Taking the Scenic Route

Monday April 9, 2007

9th April 2007

Monday April 9, 2007

On the way to my parents yesterday Zach and I were discussing various religious topics. 

 

Zach:  So, before the holy spirit descended (pentecost), did we have spirits?

Me:  Yeah, I think we had spirits, they just couldn’t talk to God very easily.

Zach:  oh, so it was sort of like and expansion pack for our spirits…upgrade now to the “Communicate with God” expansion pack, version 2.0

…and after some giggling….

Zach:  I’m gonna go to hell for that, aren’t I?

 

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8th April 2007

Sunday April 8, 2007

We went out to my folks for Easter.  It was actually colder outside than it was at Christmas, so no Summery Easter clothes or running through the sprinklers this year.

 

Grandpa is happy to see us arrive.

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Snuggling with my Grandma (my mom’s mom)

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Zach cutting the ham

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Easter Baskets

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Aunt Joy showing him the fun of Pez

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Not long after this photo Zach and I both took a nap.  Grandma and Joy played with the kids and had a ball.  They played with the toys from the Easter baskets, blew up balloons, and built with tinkertoys and lincoln logs.

Some outside time with Grandma, both in heavy winter coats, but having lots of fun.

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When we got back home, Zora ate the ears of her Easter bunny

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Zach called his family

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and Zane zonked out in the car, slept through coat removal and change of pants, and stayed asleep.  He was one worn out little guy.

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8th April 2007

Sunday April 8, 2007

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discovering chocolate

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8th April 2007

Sunday April 8, 2007

After careful consideration, Zane picked out the “Elmo Eggs” kit for the Easter Eggs and has been asking to decorate them every day since.  Well, tonight was the night and he was delighted.

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6th April 2007

Friday April 6, 2007

We ended up with a bit more snow.  It actually got deeper than this, but it was too dark to photgraph by then and it is mostly melted off today.

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This morning Zane woke up and wanted “Mickey Mouse Club please”.  At this point, I really have heard enough “Hot Dog Hot Dog Hot diggity dog…” and “Oh toodles” as I ever want to hear.  lol. I am so bored with this video and hope he finds a new obsession soon.  He is going to wear out a line in the carpet between the tv and the sliding glass doors if he continues to run back and forth like this.  Whoever said that tv & video games are sedentary activities has never spent time in our house.  Fridays are always really stimmy around here because he is so worn out from the week’s therapy and school.  Both of my guys are just “done” with being out of the house by the time Friday comes.  Zach comes home and just wants to sleep and usually makes the statement “I don’t want to leave the house for the rest of the day”. 

Zach informed me that last night Zane’s “God blesses” got really long.  “Oncle ‘Teve” should feel good because his name came up pretty high on the list, right after our family, then the Grandparents, then went to include his therapists, and then a bunch of students in his class.  After Zach got him started, he actually said the “God Bless” part, not just the pause after Zach said “God Bless…”.  And, typical of Zane, after he had said it a few times, he started mushing together the words, but Zach was able to get him to slow down and enunciate.  Nothing quite like cramming a speech lesson into a prayer.  lol.

Zora is walking around repeating the phrase “ahhh Gooo”(rhymes with “Ah Chew” or, more likely “I do”)  It sound eerily like verbal stimming, but I really think it is just her practicing speech, not true stimming.  At least hers is done is a sweet little baby voice, so it is mostly just cute.  Much better than the screaming she is apt to do later in the day.  (often done while holding shoes, or a coat, or clothes in an attempt to get us to take her out and go someplace).  She is just about as opposite a kid as possible.  She starts losing it if we stay home the entire day…who am I kidding, if we stay home for more than about 4-6 hours.  This is truly going to be one of the most challenging things to balance as our family gets older.  Zane cries if we leave the house, Zora cries if we come home. 

We are hoping to get the front room (will be Zora’s room at some point in the future) cleared out today.  I am hoping that I can accomplish enough that I feel ok pulling out my knitting again.  I am not sure if we are going to get that much done, but one can hope.  I do know that I am getting tired of not having access to all of our stuff.  It is so much harder to unpack with the kids around because if we have more than a box or two open, both of them start ‘helping’ and it turns into a mess really fast. Trying to manage the normal living mess with the unpacking mess has me tired beyond belief.  The laundry isn’t helping either.  I am not even cloth diapering right now, but my laundry still has me snowed under.  Once everything is together, I think laundry will actually be a lot easier here than it was at our last place, but it isn’t there now.  I just want to spread it all out so I can see what is going on, but Zach gets really anxious seeing piles of laundry strewn throughout the place and the kids will just re-arrange the piles anyway, so I just have to try and go through the giant pile and pick out things for a load, trying to keep Zora from crawling on me and keeping the clothes I just put “shout” on out of her hands/mouth, ect.  Everything just seems like so much *more* right now.

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6th April 2007

Friday April 6, 2007

Revolutionary New Test for Early Detection of Autism

Revolutionary New Test for Early Detection of Autism

Researchers at Cambridge University have found a relatively easy and early way to detect autism. Although autism has its subtle beginnings during infancy, the diagnosis is rarely made before three years of age (and usually autism is discovered even later than that). Since treatment is more effective the earlier it is begun, the possibility of early detection is truly exciting.

1Three hallmark behaviors were the focus of their investigation:

  1. Protodeclarative pointing — by fourteen months of age a normal infant will point at an object in order to get another person to look at that object
  2. Gaze-monitoring — by fourteen months an infant will often turn to look in the same direction an adult is looking
  3. Pretend play — by fourteen months children will begin to play using object substitution,e.g. pretending to make tea and drink it out of a toy cup.

All three behaviors are typically absent in school-age children with autism.

Cambridge researchers looked at sixteen thousand children in the southeast of England during routine eighteen month well-child examinations. They checked to see if the children had evidenced each of these three key behaviors. Only twelve children out of the sixteen thousand consistently failed in all three key areas at their eighteen month check ups. Ten out of these twelve later proved to have autism. Of twenty-two additional children who failed in either one or two of the behaviors, none turned out to have autism, but 68% did later have a speech delay.

This powerful screening test is remarkably simple, painless, and cost-effective. It promises to revolutionize the lives of the next generation of children with autism. If your child isn’t exhibiting these behaviors by 18 months of age, bring this to your pediatrician’s attention.


 

Alan Greene MD FAAP

April 14, 1996
Reviewed by Khanh-Van Le-Bucklin MD September 2000
Footnote References:

1Baron-Cohen et al. British Journal of Psychiatry, 168:158-163, 1996)

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5th April 2007

Thursday April 5, 2007

Today’s Oprah was about Autism, and I know I will be asked what I thought of it, so I thought a blog would be appropriate.

First, I am not a huge fan of “Autism Speaks”, but I am happy there is more awareness out there.  One of my initial impressions is that I was suprised how much more I liked the parents on Oprah’s show than I did when I saw them in the Autism Speaks video “Autism Every Day”.  In that video they just seem so foreign to me, and I remember the film scaring the crap out of me and really bringing me fear for what the future holds for me.  I also really disliked the view that the children were ‘trapped’ and ’stolen’ and the philosophical view of autism as a horrific, devastating thing.  It frustrated me.

As the show progressed, hearing the parents talk confirmed to me that the video was edited in a specific way to elicit the most negative view of autism.  There were bits and pieces of the film I identified with, but most of it, especially the attitude of the parents, was alien to me.  The parents seem much more well rounded and more loving when they were on the show, which softened my initial view of them quite a bit.  Although there still was some degree of hand-wringing dramatics, I found it considerably better than I thought it might be.

One thing I realized, more concretely, it that there is one definite line in the sand that makes our experience different from some, but not all, of the parents on the show.  I think it probably would be much more devastating and harder to deal with if your child was typically developing and then seemed to just grow a shell around them.  For us, there was never a regression.  The closest thing to a regression was that he got harder to photograph someplace between 6-12 months, but it could also be because he was mobile and not as captive of an audience.  Our experience was just atypical development, not a sudden shift in development.  We never had a ‘loss’ in the way that one set of parents described. 

One thing I found sort of darkly funny is one of the parents commenting that the screening questions are just not nearly precise enough to catch autism, especially if the pediatrician/doctor isn’t familiar with autism and can’t see the subtle signs in behavior that would trigger them to ask more accurate questions.  Many of the questions would catch a hearing deficit, but not an attention one.  The questions need to be revised considerably to catch issues earlier. 

Something about the doctor on the show just rubbed me the wrong way.  She really seemed to tow the line of the CDC without at least acknowledging that nobody really knows much about the causes.  It made me really appreciate the developmental ped we have.  I was really glad that Oprah gave a voice to the mom who adamtely believes it was vaccines that caused the autism in her child.  There are enough parents who have that experience that it would have been a shame to have that voice silenced.  Even though I don’t think Zane was triggered by an environmental impact, I do think that kids with the regressive forms of autism (typical development and then *wham* autism) are probably caused by environmental triggers and I tend to think the most likely suspect is an assault to the immune system, either by vaccine (not neccessarily mercury, but vaccine’s in general) or virus or the antibiotics or other medicines used to treat illness.  I am convinced enough that the insane number of vaxes given to our tiniest humans is a bad idea that I delayed many of Zane’s vaxes once I realized it was an option (and it really, really pisses me off that doctors make it sound like it isn’t an option…feels like a betrayal and made it really hard to start trusting doctors again), and I delay all of Zora’s vaxes.  We *might* start vaxing her this summer, but most of her vaxes will be spread out over years, instead of months, and most will be started after at least 2 years old. 

Of course, there is a large part of the experience of those parents that I don’t have.  My child is probably not considered ‘high functioning’ right now because of his language usage, but I strongly believe he is headed that way.  He doesn’t have the extreme stims, he doesn’t totally lack communication, and he seems to have a high intelligence that will compensate for a lot of the other things given some time.  He has motor planning problems, but his extreme ability at problems solving compensates for it to a large degree.  He is able to generalize concepts with much greater ease than most kids with autism.  He is also able to make leaps in abstract thinking that are atypical in autism.   He is gaining so quickly it is really likely that he will be able to be ‘mainstreamed’ at some point in the future. 

I might come back and add to this, but Zora is not happy and daddy doesn’t have what she is wanting.  lol.


ok…now where was I….

One of the other things that sort of bugged me is the idea that parents of autistic kids are some how ‘more courageous’.  I don’t know, I don’t really feel that.  I just feel like a parent. 

I wish she would have had some autistic adults on there.  Even though I am the parent of a specturm kid, I get a little tired of hearing just that perspective.  Autistic individuals should be given more of a voice.  There should be a show that talks more about acceptance, and that it isn’t a tragedy, it is just a difference.  Yes, it is exhausting to be the parent of an ASD kid, but I think it is more exhausting to be trying to navigate in a world that is so unfriendly to the way you think and feel.  I wish they would have explained the concept of “spectrum” a little better because I don’t see my child in many of the kids they showed and think that many people who are looking at their own children might continue to miss the symptoms if they only show the more extreme cases.   I wish there would be a show that talked more about the benefits and gifts that come along with the struggles.  I wish there was a show that talked more about not being judgemental. 

I did like how they ended the show.  I loved the “Why don’t you just…” section and really identified with that.  (remember my Knuffle Bunny post and follow up…very similar experiences).  I liked hearing how the parents learned from the child.  I liked that because I could really understand that and, for once, shared the experience more completely with those parents.

I am really glad she did a show on Autism.  I wish it wouldn’t have taken so long. 

 

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5th April 2007

Thursday April 5, 2007

You know you live in Kansas when this happens in April, a few days before Easter.

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We have had a few more inches since the kids were outside playing, so it is actually much whiter as I look out the window now, and it’s still snowing.  Zach and Zora are at the store picking up some crackers for Chili and some salt for the front steps (in case it gets cold enough to freeze and get slick). 

I am so glad Thursday is nearing it’s end.  Wednesday and Thursday are normally our busiest days, made even busier this week by appointments with the Oral Surgeon and Dentist for Zach, and only one car.  I felt like a taxi driver today.  Zane went to school, and then back, then I took Zach to school, Zane to school/literacy group, pick up Zach from School and take him to the Dentist, go get Zane from school, go back and pick up Zach before heading home. 

The suckiest part of the day was after I was returning from dropping Zach off from school and I smelled something really bad from the back seat.  I didn’t know which butt created it at the time, but I knew we needed to stop by home before going back to the school for Zane.  It was Zora (which is good), but since we were home and the weather was getting colder, I made the mistake of trying to change Zane’s outfit.  Oh boy.  He did not want to take off his shirt, then he didn’t want to get the new one on, and he didn’t want to put on pants or socks or shoes.  It was an all out battle, with him pulling one leg out of the pants while I tried to shove the other leg in…over and over again.  Same deal with the socks, all the while Zane screaming and Zora getting upset seeing Zane screaming.  It was just lovely.  *cough*cough*  Then he wouldn’t go out to the car, so I had to take Zora out first, get her strapped into the car seat, and go back to get him.  As I walked back to the door, he sees me coming and tries to close and lock the door.  I got there in time to keep from having to unlock it, and when he saw I was getting back inside he ran away.  I caught him, and had to carry him, kicking and screaming, out to the car.  When we got to the school, he actually got out of the car just fine, and I was so relieved.  However, he had another meltdown in the lobby.  Thankfully, I glimpsed some of the Kaliadascope student teachers and asked if they could keep an eye on Zora when I set her down to retrieve him.  One of them engaged Zora and his regular student teacher poked her head around the corner and helped to talk to Zane and help him decide to go to the classroom under his own steam.  Whew.  He actually did very, very well once in the classroom.  He was participating right away.  You would never know by looking at his behavior in class that getting there was such a battle.

At the end of the class I got a real treat.  As they were dismissed, he ran out the door, but I needed to talk to the teacher for just a bit, and one of the student teachers helped get him back into the room (ok, that part wasn’t great, but it gets good here…).  When he came back in the classroom, one of the other boys was pulling out the big unit blocks and starting to build.  Zane joined him.  Then another boy joined and the three of them played together building a tower.  (according to one boy it was a machine,the other it was a playground).  They pointed and built and worked together.  I don’t think I have ever seen him play with peers like that before.  A little girl from the group was the ‘little mama’ type and immediatly lead Zora into the little play kitchen area and was totally engaged with her.  For the first time in my entire life, I watched both of my kids happily engaged with kids and playing.  It made me so happy I started having to wipe away tears as I watched.  What a wonderful thing.  Poor Zach was stuck at the dentist waiting for a while because I just didn’t want to interupt the playing because it seemed too special and important to interupt.  Zach, being the wonderful man he is, wasn’t upset once he heard what happened.

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4th April 2007

Wednesday April 4, 2007

So, you think she understands “time to go” ? 

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Zane’s second favorite thing to do at OT

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Zane’s favorite thing (he is snuggled into the hammock with a weighted blanket and swung into the big blue pad against the wall)

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I was getting a shot of the two of them sitting so cute together and the OT noticed, with suprise, that she seems to naturally have a tripod grip.  She did it multiple times, and I had noticed it at home too, although at home she did it with her right hand.  

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This picture could be called ‘mixed feelings’.  Notice the immature grip vs. the mature grip.

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On a totally different note, what is the deal with the weather?!?  I have all these cute summer dresses just waiting for Zora and it looks like it is going to SNOW tomorrow.  This is so irritating!  Most of her winter clothes are size 6-12 month, so the few I have keep making the rounds in the washer trying to keep up.  (ironically my favorite one keeps missing the picture taking.  lol)

x2007-04-03 003.jpgSpeaking of dresses…I think I maybe should have ordered size 70s in Hanna’s for her.  She is technically at the top end of 70s, so I ordered 80s for this summer.  It looks like a ball gown on her.  lol.  It had matching pants (that are supposed to be capris), which is why they got pulled out today, but the dress is so long, you can’t really see the pants.  In a funny note, I had her in a size 60 Hanna yesterday (on the right), and the capris fit and looked like capris.  The top fit someplace between a long top and a short dress.  She is as slender as Zane was chunky at this point.  I need to just start buying a size down in pants for her, but I hate doing that because it makes it harder to resell.  (which I need to stop caring about and just get what fits, even if it seems so weird to my OCD tendancies)

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4th April 2007

Date night, grandma babysits

My mom came up tonight to spend time with the kids while Zach and I went to see a movie.  *ahhhhh*  It was a very nice evening and a much needed break. 

We went to see 300, which was a really neat film (if battle violence doesn’t disturb you).  It was reasonably accurate as far as the history goes, done in a very stylized, artistic storytelling style.  The violence was brutal, but it reminded me a bit of Kill Bill style, except that it was more traditional sword play.

After the movie, we went to a restaurant we have wanted to try out for probably a decade.  We had sushi for the first time (we make nori/California rolls regularly, but have never had the ‘real’ thing), then went over to Panera bread for a pastry and Chai Tea.  Yummy.  I had only been there once, and it was the first time for Zach, so two new (or relatively new) experiences for us.

Mom had fun with the kids, and they with her.  She brought Zane a dump truck, which he was excited about, and Zora a little kid truck to play with.  They spent most of the evening downstairs in the basement area and reading books.  Mom also brought us one of her extra can openers, which means we will probably find ours.  lol.

Zora is not going to be patient much longer, so let me upload the pictures and get back to her.

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oh…one more neat thing…tonight when Zane was doing his “God bless….” he remembered “Oncle ‘teve” and “ann Joy” with no prompting.  (my brother Steve and his wife Joy).  really cute.  I think he called me “mom” instead of “mama”, but we will ignore that *lalalalalalalala*

 

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  • Zane's age

  • Zane is 22 years and 4 months old
  • Zora's age

  • Zora is 18 years, 4 months, and 4 days old
  • Random Quote

  • What would happen if the autism gene was eliminated from the gene pool? You would have a bunch of people standing around in a cave, chatting and socializing and not getting anything done — Temple Grandin, PhD, Autistic

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