Articles Tagged victories

Not Your Average Mall Santa

This was not just about seeing Santa.

This was not about having my kids sit on his lap and tell him what they wanted.

This was so much more than that.

This was a room full of families looking for an atmosphere where their child could just “be.”  With no one staring, no judgement, no whispering.

This was a room filled with special needs children.  There was hand-flapping.  There was crying.  There were kids (mine) walking around a table over and over and over.  There were kids on iPads. There was a train set.  There were autism-friendly toys.  There was Polar Express playing on a big TV.  There was a play-doh table.  There was a woman blowing bubbles (Easton’s favorite).  There were no lines of people.  There was a mom, crying, talking to a woman from the Autism Society of Nebraska, who helped organize it, saying “thank you so much, this was wonderful.”

This was a room full of acceptance and patience.  It was an opportunity for families to have a stress-free environment for their kids who get stressed easily.  It was a community coming together.

I found out about this Sensory-Friendly Santa photo shoot from Easton’s OT, who called me several weeks ago to tell me she got an e-mail from the Autism Society about it and specifically thought of Easton.  I wasn’t even planning on doing the whole “Mall Santa” thing this year.  It’s just not worth the stress.  But I signed up for this event, thinking it might be worth a try.

Easton walked right over to Santa when it was our turn, mainly because there was an elf blowing bubbles.  I said, “Say hi to Santa!”  He started singing “MUST BE SANTA!  MUST BE SANTA!” without even looking at the big man in the white beard.  In fact, he never actually looked at him.  But…he let this stranger get in his space. …continue reading

A Stress-Free Thanksgiving (Woo-Hoo!)

November 25, 2012 by in Holiday, Parenting, SPD with 3 Comments

Since Mr. Pants was born we have been in a constant state of change.  As his parents, we fluctuate. We bend.  We make plans and then change them. We leave parties early and I often abandon my shopping cart. Because sometimes life is really hard for kids and when you add sensory integration frenzy, a little OCD (mom diagnosed)  and his absolute need to predict the routine, that can make the holidays a stressful time.

A few weeks ago I showed up at pre-school excited to be a room mom for his Halloween party. What I hadn’t thought of was that when I show up at school, to him that means it’s time to go home.  I tried to explain that I wanted to stay and have a party with his friends. But you know it didn’t go well, right? Yeah, mama doesn’t get to be room mom anymore.  It made me sad but it also reminded me that while Mr. Pants is making great strides in being out in the world, he still needs us to consider his need for routine. I appreciated the reminder because here we are heading into the big holidays. The ones that are enough to stress out typical kids let alone our sensational ones. …continue reading


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Anatomy of a Field Trip

July 5, 2012 in Autism, Parenting, School, SPD, Victories with 1 Comment

2 and a half weeks ago: Received letter from school informing me that Danny’s class was going on a field trip. The plan was to take a school bus to a town about 1.5 hours

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

And the Oscar Goes To…

June 24, 2012 in Inspiration, Parenting, Social, SPD, Victories with 4 Comments

Some days you just gotta congratulate yourself because no one is going to do it for you! As a sensory parent, no one is hosting some grand dinner for you to honor your Outstanding Dedication

To the Freshman Class of Special Needs Dads:

For years, my wife, Jennie, and I were up to our necks in early intervention.  It literally took over both of our lives completely.  That time was a blur of evaluations, IEPs, EEGs, medications, OT,

Soccer Goalie-Guest Post from my Husband

Greetings everyone, I am the husband to momma2boys and father to 2boys. While momma2boys was home with a feverish number 2 son, I took number one son to his soccer game. His performance compelled me

An Important Lesson We Need To Teach Our Children

We recently had our son’s IEP meeting. We are, from what I can tell from other stories I hear, very rare in our experiences. Our IEP meetings have always been friendly and upbeat. You can

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