I would love a regular break and that is what I was hoping preschool would give me. However, what did just cross my mind is that if she is ready to go to preschool (thus giving me that needed break) then she will be ready for me to leave her at the child care at the gym, or leave her easily (i.e. no whining/tears) with Daddy. So basically the conclusion I have come to is that I will get my regular break when she is ready to give it to me, whether she is in preschool or not...I think?
LOL One-ly!
Isn't it nice to dream that your child is 'normally developing' and that the 'just right' program will convert her into someone who isn't 'high-need?'
You can wake up now.
My advice? Start with Daddy! You know that you have a clingy, needy, special needs kid on your hand when leaving the child with Daddy is so painful that you just 'forget' to ask for it, except in extreame need.
I can't say that all of these kids are special need in their own way, but mine was, and I think a large precent are. For my son,the metaphore was: it was as though he had a hearing problem, was surrounded by strange sounds, and clung to me because I was the only one who he could understand. I do remember going on a guided trolly ride through Key West, with him a toddler just next to me and DH. The loud speaker would squakily announce something about a house, and DS would start freaking out because he couldn't understand, and the only way I could get out of him causing a disruption on the train, was to whisper simultanious translation in his ear. This was noticibly difficult, as I was trying to understand the speaker at the same time. DS wouldn't have been put off by anything less than my best explaination of the words and everything that they refered too. DH felt like we were telling secrets about him, I would guess. I was miserable, but it showed me, in fast motion, what I had been doing all day long under less strenuous circumstances.
Anyway. You do need a break. What I did, and what I reccomend you do, is get Dad's agreement for you to be away on a regular basis, out of the house, every week for a few hours. Yoga, message and facial, reading books in the library, painting or pottery class, whatever you can afford, but do it! You first way out of this hole is getting her and Daddy tight.
I don't think the 'rec drop off' centers are going to be a good idea, but if you can find another Mom of a gifted or older kid who you can trade time off with, that might be a parrallel area to explore.
I know that just getting it off your own chest helps a lot. This is do-able, even though it's difficult. ((If you are still nursing, don't stop in hopes of greater freedom, plot for greater freedom.))
The problem with these kids is that things get tougher for the next few years, peaking around k-2nd grade. (In general) So unless the gifted preschool is filled with kids at the exact same 'readiness level' of learning that she is at, keep her nearby and build, build, build that relationship. You are going to be her oxygen line for a long long time.
Love and More Love,
Grinity