We met with Simon's main teacher and his autism coordinator this morning for his IFSP (Individual Family Service Plan). I love meeting with these women. They are so knowledgable and always have great tips for ways we can work with Simon better.
He is doing great at school. Sits when he is supposed to sit. He is participating in group activities. He thrives off his picture schedule. At school they use a small notebook with him that moves as he moves from activity to activity. We are going to set up one of those here at home as well - one that can move around the house and travel with us.
Back in May Courtney had emailed me a bunch of great links for picture schedule information. If you are looking for images check this out (scroll down to the bottom of the page). Lots of great images located there. I just printed a bunch out for his new notebook.
Goals for this next year for Simon include: throwing & catching a ball, riding a tricycle, practicing overhead reaching (gross motor development); scissors, drawing (fine motor skills - developing his strength/being able to apply pressure when using a pencil); continuing to work on "first ___" and "then ____." (sequencing), toilet training, "look Simon, it is different" (adjusting to changes in routine) and following directions.
One of the big things that needs to happen is that we need to be more on top of turning off the videos. Right now most of his verbalization comes from things he has memorized off Dora or Pooh. Less TV. More interaction. More pairing words with actions.
Also looking forward to have the autism specialist and the OT come over for a home visit to work on some food issues (mainly getting Simon to eat a few other things), toileting, etc. Having them come to the house is so cool because it is in our own environment...just seems to click better for me.
I have said this before and I will say it again: I am so thankful for the teachers Simon has in his Early Education Program. They are totally on the ball and so willing to go above and beyond to help Simon become independent and successful. It is awesome.
And yesterday I got an email from Josie that included the following. I think I have read it before, but I don't think I have shared it on here. Thanks for sending this my way Josie.
TEN THINGS EVERY CHILD
WITH AUTISM WISHES YOU KNEW
© 2005 Ellen Notbohm
Some days it seems the only predictable thing about it is the
unpredictability. The only consistent attribute -- the inconsistency
There is little argument on any level but that autism is baffling, even
to those who spend their lives around it. The child who lives with
autism may look “normal” but his behavior can be perplexing and
downright difficult.
Autism was once thought an “incurable” disorder, but that notion is
crumbling in the face knowledge and understanding that is increasing
even as you read this. Every day, individuals with autism are showing
us that they can overcome, compensate for and otherwise manage many of
autism’s most challenging characteristics. Equipping those around our
children with simple understanding of autism’s most basic elements has
a tremendous impact on their ability to journey towards productive,
independent adulthood.
Autism is an extremely complex disorder but for purposes of this one
article, we can distill its myriad characteristics into four
fundamental areas: sensory processing challenges, speech/language
delays and impairments, the elusive social interaction skills and whole
child/self-esteem issues. And though these four elements may be common
to many children, keep front-of-mind the fact that autism is a spectrum
disorder: no two (or ten or twenty) children with autism will be
completely alike. Every child will be at a different point on the
spectrum. And, just as importantly – every parent, teacher and
caregiver will be at a different point on the spectrum. Child or adult,
each will have a unique set of needs.
Here are ten things every child with autism wishes you knew:
1. I am first and foremost a child. I have autism. I am not
primarily “autistic.” My autism is only one aspect of my total
character. It does not define me as a person. Are you a person with
thoughts, feelings and many talents, or are you just fat (overweight),
myopic (wear glasses) or klutzy (uncoordinated, not good at sports)?
Those may be things that I see first when I meet you, but they are not
necessarily what you are all about.
As an adult, you have some control over how you define yourself. If
you want to single out a single characteristic, you can make that
known. As a child, I am still unfolding. Neither you nor I yet know
what I may be capable of. Defining me by one characteristic runs the
danger of setting up an expectation that may be too low. And if I get
a sense that you don’t think I “can do it,” my natural response will
be: Why try?
2. My sensory perceptions are disordered. Sensory integration may
be the most difficult aspect of autism to understand, but it is
arguably the most critical. It his means that the ordinary sights,
sounds, smells, tastes and touches of everyday that you may not even
notice can be downright painful for me. The very environment in which
I have to live often seems hostile. I may appear withdrawn or
belligerent to you but I am really just trying to defend myself. Here
is why a “simple” trip to the grocery store may be hell for me:
My hearing may be hyper-acute. Dozens of people are talking at
once. The loudspeaker booms today’s special. Musak whines from the
sound system. Cash registers beep and cough, a coffee grinder is
chugging. The meat cutter screeches, babies wail, carts creak, the
fluorescent lighting hums. My brain can’t filter all the input and I’m
in overload!
My sense of smell may be highly sensitive. The fish at the meat
counter isn’t quite fresh, the guy standing next to us hasn’t showered
today, the deli is handing out sausage samples, the baby in line ahead
of us has a poopy diaper, they’re mopping up pickles on aisle 3 with
ammonia….I can’t sort it all out. I am dangerously nauseated.
Because I am visually oriented (see more on this below), this may be
my first sense to become overstimulated. The fluorescent light is not
only too bright, it buzzes and hums. The room seems to pulsate and it
hurts my eyes. The pulsating light bounces off everything and distorts
what I am seeing -- the space seems to be constantly changing. There’s
glare from windows, too many items for me to be able to focus (I may
compensate with "tunnel vision"), moving fans on the ceiling, so many
bodies in constant motion. All this affects my vestibular and
proprioceptive senses, and now I can’t even tell where my body is in
space.
3. Please remember to distinguish between won’t (I choose not to) and can’t (I am not able to).
Receptive and expressive language and vocabulary can be major
challenges for me. It isn’t that I don’t listen to instructions. It’s
that I can’t understand you. When you call to me from across the room,
this is what I hear: “*&^%$#@, Billy. #$%^*&^%$&*………”
Instead, come speak directly to me in plain words: “Please put your
book in your desk, Billy. It’s time to go to lunch.” This tells me
what you want me to do and what is going to happen next. Now it is
much easier for me to comply.
4. I am a concrete thinker. This means I interpret language very
literally. It’s very confusing for me when you say, “Hold your horses,
cowboy!” when what you really mean is “Please stop running.” Don’t
tell me something is a “piece of cake” when there is no dessert in
sight and what you really mean is “this will be easy for you to do.”
When you say “It’s pouring cats and dogs,” I see pets coming out of a
pitcher. Please just tell me “It’s raining very hard.”
Idioms, puns, nuances, double entendres, inference, metaphors, allusions and sarcasm are lost on me.
5. Please be patient with my limited vocabulary. It’s hard for me
to tell you what I need when I don’t know the words to describe my
feelings. I may be hungry, frustrated, frightened or confused but
right now those words are beyond my ability to express. Be alert for
body language, withdrawal, agitation or other signs that something is
wrong.
Or, there’s a flip side to this: I may sound like a “little
professor” or movie star, rattling off words or whole scripts well
beyond my developmental age. These are messages I have memorized from
the world around me to compensate for my language deficits because I
know I am expected to respond when spoken to. They may come from
books, TV, the speech of other people. It is called “echolalia.” I
don’t necessarily understand the context or the terminology I’m using.
I just know that it gets me off the hook for coming up with a reply.
6. Because language is so difficult for me, I am very visually
oriented. Please show me how to do something rather than just telling
me. And please be prepared to show me many times. Lots of consistent
repetition helps me learn.
A visual schedule is extremely helpful as I move through my day.
Like your day-timer, it relieves me of the stress of having to remember
what comes next, makes for smooth transition between activities, helps
me manage my time and meet your expectations. Here’s a great website
for learning more about visual schedules:
www.cesa7.k12.wi.us/sped/autism/structure/str11.htm .
I won’t lose the need for a visual schedule as I get older, but my
“level of representation” may change. Before I can read, I need a
visual schedule with photographs or simple drawings. As I get older, a
combination of words and pictures may work, and later still, just words.
7. Please focus and build on what I can do rather than what I can’t
do. Like any other human, I can’t learn in an environment where I’m
constantly made to feel that I’m not good enough and that I need
“fixing.” Trying anything new when I am almost sure to be met with
criticism, however “constructive,” becomes something to be avoided.
Look for my strengths and you will find them. There is more than one
“right” way to do most things.
8. Please help me with social interactions. It may look like I
don’t want to play with the other kids on the playground, but sometimes
it’s just that I simply do not know how to start a conversation or
enter a play situation. If you can encourage other children to invite
me to join them at kickball or shooting baskets, it may be that I’m
delighted to be included.
I do best in structured play activities that have a clear beginning
and end. I don’t know how to “read” facial expressions, body language
or the emotions of others, so I appreciate ongoing coaching in proper
social responses. For example, if I laugh when Emily falls off the
slide, it’s not that I think it’s funny. It’s that I don’t know the
proper response. Teach me to say “Are you OK?”
9. Try to identify what triggers my meltdowns. Meltdowns,
blow-ups, tantrums or whatever you want to call them are even more
horrid for me than they are for you. They occur because one or more of
my senses has gone into overload. If you can figure out why my
meltdowns occur, they can be prevented. Keep a log noting times,
settings, people, activities. A pattern may emerge.
Try to remember that all behavior is a form of communication. It
tells you, when my words cannot, how I perceive something that is
happening in my environment.
Parents, keep in mind as well: persistent behavior may have an
underlying medical cause. Food allergies and sensitivities, sleep
disorders and gastrointestinal problems can all have profound effects
on behavior.
10. If you are a family member, please love me unconditionally.
Banish thoughts like, “If he would just……” and “Why can’t she…..” You
did not fulfill every last expectation your parents had for you and you
wouldn’t like being constantly reminded of it. I did not choose to
have autism. But remember that it is happening to me, not you.
Without your support, my chances of successful, self-reliant adulthood
are slim. With your support and guidance, the possibilities are
broader than you might think. I promise you – I am worth it.
And finally, three words: Patience. Patience. Patience. Work to
view my autism as a different ability rather than a disability. Look
past what you may see as limitations and see the gifts autism has given
me. It may be true that I’m not good at eye contact or conversation,
but have you noticed that I don’t lie, cheat at games, tattle on my
classmates or pass judgment on other people? Also true that I probably
won’t be the next Michael Jordan. But with my attention to fine detail
and capacity for extraordinary focus, I might be the next Einstein. Or
Mozart. Or Van Gogh.
They had autism too.
The answer to Alzheimer’s, the enigma of extraterrestrial life --
what future achievements from today’s children with autism, children
like me, lie ahead?
All that I might become won’t happen without you as my foundation.
Think through some of those societal ‘rules’ and if they don’t make
sense for me, let them go. Be my advocate, be my friend, and we’ll see
just how far I can go.
© 2005 Ellen Notbohm
Ellen Notbohm is author of the book Ten Things Every Child with Autism Wishes You Knew, winner of iParenting Media’s Greatest Products of 2005 Award, and co-author of 1001 Great Ideas for Teaching and Raising Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders,
winner of Learning Magazine’s 2006 Teacher’s Choice Award. She is a
regular columnist for Autism Asperger’s Digest and Children’s Voice and
a contributor to numerous magazines and websites. Your comments and
requests for reprint permission are welcome at ellen@thirdvariation.com.

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59 comments
thanks so much for sharing that article. It's exactly what I needed to read tonight
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Ali, I feel like I know you since I came across your blog and wonderful pages through Stacy's blog. I especially have enjoyed your pages and posts about Simon and your journey through the screening and evaluation process. I have worked as a school counselor for 10 years but just recently have been on the other side of the table at these types of meetings. My youngest (18 months) is on an IFSP as well but for developmental delays. We have our six month follow-up on Monday so I enjoyed reading your blog about the meeting and how helpful the providers are. We have a physical therapist, a speech therapist and an early childhood teacher who all come in our home and it is awesome. It is amazing how my son gets so excited to have someone come to visit just him. I can bet Simon will also love it (once he gets used to the person - my son cried the first several sessions if I got more than a few feet away). I guess when parents told me how much my individual counseling sessions meant to their child at school, I dismissed them thinking they were just glad they didn't have to pay for a counselor in an agency. Now I realize how powerful another caring adult who is solely focused on your child can be to his development and self-esteem. Best of luck with the in-home services and as I am sure you will - remember to take pictures of them working together. My son loves looking at them and they bring back so many memories of feeling hopeful and how far he has come.
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So happy to hear he's doing so well, Ali. That's a wonderful list. :-)
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This summer I read the book "there's a boy in here (Sean Barron)." It's a great narrative about a boy with autism and his mother. In each chapter they journal about different memories / situations they experienced together. The book begins in the early 1960's when there was limited information about autism. Sean, the author, now works for a local newspaper in Ohio and is working on his second book. It was a treat to meet him. It's great that you blog your Simon updates and reminded me of the book...I must read it again!
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So happy to hear that Simon is doing well. Thank you for the wonderful resources. We have a 7 year old autistic friend and your information is very helpful. Thanks.
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This is awesome Ali. THANK YOU!!! I'm so happy to hear that Simon is doing well. Sounds like he's getting some great help. We have home visits for Lowell twice a week in addition to a special ed class he's in. It is nice for them to learn certain things in his home environment. Thanks for the fabulous link and the great article. You're wonderful:):)
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Thanks for sharing all of that information on Autism Ali. You and your husband are doing a wonderful job with Simon. It is such a blessing to have a great support team working with you too. Isn't it a relief to have a network of people who truly value your child as much as you do.
I have a child with type 1 diabetes. Harry was diagnosed almost 4 years ago (aged 5) and it is something we have learned to live with everyday. That's the tough part though isn't it? Everyday....no days off! Give yourself a pat on the back from me..you are doing a fantastic job, above and beyond the norm for most parents.
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awesome news about simon. he is so lucky to have two parents who are so loving, understanding, and WILLING to learn whatever they can to help him. it is wonderful news that he has such a great group of teachers, too--that makes such a huge difference in the way children respond.
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good to hear that you had a good meeting with these folks. the picture schedule worked well with my youngest daughter who has Asperger's Syndrome. thanks for that the thoughts about what it's like to be autistic. always helpful to remember the world from another perspective. it's like speaking with someone who speaks a different language and not having a translator.
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ali-its tara on caths computer-she is asleep, but its only like 10 for me. :)
this is wonderful. it made me laugh-its so true.
thanks for posting it.
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I love that list...that baby is getting printed and distributed to every person I work with in my school district (I hope it's okay to duplicate!)
Such good information!!
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Thanks for posting that. I really enjoyed reading it. I wish people would remember that when dealing with all people who have disabilities. It's frustrating having to try and get people to understand my ADD, including my own husband.
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Simon is blessed with such a GREAT mom. I know from personal experience a little of what your life is like. I too have a child with autism. He'll be 18 this summer, and it's always been an adventure. Never a dull moment...You are undoubtedly the most important and amazing person in Simon's life. God Bless you.
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i just wanted to say how blessed you are to have Simon. I know you know this...he is quite blessed to have you. Your patience and your love for him...every part of him. Reading this blog inspires me to be more patient with my kiddos and more diligent in embracing all their quirks. He is such a special person...God makes these little guys for a reason...probably to bring a smile to all our faces. Thanks for sharing this part of your life with us. It is really inspiring:)
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This is so touching. Ever when I see Simons photos I asked myself, this sweet dude is an autism child? Thank you for posting this list, a lot information for me and others. You are the best parents for this little person!
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So glad to hear that Simon is doing so well, Ali! That's awesome news!! He is getting so big and gets cuter everytime I see a new picture of him!! Best wishes to you guys!
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Makes your day: hearing -as a parent- that your child is doing great!
Concerning the language part i would say -in my roll of Dutch speech-therapist ;) - that not only patience is very important but even pauses..."Please put your book in your desk, Billy.--- pause for a while and for the imprinting --- It's time to go to lunch."
And it is so much fun to combine language and motor skills! f.e. Sitting at the table and having a few things in front of you; some cardstock squares (different colours) and just one circle-punch. You act first and tell what you do... "I punch a circle". You hand the punch over to Simon and just wait what he will do and say. Don't stimulate. Just wait. After his turn you only held out your hand for the punch and "I punch another circle".... that's the sentence you want to hear at last but don't ask him for repeating, just wait and be patient. Just have fun making the circles. Later (or another day) you can adjust the colour doing the same action. "I punch a yellow circle", etc....
Or stick the circles on an piece of paper. "The yellow cirlce goes there" Sorry for my bad english btw :( Mind that each of you has its own piece of paper to stick the circles on.
You can use all your creativity to combine the language and motor skills. Just repeat again and again one action in combination with that one sentence you want to practise.
Have fun.... and patience... and ;)... pauses
groetjes van monique
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I plan to print this and give a copy to every teacher in my school on Monday. Just yesterday, one of my little gals had a meltdown bcause of an upcoming fire drill. After reading this, I now know that I will never know how she feels. I kept trying to make her feel OK, while reminding her still that sirens and such are meant to help you. She just trembled with fear and I couldn't relate. I need to try harder as a teacher. Reading this, I was also reminded of my use of sarcasm (it's my nature) and how I am often met with very confused stares when I tell a classroom full of my kiddos, "See you later, tatertot!" They look at me as if to say "Where are the tatertots?"
Anyway, thanks for sharing. I needed the reminder. And, as always, thank you for the credit that you so readily give Simon's teachers. We teachers need pats on the back sometimes!
Sara
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Ali,
It is wonderful to see that you are working so well with Simon. He is very blessed to have you as his mamma. The 10 Things list is so enlightening & insightful. I believe that everyone should read this, not just parents of children with autism. It makes you understand just a little more.
I do not have a child with autism, but my oldest daughter does have mild dislexia and has learning difficulties. She was very "high maintenance" when she was younger. There were days when I would just be so frustrated because I could not seem to communicate with her. By the time she was 5, many people assumed she was ADHD (including her teachers) and suggested we have her put on Ritalin. Fortunately, her pediatrician chose to evaluate her before medicating her and discovered that she was indeed, not ADHD. People just didn't understand her. She could be seemingly fine one moment and bouncing off the walls the next. They either assumed something was wrong with her or that she needed to be disciplined. (And assumed we just allowed her to act up whenever she chose.)
Finally, when she was 10, I discovered that some of her inappropriate behavior was caused from food allergies. For instance, red food dye or microwave popcorn will still send her into a tailspin. Within minutes, she will be hyper and incoherent. She's 12 years old now, and most of this type of behavior has totally dissapeared. She knows what not to eat and what will happen if she chooses to have it anyway.
It is sometimes difficult to parent a child with challenges, but it is very rewarding when you see them growing up and becoming responsible.
I wish you well in your adventures with Simon and I will look forward to more "Simon updates."
Hugs, Tautchia
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I volunteer at my children's school weekly & both of my children have a child that needs some extra guidance or assitance in their class. I have become very close friends with one of the teachers and she said something last week that made me think of you immeadiately! She said not always, it's certainly not the rule, but nine times out of ten in her career she finds that an austitic child was born to the family that was ready for him. She always wonders if the family was born ready for the child, or if the family adapted so well that it seemed second nature by the time they hit the school years. I know you must have done some adapting in your life over the years, we have all been witmess, but you just do it SO WELL. I love your Simon updates SO much. On a lighter note...LOVE the new top border!
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