Articles Tagged Humor

Our reading rainbow might be in grayscale

August 7, 2012 by in Autism, Humor with 1 Comment

My four year old and I were snuggled up on his bed, reading one of his old board books to start off his bedtime routine. This book is bright and sweet, a little story about the magic of reading and the imaginative places you can through books. My son, however, is not especially imaginative. In the past year he has learned to pretend, which is a huge victory for the small child that used to scream whenever someone else made one his toys “talk.” Still, his pretending is very basic and realistic. The trains act out disasters and emotional dramas that are replications, or very similar to, plots from Thomas. The small version of one dinosaur calls the larger version of the same dinosaur Mommy. When prompted, he can often branch out, taking for example the hilarious conversations Daddy and Simon had over the banana phone, prompting Simon to search for and find a “missing banana.” He never found an actual banana, but pretended he did, and pretended to put it away. This is something we weren’t sure he could ever do, and he’s doing it, and it gives us an expectation that he’ll develop the rest of the typical social, playing, and learning skills, just a few years later than most of his peers.

In the meantime, though, he’s still pretty narrow in his self initiated pretending and understanding. Take that board book, with a “field of fresh daisies with faces that glow.” “Wait, wait Mommy,” Simon interrupts, “why do they have faces?” “I don’t know,” I reply, as we always do, desperately trying to prod him to think for himself, “why do you think they have faces?” “I think it’s because they can talk,” he replies, probably coming, again, from Thomas, where only the machines with faces talk. At this point I’m pretty excited, thinking we’re going to have a real conversation about a picture in a book. This is one of the most recommended tactics for reading with kids, to help them learn to read, but more importantly, to help them learn to think, and get meaning from what they read. It’s not something Simon really does, especially not with us. So, excited about him initiating with a question about a picture, and actually providing his own opinion, we continue. “What do you think they are talking about?” …continue reading


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Murphy’s Law of Special Needs Parenting

July 13, 2012 by in Humor with 8 Comments

 

Murphy’s Laws of Special Needs Parenting…

         1. If you think you have 3 hours to yourself, your
child will have a meltdown at school and have to come home early.
      2.  If your oldest is a sensory seeker, your
youngest will be a sensory avoider.
     3.    If you dress your child in a button down shirt
for pictures, they will chew the buttons off before you get to the photographer.
4.    If your child will eat spaghetti it at the OT’s
office, he still won’t eat it at home.
5.    If you say ‘Don’t play in the hose’, your child
will flood the bathroom.
6.    If you put your child to bed early, he will be
up until midnight playing Legos.
7.    If you put your child’s shoes on to leave the
house in a hurry, he will take them off before you even find your purse.
8.    If you wear a white shirt, your child will get a
bloody nose.
9.    If you ask your child to use the restroom before
leaving the house, he will still have an accident on the way to the park.
10.   If you clean up the hotwheels cars lined up on
the staircase, your child will have an hour long meltdown that you messed up
the ‘race’.

I’ve Stopped Being Afraid Of My Kid in Public

July 1, 2012 in Anxiety, Humor, Inspiration, Seekers, SPD with 10 Comments

I have no pictures to post of us at the library. Because I was too busy wrangling and making sure my kid didn’t murder the other kids in the five and under room. Ok, murder is

Relaxing with Our Toes in the Sand…. Or Not.

May 4, 2012 in Autism, Humor, Parenting, SPD, Summer, Vacation with 4 Comments

Living in Southern California, one of the biggest perks is the beach. We live 3 miles from the ocean. (I know, spoiled) Our two year old daughter, Madison, is presently in a stage where she copies everything

Pudding and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day

Yesterday Pudding asked me to read her Alexander and the the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day.  Pudding likes this book, but it goes in phases for her, and she hasn’t been interested in reading

Welcome To Walmart

April 20, 2012 in Advice, Autism, Diagnosis, Humor, SPD with 12 Comments

Okay, so when your child gets diagnosed with any form of special needs, they give you a copy of Emily Perl Kingsley’s “Welcome to Holland.” She’s a mother of a child with Down syndrome who,

Kids Today {Now with 23% more Autism!}

April 16, 2012 in Autism, Humor, Parenting with 1 Comment

Extra extra, read all about it; CDC says Autism numbers are on the rise & kids in the US are at a 1 in 88 child chance of being diagnosed with an Autism Spectrum Disorder! At

Lessons in Water Fountains

April 13, 2012 in ADHD, Behavior, Humor with 2 Comments

Last month a friend of mine’s daughter came to stay with me for about ten days.  She was dropped off by her mom’s friend late on a Tuesday night.  My oldest son Gabriel was already

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