Articles Tagged Autism

That’s My Boy

April 18, 2013 by in Autism, Behavior, SPD with 6 Comments

It’s been about 14 months since I initially contacted First Steps in February of 2012. I know I am still a newbie with much to learn, but I feel like such a different person than I was a year ago. Things were so scary and dark for a time. I was stressed, overwhelmed, confused. After I got answers and therapists started coming in weekly, I thought things would be better, and in many ways they were, but this was also when sadness, grief, guilt, and sometimes anger reigned. I sometimes believe that two of the worst times in life for a parent of a special needs child are when they don’t know what is going on, and when they find out what is going on.
This weekend, we went to the park. We stayed 2 hours. My older daughter, who has SPD, ran and played just like all the other children. Little toddlers my son’s age climbed and crawled and went down the slide. My son, who has sensory issues and has been diagnosed on the spectrum, spent just about the entire time pacing the paths, collecting twigs, and throwing them into various holes, mainly the recycler and a tube on the jungle gym. Last week at another park, it was wood chips, sorting and throwing, nonstop.
A year ago, this would have made me cry. I would have been reminded about how different he was from his neuro-typical peers. Honestly, it did remind me, but not with a heavy heart. This is my boy. At home, we try to push him out of his comfort zone and encourage him to interact with us more. I let him engage in his soothing world of repetition for a while, and then pull him back out. But you know what? While he was pacing about collecting sticks, he was smiling. He laughed. He was in the sunshine and fresh air, around people, with his family. He was happy. We were happy. …continue reading


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Assistance Dogs, Magic and Autism

April 12, 2013 by in Autism, Behavior with 6 Comments

Last November I got a phone call that I was anticipating for a few years.

It was the lovely Aileen from Irish Guide Dogs for the Blind telling me that  an assistance dog had been matched to our family, and that I would need to go to Cork for a week for training in all things canine.

It was like winning the lottery, losing a stone and finding the cure for cellulite all in one go.

My over-exuberance may have been notable, because Aileen had to practically fan me down and feed me sedatives over the phone.

She explained to me that having an assistance dog is not magic and that the success of the partnership depends on hard work and willing participation.

Our new dog would not lope home to tell me that Little Bobby had fallen down a well and was surviving on locusts and gogi berries.

She would not cure my son’s Autism.

Even worse, she would not iron, make dinners or wash the floor.

I mean, just what kind of assistance dog was she???

Aileen told me that her name is Vikas (pronounced Veekas) and she is an almost 2 year old lab/retriever cross.

In Cork I would learn all the tricks necessary to enable my family to venture out of the confines of our barracks, and to do stuff that other *cough* normal families do without thinking.

Stuff like going to McDonalds, feeding the ducks and (best of all) wearing heels because Vikas removes the requirement to sprint after a bolting (occasionally semi-nude) child.

Stuff  like not needing to play chicken with traffic (you should try it, it’s funbecause your child is safely attached to a well-behaved pooch.

Stuff like not needing to have the local Gardi, and our friends and neighbours, on speed dial, to help us when Finian teleports at warp speed through the Monaghan countryside.  We know he teleports because no-one  ever sees him vanish.

…continue reading


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Don’t Assume

April 2, 2013 in Autism, Parenting, SPD with 4 Comments

Don’t assume… …that the mother who is giving her baby a bottle of formula is too lazy to breastfeed or doesn’t care about giving her baby the best.  Her baby may have been unable to

Celebrate the Peaks

March 29, 2013 in SPD with 2 Comments

My son is almost 2 ½, and he does not speak. He can repeat some words when prompted, which is awesome, but he does not initiate speech and is not consistent with his skills. I

Anxiety Rising

February 4, 2013 in Anxiety, Autism, Avoiders, SPD with 4 Comments

It’s been a common refrain around our house recently.  I’m not in denial.  I can see it.  I can see it in his face, his hands, and the way in which he’s disconnecting more than

The Language Barrier

January 24, 2013 in Autism, Diagnosis, SPD with 4 Comments

I want to talk about what it’s like to have a non-verbal toddler. I’ve touched on this before, many times, but I want to talk specifically and solely about this. And lately, I’ve gotten a

I wanna hold your hand

January 14, 2013 in Autism, Behavior, SPD with 5 Comments

Abandoning the shopping car beside the milk display, I dash between refrigerator cases of eggs and butter, hoping to cut him off before he makes it to the frozen foods. I’m too slow. He’s almost

Do’s and Dont’s for Holidays and Family Gatherings

December 31, 2012 in Autism, Behavior, Holiday, SPD with 6 Comments

After a combination of a recent trip over the mountains to visit my family as well as the holidays that are barely done, I have felt a growing need to write up and educational pamphlet

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