustains no matter what that is deep inside us for each person on the planet!!

Here is a quick blog abt the subject: http://boxheather.blogspot.com/2010/04/hi-i-love-you.html
photo
Alleviate Autism
Anne Moore Burnett
02:02 PM on 06/13/2011
we imagined them as some kind of dynamic duo that would be by our sides helping us change the world…

they’ve changed your world… and now you’ve changed ours, for the better. Thank you.
01:47 PM on 06/13/2011
There's simply no way to make it through life with an autistic kid WITHOUT having unconditional love -- at least, not with one's sanity intact.

I mean ... when most of us find out that we're going to parents, we start dreaming about all the things we want for our kids. What we want them to become, where they'll go school, what they'll do for a living, and other such thoughts run through our heads. Sure, we wish for good health, etc., but we also dream. And why the heck not -- isn't that part of being a parent? After all, it's OUR kid(s) who will be the one(s) to change the world!!

But, as you noted, a lot of the stuff you might have wanted for your kids won't happen due to the autism.

And that's okay.

Yes, there are times it's just so absurdly frustrating. You sit there and do what the experts say to, yet it doesn't matter. The kid is going to yell, or throw a fit, or whatever, and there's not much anyone can do.

So enjoy all the good times and ... well, heck, even enjoy the not-so-good ones. It's also good to remember that those with ASD do see the world differently than the rest of us—and that it's okay for all of us to sometimes take a different peek at it.

We just might be surprised what we find ...