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Fears and Raising Children with Special Needs

October 26, 2011 in Featured, From Julia by Julia Roberts

When we are sharing here on Support for Special Needs about the unique challenges of raising kids that have differences there’s always someone to offer a different perspective. In doing so they make you think about how grateful you are there is someone who truly understands.

We all have different perspectives (obviously) on what to focus on, what motivates us to keep going each day (when the day kicks us in the teeth) and in what way we present our stories (public or private, positive or negative). We all have fears. Some of us share our fears; some have them but are afraid to share them.

During my son’s battle with kidney failure, a botched surgery, kidney transplant, and subsequent frightening depression I had many fears for his safety, for his general well-being, for his life. I didn’t voice my fears about him dying very often and I tried to shut them away during the period of time he was suffering but it was an underlying tone for me. My husband wasn’t able to voice it, think about it, or hear me talk about it either. It was a hard time to have those fears.

Some fears that I and other community members have…

  • -          Financial security, for us now and our children in the future. Keeping insurance, hitting maximums before our kids are 5 or 10 and the many out-of-pocket costs of taking care of kids with special needs. Many of us are  discussing  special needs trusts before our kids are five.
    -          Independence into adulthood. We want our kids to have as much independence as they are able to gain. We worry for their safety and happiness.
    -          Bullying. We worry our kids that their developmental, physical or mental challenges will be the target of bullies. For me, this started at kindergarten and continues…
    -          Change. For some of our kids change can be extremely difficult to navigate. Early on we learn that they don’t like natural transitions in the world and we grow to fear it because adjustments are difficult. For parents, sometimes change means a progression in a disease symptom, medication, treatment, or arrangement. Sometimes we fear it. Greatly.
    -          Acceptance. Tied to bullying of course, but acceptance is huge worry for many of us. We want our kids to grow up being able to experience typical things everyone wants to enjoy…friendships, inclusion in social events, feeling welcome in new  groups of people, sleepovers. Acceptance.
    -          Education. We want what is our child’s right. Reasonable access to education. We want a compassionate education team, we want services that will help them, appropriate classroom settings and people to treat us parents/caregivers as part of the team. We want everyone to help our kids reach their potential. Period.
    -          Abandonment. Sadly, the acceptance item on this list extends even to people who love us. Our kids aren’t “perfect” and some come with a lot of management; behavior issues and plans, problems with eating, dressing, toileting and speaking. We want the people who love us to try to understand that we’re doing our best and we don’t want you to abandon us because it gets rough. It gets rough a lot.
    -          Relationships. Fearing change in relationships because of the relentless needs. Along with that I fear losing myself. Period.

Community member, Michelle Howard said, “I hate the word fear. It has too much power over people.” While fear can permeate my subconscious it doesn’t rule my life. For me and most of the parents of special needs kids I have contact with letting fear rule us would mean that we have to pull energy from the job of managing the special needs our kids have and our time is too precious.

I’ve learned to live with fear. It’s something the forces me to grasp my reality and it’s sometimes what propels me to seek out and appreciate the joys.

Originally published in January 2011

Ten Coping Strategies for Crisis

April 11, 2011 in Book Reviews, Featured by Admin Dawn

By Linda Cole, author of Resurrecting Anthony: A True Story of Courage and Destination

1.      Recruit and accept help and emotional support through family and friends.  Do not try to weather the crisis alone.

2.      Confide in your primary physician.

3.      Be positive.  Be proactive.  Your attitude will contribute greatly to the outcome.  Educate yourself and be involved as much as possible.

4.      Recognize that “This too shall pass.”  You will have a “normal” life again, although it may never be as it was.

5.      Find your mental “get-away” for particularly traumatic moments.  Example: Envision yourself floating on calm water.  Block out all distractions and center yourself.

6.      Focus on others.  Do not internalize.  Who else needs your help during this crisis?  How can you help those around you?

7.      Stay busy.  This is a bad time to be idle.  Don’t sit home alone.

8.      Exercise regularly.  Walk, run, bicycle thirty minutes every other day.  The endorphins released will help you mentally and emotionally.  Your sleep will improve.  Your body will be stronger and you will feel more in control.

9.      Sleep.  Get a good night’s sleep.  Your body and brain need the recuperation times.  If you are exhausted, you will be less effective at a critical time.

10.  Eat well.  Eat well-balanced meals, lots of fruits and vegetables, good proteins and complex carbohydrates.  Your body and mind are in a state of hyper-stress.  They need useful nutrients, not chemicals, processes and additives that sap your strength.

Finally, you will have moments that you can’t avoid.  Find a place; mine was in the closet, where you can really cry.  Let it come.  But set a limit, perhaps 4-5 minutes.  Afterward move on.  Do not dwell.

Linda co-authored her first book, Resurrecting Anthony: A True Story of Courage & Destination, which tells the story of her 12-year-old son’s heart attack and brain injury. A look back over the decade since the event helps the reader see how her once perfect family survived the devastating loss of a child and how a new family has come to be. Linda is also CFO of Anthony Cole Training Group, a successful company that builds sales cultures within organizations nationwide.

Tony graduated from the University of Connecticut with a degree in Education. A scholarship athlete, upon graduation Tony leveraged his experience to coach Iowa State University and University of Cincinnati athletic teams. He then spent more than 15 years in sales and sales management positions in the exercise equipment and insurance industries.

This unique combination of coaching and selling led Tony and Linda to launch Anthony Cole Training in 1991. An immediate success, by the end of 1998, the little company of two grossed half a million dollars. However, when their twelve-year-old son became severely brain injured the company down shifted for several years. In 2003, having adjusted to a new life and family, the company began to grow once again. Tony is CEO and President of Anthony Cole Training Group, which serves companies nationwide, bringing new life to sales organizations.

Welcome to New Members

March 11, 2011 in Around the Site, Featured by Admin Dawn

Gail Curran: Gail works at the Arizona Centers for Comprehensive Education and Life-Skills. Are you in Arizona? Look Gail up!

Achieve Beyond: Achieve Beyond specializes in nationwide pediatric therapy and autism services for children ages 5 and under including states like California, Illinois, New York, Virginia and Conencticut. Achieve Beyond uses a family focused approach in providing early intervention speech therapy, occupational therapy, physical therapy, ABA/autism therapy and psychological counseling. We strive to serve our patients and their families by providing services and evaluations support in their predominant language, at both the home and community settings. We also offer private pay / insurance services, educational workshops for parents and therapists as well as translation / interpretation services at several of our branches.

Denise Moberg: Retired from 30 years as an SLP in the public schools. Currently have a part time private practice.

Kyra: I am a stay at home mother of 4 kids. 2 are Special Needs. My 7 yr old has ADHD, Auditory Processing Disorder, Sensory Modulation Disorder, and Dyspraxia (the last 3 are very new to us). My 2 yr old has Apraxia and Sensory Modulation Disorder. My other 2 kids are just in special need of special attention. I am on a leave of absence from school right now so that I can get a better handle on my family and concentrate more on them than me.

Julie Fick: I am a full time mom to my son who has DiGeorge Syndrome. We live in Woodstock, GA.

Alisa Ricketts: I have been married for almost 20 years and I am a SAHM of two teenagers, one of whom is a special needs child.

Patricia: I have a 7 yr old with odd severe, conduct disorder, ocd tendencies, generalized anxiety disorder, separation anxiety disorder severe

Ayoca Freeman: I have two beautiful daughters; their ages are 8 and l year old. My oldest was blessed with an extra chromosome better known as Trisomy 21, one of the types of Down syndrome.

Jennifer McMahan: Mom to 2 beautiful daughters. The youngest one has Dravet Syndrome. I am actively involved as a volunteer in the IDEA League, the only organization that provides advocacy, support, education and research for Dravet Syndrome. Their website is http://www.Idea-League.org. It is my goal to help raise money for research as well as educate the public on this very rare syndrome.

Amanda L.: Mommylebron is the slightly diabolical leader of Lefam (just don’t tell LeDaddy, he thinks he’s the leader, riiight). She is a snarky & sweet mom on a mission! Once she attains her goal of world domination she will educate all its poeple on pediatric mental illness and erradicate stigma. All while wearing a really cute apron. This domestic diva, kitchen queen, laundress extraordinaire also enjoys writing, reading, movies, scrap booking, word puzzles, kiddie cuddles, wet kisses, big brown eyes……Oh, and, during her “on time” she molds the only-slightly-less-diabolical-minds of 4 year old’s (aka preschool teacher).

Stephanie LeMieux: I have a boy with HFA and Tourette’s

There are side-effects to surviving

December 6, 2010 in Future Glimpse by Admin Dawn

Bee LavenderBee Lavender is the author of the award-winning memoir Lessons in Taxidermy: Diagnosed with cancer at age twelve and perilously pregnant at eighteen, surviving surgeries and violent accidents: Sometimes you can’t believe Bee Lavender is still alive; sometimes you think nothing could kill her. Lessons in Taxidermy is Lavender’s fierce and expressive search for truth and an elusive sense of safety. This autobiographical tale is stark and resolved, but strangely euphoric, tying together moments and memories into a frantic, delicate, and often transcendently funny account of anguish and confusion, pain and poverty, isolation and illusion. While staying conscious of the particulars of her circumstances, Lavender frames her life in the context of history, traveling, landscape, and freak show culture. Lessons in Taxidermy is apocryphal, troubling, cathartic, and important.

We interviewed Bee about her experiences to ask her what parents can do to help their children who are going through a medical crisis.

Children who have been seriously ill go to a place where they are absolutely alone and where their parents can’t follow. How can parents support their children as they face these very scary challenges?

The first and fundamental principle is simple: always tell the truth. No matter how difficult, unwieldy, or frightening, it is better by far to acknowledge what is actually happening. Yes, this is hard – especially if you are talking about painful and messy procedures, serious permanent disabilities, or the possibility of death. But even the youngest children have the capacity to understand what is happening, and developing a framework will help them cope with the process. Saying “this will hurt” is always better than pretending otherwise. Saying “we don’t know what will happen” is always better than promising a miracle that might not come.

Truth doesn’t hurt. Surgeries hurt.

In your book, you write about your ability to separate your body from your mind in an effort to deal with the pain of your cancer. Have you been able to come back to your physical self? Do you have thoughts about how parents can help their children retain that sense of self?

It is fair to say that sustained and routine trauma is not a desirable formative experience. In my particular case, I learned to compartmentalise. Pain and pleasure go in separate boxes, learning and love happen on their own. It took several years before I could even let the food on my plate touch, let alone the emotions or whatever you want to call the stuff boiling around in your brain and chest. I had to take small and incremental steps toward normal behaviour – the ability to think, yearn, fail, all at once, losing control, letting life happen, feeling it.

I still lack certain forms of empathy. I grasp that there are no hierarchies of suffering, yet I am dismissive of pain in myself and others. When my friends (or children) complain about something they find deeply important, I often catch myself thinking they should go get some real problems. Though at least I have learned to think it instead of saying it out loud.

There is no tidy way to help a kid in similar circumstances. There are side-effects to surviving.

How has being a writer helped you process your experience? Do you think parents should help their children journal (either via writing or pictures)?

From my earliest years I remember thinking that words were my friends, and putting them in a certain order to convey stories was a tremendous distraction from all manner of mayhem. From about age five or so I wrote fiction, and the activity was hugely entertaining and a much needed distraction. Other children might have a different set of needs, but I think that the desire for escape is valid and necessary.

Distraction, even obsession, can be better than therapy, when your life is organised around medical treatments. By the time I was eighteen years old I had several hundred surgical scars on my body and I would have rather stabbed myself in the eye than talk about my illness: dreary, boring, obnoxious illness! Cancer, cancer, cancer, ugh. Give me a movie, a concert, a new album to listen to, book to read…. art, literature, and politics offered solace and a way forward. For other people it might be sports, video games, knitting, whatever, just something external, something to think about other than the failures of the body.

I didn’t keep journals as a child, and never wrote directly about my illness until I was about 29. I don’t think it would have helped *me*, except to keep track of dates for later publication. In fact, I don’t think documenting the experience would have been especially healthy, because doing so would have been another way of assigning a privileged meaning. I think the most empowering thing is to learn to say “the disability is part of me, but it does not define me.”

Did you feel you had to protect your parents from your fears? Is there something they could have done to relieve some of that burden?

Yes, I wanted to protect them, and the need to do so was both explicit (I was told not to cry) and implied (being brave made it easier for everyone to play their part). I agreed with these values at the time and I still do. Life was seriously difficult for me, but my parents were there too. They had to watch me suffer, but they also had to deal with the administrative details, and pay the bills. Even now, with children of my own, I simply cannot imagine the anguish they were forced to endure. I was stoic, but my parents were heroic.

Decades later and thousands of miles away, my first thought when I have a medical appointment is how to prevent my mother worrying about me, or knowing at all. If I had one magical wish it would be to take away the pain that she suffered raising a sick kid. Both of my parents did their absolute best in a terrible situation, and asking for more – for niceties of behaviour or etiquette – is foolhardy at best.

The only way our collective burden could have been relieved was simple, and structural. My health insurance came from my mother’s job. The money to pay what the insurance didn’t cover came from the overtime both parents worked. I was literally alone, because they both had to work desperately hard – just to keep me alive.

The only thing that could have relieved our collective burden would have been universal health insurance. I believe that every citizen of a wealthy nation should have access to basic medical care. I moved to England six years ago because of the National Health Service, and I have no plans to move back home until health care reform is a reality instead of a promise. I do not want any of my loved ones to sacrifice their dreams to my illness.

Finally, medical issues force children to give up control of their bodies and their physical privacy in lots of ways. Do you have any thoughts about how parents can protect their children or give them some measure of autonomy given the reality of their medical needs?

In a purely practical sense this is an unobtainable goal. Whether you are talking about a crisis medical situation or long-term maintenance of a disability, you just can’t expect much privacy. Your body is being inspected for a reason, and the people looking are generally doing their best to help.

However, I do think there are limits. Speaking as someone with an “interesting” and rare disorder, there have been countless times when an examination seemed to be more for the prurient interest of staff than any clinical reason. Sometimes I have no choice but to cooperate, especially when using teaching hospitals. But I always make an effort to achieve at least a symbolic level of privacy.

This can be as simple as insisting on a curtain around the examination table, or an introduction to the people poking my flesh.

But privacy is more than just showing skin. It is about control, autonomy, narrative. The best thing that my parents did was allow me to own my story – to decide when and how to talk about the disease. Or not.

November is National Diabetes Awareness Month

November 10, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

Almost 24 million Americans have diabetes and nearly 300,000 people diagnosed with endocrine, nutritional and metabolic diseases as their primary diagnoses receive Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits¹, according to Allsup, the nation’s leading Social Security disability representation company. Those numbers are expected to rise.

A recent study² found that hospitalizations for diabetes in the United States rose 65 percent over a 14-year span (1993 to 2006).

via November is National Diabetes Awareness Month.

Autism Commission Returns With New Ideas

October 29, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

A commission created a year and a half ago to evaluate Oregon’s approach to autism has returned with hundreds of ideas on how to improve services for affected families.

The 13-member Oregon Commission on Autism Spectrum Disorders summarized its research in a 53-page draft report.

It tackles everything from educating kids with autism, to health insurance issues.

In fact, the commission recommends that Oregon lawmakers take up the controversial issue of mandating health insurance coverage for autism services.

via OPB News · Autism Commission Returns With New Ideas.

It’s Time To End Insurance Discrimination Against People With Autism

October 29, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

I think a lot of us assume that “regular” people can’t really make an impact anymore. The idea of “grassroots movements” can sometimes be written off as idealistic, impotent or inconsequential. That’s why I want to shine a light on an incredible effort going on right now – led by some remarkable, passionate parents — to end a terrible form of discrimination against people with autism. It’s something we can all be a part of, without much effort.

I’ve blogged before about how insanely expensive it is to treat a child with autism — intensive, one-on-one therapies can cost tens of thousands of dollars every year. That’s obviously beyond the means of most families affected by the fastest growing disorder in America, which is why there are a lot of moms and dads out there — as well as siblings — making incredible sacrifices so that their loved ones can get the therapies they desperately need. Families are taking out second mortgages and emptying out savings accounts and college funds. They’re going broke.

Read more here: Holly Robinson Peete: It’s Time… To End Insurance Discrimination Against People With Autism.

Mental health providers grapple with Medicaid expansion

October 21, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

For District health officials, it was an easy decision.

The federal government handed them an opportunity to save $56 million over four years by expanding Medicaid this summer and they jumped at it. They switched 35,000 low-income residents from the city -funded D.C. Health Care Alliance insurance plan to a Medicaid plan and reaped the reward.

It looked like a win-win: The city got some financial relief and the new Medicaid beneficiaries got mental health coverage, which was not part of the Alliance plan. But it creates a problem for the city’s mental health-care providers, who said this week that they are faced with serving thousands of new clients they are not prepared to manage.

Read more here: Mental health providers grapple with Medicaid expansion.

Cost of autism care mandate debated

October 13, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

For a change, we’re not going to talk politics today.

Sure, Nevada’s autism health-insurance mandate became a red-hot campaign topic in September, with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., making a major issue of Republican candidate Sharron Angle’s opposition to the pending requirement.

Rather than discuss the back-and-forth between the candidates and their affiliated interest groups, though, we want to ask a simple business question: How much will that autism regulation really cost, anyway?

A big Nevada insurer who didn’t want to discuss the political hot potato on the record has crunched the numbers and found the mandate will add 2.2 percent, or about $100 a year, to Nevadans’ annual premiums.

Read more here: Cost of autism care mandate debated – News – ReviewJournal.com.

MICHIGAN: Final autism hearing in senate

October 12, 2010 in Special Needs News by Admin Dawn

Advocates told a state Senate panel Tuesday that Michigan is heading for serious problems and expenses if it does not require insurance companies to cover autism treatment.

Lorri Unumb is with the advocacy group Autism Speaks, and is the mother of a 9-year-old child with autism. She told lawmakers that about 15-thousand children in Michigan have been diagnosed with autism, and that number is growing.

Read more here: MICHIGAN: Final autism hearing in senate (2010-10-06).

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