Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 It's tragic, it's sad, it's understandable. It makes me sad. It makes me cry. But it's even more: FULL STEAM AHEAD! It's us against the world This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html The Times April 20, 2006Times 2 It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son after an anguished phone call saying she couldn’t cope. A mother who faces similar pressures explains When ine Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not surprised. ine’s son, , is 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in to care for him. Of the case of Alison and Davies, ine says: “It has happened before and it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you’re going to lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a child with severe autism. It’s an absolute nightmare that you hope you’ll wake up from, but you never do.” Here, ine describes her life with PJ... I know it’s a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn’t talk; he grunts. Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He’s very, very hyperactive. He can’t sit still for two minutes. That’s why he’s only 5½ stone (35kg). He’s always jumping up and down, grunting, and he’s bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says “mum mum”. But I know he’ll never say, “I love you mum mum”. If he ever spoke, those would be the few words I’d want to hear. He knows that I’m his mum and that I love him with a passion. When I say, “Give me a big love (hug)”, he’ll offer me his cheek and cuddle me. He doesn’t know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that moment in time he’s really with us. Otherwise he’s in his own little world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I’m still changing his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so there’s no way he can play outside. I’ve been in the garden and seen a slug in his mouth. He’ll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, he’d eat that. He’d eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn’t watching. When he was younger, he used to smear the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He’s still got a baby gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he’s at home, he spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on television. He’ll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking his body and nodding. He’s always smiling, always got a grin on his face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all the foods that kids love. He’d eat a whole trifle by himself if I let him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14-year-olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I’m doing. But they don’t know how extra hard it is behind closed doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed. For a split second, I thought, “If I do something stupid, like take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after.” But I thought about my other boys. And I’d never have taken PJ with me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. I’ve also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I’m ashamed that I even thought that way. I’m a strong person, but I think there are a lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably wasn’t strong enough to go to her doctor and say, “I feel suicidal”. It’s like admitting defeat, that you can’t look after your own children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he couldn’t do the same things as before. But I didn’t really know anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health visitor said that he didn’t have very good eye contact. A paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and suggested nursery, so that he could be around other children. He didn’t come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing the signs of autism. That’s when I realised he was autistic. I knew it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special-needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I’d lost him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and here was this strange little person that I’d have for the rest of my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can’t get my head round it. When it’s your child, it’s devastating. And what have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in God but I’m angry with Him because He’s made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn’t received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn’t understand it so it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it’s just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your mind. You don’t want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can’t. It’s as if someone’s ripped out my heart. People say, “I don’t know how you do it, ine,” but I have to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he depends on me. PJ’s condition affected my relationship with PJ’s father — it broke us up. We’d been together for five years. I don’t think he could cope, although he’s still in contact with Rick. When I met , he said, “I don’t know if I can cope with this.” I told him, “Thank you for being honest with me.” It’s very hard on him, because he’s not PJ’s dad, but ’s so good with him. He won’t change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the shops. And he’ll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I’ve lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a bubble bath and just chill. I’m told that he’ll probably get a place somewhere else. I’ve noticed that social services provision has improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had Down’s syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he starts playing up, people see him screaming at the top of his lungs and think, “Why can’ t she control her own kid?” People look really, really shocked. I can’t take him shopping, and he misses out on his cousins’ birthday parties because he can’t cope with crowds. He can’t visit Santa at Christmas. And now it’s such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He’s got spots, and I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he’ll be getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won’t be in control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he’s going to be bigger than me. His brother’s 6ft tall. He’s very placid now but what if he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope that he’ll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though Rick and love PJ and worship the ground he walks on, I don’t want either of them to look after him out of duty. I don’t want their lives ruined. I’d like to meet other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and said, “Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy.” And someone else would say, “Oh, my kid did that last week.” People need to know that they’re not the only ones with severely autistic children. Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if his nappy has leaked — “nine times out of ten”, she says — and changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. “PJ loves going to school,” ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then bed. Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children’s Rescue Society, says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had little choice. “The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost us £200,000 to keep it open.” ine Newman, director of children’s services for Manchester City Council, said: “It is regrettable that Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the council and the families of the young people who use it. We are working with them to find a suitable alternative.” ELLA STIMSON Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low rates. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Come to America. We're full of heartbroken parents. Misery loves company and we're pretty good about talking each other down from the ledge. It's us against the world This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html The Times April 20, 2006Times 2 It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son after an anguished phone call saying she couldn’t cope. A mother who faces similar pressures explains When ine Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not surprised. ine’s son, , is 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in to care for him. Of the case of Alison and Davies, ine says: “It has happened before and it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you’re going to lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a child with severe autism. It’s an absolute nightmare that you hope you’ll wake up from, but you never do.” Here, ine describes her life with PJ... I know it’s a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn’t talk; he grunts. Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He’s very, very hyperactive. He can’t sit still for two minutes. That’s why he’s only 5½ stone (35kg). He’s always jumping up and down, grunting, and he’s bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says “mum mum”. But I know he’ll never say, “I love you mum mum”. If he ever spoke, those would be the few words I’d want to hear. He knows that I’m his mum and that I love him with a passion. When I say, “Give me a big love (hug)”, he’ll offer me his cheek and cuddle me. He doesn’t know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that moment in time he’s really with us. Otherwise he’s in his own little world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I’m still changing his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so there’s no way he can play outside. I’ve been in the garden and seen a slug in his mouth. He’ll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, he’d eat that. He’d eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn’t watching. When he was younger, he used to smear the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He’s still got a baby gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he’s at home, he spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on television. He’ll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking his body and nodding. He’s always smiling, always got a grin on his face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all the foods that kids love. He’d eat a whole trifle by himself if I let him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14-year-olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I’m doing. But they don’t know how extra hard it is behind closed doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed. For a split second, I thought, “If I do something stupid, like take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after.” But I thought about my other boys. And I’d never have taken PJ with me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. I’ve also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I’m ashamed that I even thought that way. I’m a strong person, but I think there are a lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably wasn’t strong enough to go to her doctor and say, “I feel suicidal”. It’s like admitting defeat, that you can’t look after your own children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he couldn’t do the same things as before. But I didn’t really know anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health visitor said that he didn’t have very good eye contact. A paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and suggested nursery, so that he could be around other children. He didn’t come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing the signs of autism. That’s when I realised he was autistic. I knew it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special-needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I’d lost him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and here was this strange little person that I’d have for the rest of my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can’t get my head round it. When it’s your child, it’s devastating. And what have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in God but I’m angry with Him because He’s made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn’t received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn’t understand it so it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it’s just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your mind. You don’t want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can’t. It’s as if someone’s ripped out my heart. People say, “I don’t know how you do it, ine,” but I have to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he depends on me. PJ’s condition affected my relationship with PJ’s father — it broke us up. We’d been together for five years. I don’t think he could cope, although he’s still in contact with Rick. When I met , he said, “I don’t know if I can cope with this.” I told him, “Thank you for being honest with me.” It’s very hard on him, because he’s not PJ’s dad, but ’s so good with him. He won’t change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the shops. And he’ll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I’ve lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a bubble bath and just chill. I’m told that he’ll probably get a place somewhere else. I’ve noticed that social services provision has improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had Down’s syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he starts playing up, people see him screaming at the top of his lungs and think, “Why can’ t she control her own kid?” People look really, really shocked. I can’t take him shopping, and he misses out on his cousins’ birthday parties because he can’t cope with crowds. He can’t visit Santa at Christmas. And now it’s such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He’s got spots, and I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he’ll be getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won’t be in control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he’s going to be bigger than me. His brother’s 6ft tall. He’s very placid now but what if he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope that he’ll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though Rick and love PJ and worship the ground he walks on, I don’t want either of them to look after him out of duty. I don’t want their lives ruined. I’d like to meet other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and said, “Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy.” And someone else would say, “Oh, my kid did that last week.” People need to know that they’re not the only ones with severely autistic children. Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if his nappy has leaked — “nine times out of ten”, she says — and changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. “PJ loves going to school,” ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then bed. Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children’s Rescue Society, says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had little choice. “The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost us £200,000 to keep it open.” ine Newman, director of children’s services for Manchester City Council, said: “It is regrettable that Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the council and the families of the young people who use it. We are working with them to find a suitable alternative.” ELLA STIMSON Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low rates. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Me too. Covered in goosebumps. but can't help but wonder if there was some biomedical intervention (specifically diet!) he wouldn't greatly improve. treat the " leaky nappies " diarrhea...supps and of course chelate. The kid's got eczema, gut issues, ADHD...classic case. I feel for this " mum. " Anyone want to write her? Any recc's for DAN-type doc in England? > > This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker. > > > > http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html > > > The Times April 20, 2006 > Times 2 > > It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja > Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son after an anguished phone call saying she couldn't cope. A mother who faces similar pressures explains When ine Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not surprised. > NI_MPU('middle'); ine's son, , is 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in to care for him. Of the case of > Alison and Davies, ine says: " It has happened before and it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you're going to lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a child with severe autism. It's an absolute nightmare that you hope you'll wake up from, but you never do. " Here, ine describes her life with PJ... > I know it's a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn't talk; he grunts. Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He's very, very hyperactive. He can't sit still for two minutes. That's why he's only 5½ stone (35kg). He's always jumping up and down, grunting, and he's bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says " mum mum " . But I know he'll never say, " I love you mum mum " . If he ever spoke, those would be the few words I'd want to hear. > He knows that I'm his mum and that I love him with a passion. When I say, " Give me a big love (hug) " , he'll offer me his cheek and cuddle me. He doesn't know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that moment in time he's really with us. Otherwise he's in his own little world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I'm still changing his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so there's no way he can play outside. I've been in the garden and seen a slug in his mouth. He'll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, he'd eat that. He'd eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn't watching. When he was younger, he used to smear > the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He's still got a baby gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he's at home, he spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on television. He'll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking his body and nodding. He's always smiling, always got a grin on his face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all the foods that kids love. He'd eat a whole trifle by himself if I let him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14-year- olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I'm doing. But they don't know how extra hard it is behind closed doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed. > For a split second, I thought, " If I do something stupid, like take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after. " But I thought about my other boys. And I'd never have taken PJ with me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. I've also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I'm ashamed that I even thought that way. I'm a strong person, but I think there are a lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably wasn't strong enough to go to her doctor and say, " I feel suicidal " . It's like admitting defeat, that you can't look after your own children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he couldn't do the same things as before. But I didn't really know anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health > visitor said that he didn't have very good eye contact. A paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and suggested nursery, so that he could be around other children. He didn't come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing the signs of autism. That's when I realised he was autistic. I knew it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special- needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I'd lost him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and > here was this strange little person that I'd have for the rest of my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can't get my head round it. When it's your child, it's devastating. And what have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in God but I'm angry with Him because He's made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn't received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn't understand it so it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it's just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your mind. You don't want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can't. It's as if someone's ripped out my heart. People say, " I don't know how you do it, ine, " but I have > to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he depends on me. PJ's condition affected my relationship with PJ's father — it broke us up. We'd been together for five years. I don't think he could cope, although he's still in contact with Rick. When I met , he said, " I don't know if I can cope with this. " I told him, " Thank you for being honest with me. " It's very hard on him, because he's not PJ's dad, but 's so good with him. He won't change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the shops. And he'll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I've lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a bubble bath and just chill. I'm told that he'll probably get a place somewhere else. I've noticed that social services provision has improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had Down's syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he starts playing up, people see him screaming at > the top of his lungs and think, " Why can' t she control her own kid? " People look really, really shocked. I can't take him shopping, and he misses out on his cousins' birthday parties because he can't cope with crowds. He can't visit Santa at Christmas. And now it's such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He's got spots, and I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he'll be getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won't be in control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he's going to be bigger than me. His brother's 6ft tall. He's very placid now but what if he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope that he'll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though Rick and love PJ and worship the > ground he walks on, I don't want either of them to look after him out of duty. I don't want their lives ruined. I'd like to meet other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and said, " Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy. " And someone else would say, " Oh, my kid did that last week. " People need to know that they're not the only ones with severely autistic children. Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk > PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if his nappy has leaked — " nine times out of ten " , she says — and changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. " PJ loves going to school, " ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then bed. > Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close > Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children's Rescue Society, says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had little choice. > " The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost us £200,000 to keep it open. " ine Newman, director of children's services for Manchester City Council, said: " It is regrettable that Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the council and the families of the young people who use it. We are working with them to find a suitable alternative. " ELLA STIMSON > > > > > --------------------------------- > Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low rates. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 This article is painfully familiar. My seven year old is barely at the development of a two year old. And until recently, nothing we've done for her helped her development. That appears to be changing rather quickly on the Geiers protocol. I'll be able to report more in a few months. It grieves me to hear about the mother who took both hers and her son's life. I hope nobody judges her, because we all know what autism has done to so many families and marriages. We all need lots of love and support from those around us just to cope. Emotionally AND financially! > > This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker. > > > > http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html > > > The Times April 20, 2006 > Times 2 > > It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja > Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son after an anguished phone call saying she couldn't cope. A mother who faces similar pressures explains When ine Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not surprised. > NI_MPU('middle'); ine's son, , is 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in to care for him. Of the case of > Alison and Davies, ine says: " It has happened before and it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you're going to lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a child with severe autism. It's an absolute nightmare that you hope you'll wake up from, but you never do. " Here, ine describes her life with PJ... > I know it's a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn't talk; he grunts. Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He's very, very hyperactive. He can't sit still for two minutes. That's why he's only 5½ stone (35kg). He's always jumping up and down, grunting, and he's bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says " mum mum " . But I know he'll never say, " I love you mum mum " . If he ever spoke, those would be the few words I'd want to hear. > He knows that I'm his mum and that I love him with a passion. When I say, " Give me a big love (hug) " , he'll offer me his cheek and cuddle me. He doesn't know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that moment in time he's really with us. Otherwise he's in his own little world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I'm still changing his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so there's no way he can play outside. I've been in the garden and seen a slug in his mouth. He'll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, he'd eat that. He'd eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn't watching. When he was younger, he used to smear > the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He's still got a baby gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he's at home, he spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on television. He'll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking his body and nodding. He's always smiling, always got a grin on his face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all the foods that kids love. He'd eat a whole trifle by himself if I let him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14-year-olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I'm doing. But they don't know how extra hard it is behind closed doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed. > For a split second, I thought, " If I do something stupid, like take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after. " But I thought about my other boys. And I'd never have taken PJ with me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. I've also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I'm ashamed that I even thought that way. I'm a strong person, but I think there are a lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably wasn't strong enough to go to her doctor and say, " I feel suicidal " . It's like admitting defeat, that you can't look after your own children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he couldn't do the same things as before. But I didn't really know anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health > visitor said that he didn't have very good eye contact. A paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and suggested nursery, so that he could be around other children. He didn't come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing the signs of autism. That's when I realised he was autistic. I knew it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special-needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I'd lost him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and > here was this strange little person that I'd have for the rest of my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can't get my head round it. When it's your child, it's devastating. And what have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in God but I'm angry with Him because He's made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn't received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn't understand it so it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it's just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your mind. You don't want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can't. It's as if someone's ripped out my heart. People say, " I don't know how you do it, ine, " but I have > to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he depends on me. PJ's condition affected my relationship with PJ's father — it broke us up. We'd been together for five years. I don't think he could cope, although he's still in contact with Rick. When I met , he said, " I don't know if I can cope with this. " I told him, " Thank you for being honest with me. " It's very hard on him, because he's not PJ's dad, but 's so good with him. He won't change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the shops. And he'll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I've lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a bubble bath and just chill. I'm told that he'll probably get a place somewhere else. I've noticed that social services provision has improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had Down's syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he starts playing up, people see him screaming at > the top of his lungs and think, " Why can' t she control her own kid? " People look really, really shocked. I can't take him shopping, and he misses out on his cousins' birthday parties because he can't cope with crowds. He can't visit Santa at Christmas. And now it's such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He's got spots, and I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he'll be getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won't be in control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he's going to be bigger than me. His brother's 6ft tall. He's very placid now but what if he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope that he'll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though Rick and love PJ and worship the > ground he walks on, I don't want either of them to look after him out of duty. I don't want their lives ruined. I'd like to meet other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and said, " Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy. " And someone else would say, " Oh, my kid did that last week. " People need to know that they're not the only ones with severely autistic children. Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk > PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if his nappy has leaked — " nine times out of ten " , she says — and changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. " PJ loves going to school, " ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then bed. > Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close > Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children's Rescue Society, says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had little choice. > " The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost us £200,000 to keep it open. " ine Newman, director of children's services for Manchester City Council, said: " It is regrettable that Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the council and the families of the young people who use it. We are working with them to find a suitable alternative. " ELLA STIMSON > > > > > --------------------------------- > Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low rates. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Judge her?? Nope. Not a bit. Judge the system that failed her, and him? Yep. You bet. If you cannot get help or support from anyone and cannot cope, what are your choices? Give your kid up to the system? The same system who created this problem to begin with? Hell no. it's more humane to take him with her than to leave him to the mercy of the state institutions. It's sad and it sucks, but unfortunately, I doubt that this case, nor the countless others like it, will change this shitty system. Re: It's us against the world This article is painfully familiar. My seven year old is barely at the development of a two year old. And until recently, nothing we've done for her helped her development. That appears to be changing rather quickly on the Geiers protocol. I'll be able to report more in a few months. It grieves me to hear about the mother who took both hers and her son's life. I hope nobody judges her, because we all know what autism has done to so many families and marriages. We all need lots of love and support from those around us just to cope. Emotionally AND financially! > > This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker. > > > > http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html > > > The Times April 20, 2006 > Times 2 > > It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja > Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son after an anguished phone call saying she couldn't cope. A mother who faces similar pressures explains When ine Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not surprised. > NI_MPU('middle'); ine's son, , is 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in to care for him. Of the case of > Alison and Davies, ine says: " It has happened before and it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you're going to lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a child with severe autism. It's an absolute nightmare that you hope you'll wake up from, but you never do. " Here, ine describes her life with PJ... > I know it's a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn't talk; he grunts. Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He's very, very hyperactive. He can't sit still for two minutes. That's why he's only 5½ stone (35kg). He's always jumping up and down, grunting, and he's bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says " mum mum " . But I know he'll never say, " I love you mum mum " . If he ever spoke, those would be the few words I'd want to hear. > He knows that I'm his mum and that I love him with a passion. When I say, " Give me a big love (hug) " , he'll offer me his cheek and cuddle me. He doesn't know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that moment in time he's really with us. Otherwise he's in his own little world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I'm still changing his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so there's no way he can play outside. I've been in the garden and seen a slug in his mouth. He'll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, he'd eat that. He'd eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn't watching. When he was younger, he used to smear > the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He's still got a baby gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he's at home, he spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on television. He'll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking his body and nodding. He's always smiling, always got a grin on his face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all the foods that kids love. He'd eat a whole trifle by himself if I let him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14-year-olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I'm doing. But they don't know how extra hard it is behind closed doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed. > For a split second, I thought, " If I do something stupid, like take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after. " But I thought about my other boys. And I'd never have taken PJ with me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. I've also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I'm ashamed that I even thought that way. I'm a strong person, but I think there are a lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably wasn't strong enough to go to her doctor and say, " I feel suicidal " . It's like admitting defeat, that you can't look after your own children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he couldn't do the same things as before. But I didn't really know anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health > visitor said that he didn't have very good eye contact. A paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and suggested nursery, so that he could be around other children. He didn't come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing the signs of autism. That's when I realised he was autistic. I knew it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special-needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I'd lost him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and > here was this strange little person that I'd have for the rest of my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can't get my head round it. When it's your child, it's devastating. And what have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in God but I'm angry with Him because He's made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn't received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn't understand it so it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it's just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your mind. You don't want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can't. It's as if someone's ripped out my heart. People say, " I don't know how you do it, ine, " but I have > to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he depends on me. PJ's condition affected my relationship with PJ's father — it broke us up. We'd been together for five years. I don't think he could cope, although he's still in contact with Rick. When I met , he said, " I don't know if I can cope with this. " I told him, " Thank you for being honest with me. " It's very hard on him, because he's not PJ's dad, but 's so good with him. He won't change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the shops. And he'll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I've lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a bubble bath and just chill. I'm told that he'll probably get a place somewhere else. I've noticed that social services provision has improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had Down's syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he starts playing up, people see him screaming at > the top of his lungs and think, " Why can' t she control her own kid? " People look really, really shocked. I can't take him shopping, and he misses out on his cousins' birthday parties because he can't cope with crowds. He can't visit Santa at Christmas. And now it's such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He's got spots, and I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he'll be getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won't be in control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he's going to be bigger than me. His brother's 6ft tall. He's very placid now but what if he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope that he'll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though Rick and love PJ and worship the > ground he walks on, I don't want either of them to look after him out of duty. I don't want their lives ruined. I'd like to meet other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and said, " Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy. " And someone else would say, " Oh, my kid did that last week. " People need to know that they're not the only ones with severely autistic children. Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk > PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if his nappy has leaked — " nine times out of ten " , she says — and changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. " PJ loves going to school, " ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then bed. > Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close > Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children's Rescue Society, says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had little choice. > " The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost us £200,000 to keep it open. " ine Newman, director of children's services for Manchester City Council, said: " It is regrettable that Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the council and the families of the young people who use it. We are working with them to find a suitable alternative. " ELLA STIMSON > > > > > --------------------------------- > Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low rates. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Me too! His diet was horrible. What is a trifle? > > > > This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the > UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker. > > > > > > > > http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html > > > > > > The Times April 20, 2006 > > Times 2 > > > > It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja > > Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son > after an anguished phone call saying she couldn't cope. A mother who > faces similar pressures explains When ine > Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently > committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not > surprised. > > NI_MPU('middle'); ine's son, , is > 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and > is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken > out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise > ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his > father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly > contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on > antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a > three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, > (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous > relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ > has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by > a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, > ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in > to care for him. Of the case of > > Alison and Davies, ine says: " It has happened before and > it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son > was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a > bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I > know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to > have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you're going to > lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a > child with severe autism. It's an absolute nightmare that you hope > you'll wake up from, but you never do. " Here, ine describes her > life with PJ... > > I know it's a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and > blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn't talk; he grunts. > Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He's very, very > hyperactive. He can't sit still for two minutes. That's why he's only > 5½ stone (35kg). He's always jumping up and down, grunting, and he's > bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his > knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says " mum mum " . But I > know he'll never say, " I love you mum mum " . If he ever spoke, those > would be the few words I'd want to hear. > > He knows that I'm his mum and that I love him with a passion. > When I say, " Give me a big love (hug) " , he'll offer me his cheek and > cuddle me. He doesn't know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to > talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. > The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye > contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that > moment in time he's really with us. Otherwise he's in his own little > world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and > thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I'm still changing > his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so > there's no way he can play outside. I've been in the garden and seen > a slug in his mouth. He'll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. > It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, > he'd eat that. He'd eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn't > watching. When he was younger, he used to smear > > the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring > in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He's still got a baby > gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he's at home, he > spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a > tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on > television. He'll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking > his body and nodding. He's always smiling, always got a grin on his > face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it > would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all > the foods that kids love. He'd eat a whole trifle by himself if I let > him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14- year- > olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok > trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I'm > doing. But they don't know how extra hard it is behind closed > doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed. > > For a split second, I thought, " If I do something stupid, like > take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after. " > But I thought about my other boys. And I'd never have taken PJ with > me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. > I've also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I'm ashamed that I > even thought that way. I'm a strong person, but I think there are a > lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably > wasn't strong enough to go to her doctor and say, " I feel suicidal " . > It's like admitting defeat, that you can't look after your own > children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken > away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. > He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with > bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he > couldn't do the same things as before. But I didn't really know > anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health > > visitor said that he didn't have very good eye contact. A > paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and > suggested nursery, so that he could be around other children. He > didn't come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of > children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing > the signs of autism. That's when I realised he was autistic. I knew > it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, > autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a > psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering > people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special- > needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the > women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew > something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I'd lost > him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked > like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and > > here was this strange little person that I'd have for the rest of > my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I > still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can't get > my head round it. When it's your child, it's devastating. And what > have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in > God but I'm angry with Him because He's made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn't > received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn't understand it so > it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so > angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it's > just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you > open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your > mind. You don't want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. > You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can't. It's > as if someone's ripped out my heart. People say, " I don't know how > you do it, ine, " but I have > > to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he > depends on me. PJ's condition affected my relationship with PJ's > father — it broke us up. We'd been together for five years. I don't > think he could cope, although he's still in contact with Rick. When I > met , he said, " I don't know if I can cope with this. " I told > him, " Thank you for being honest with me. " It's very hard on him, > because he's not PJ's dad, but 's so good with him. He won't > change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the > shops. And he'll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I've > lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a > bubble bath and just chill. I'm told that he'll probably get a place > somewhere else. I've noticed that social services provision has > improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had > Down's syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he > starts playing up, people see him screaming at > > the top of his lungs and think, " Why can' t she control her own > kid? " People look really, really shocked. I can't take him shopping, > and he misses out on his cousins' birthday parties because he can't > cope with crowds. He can't visit Santa at Christmas. And now it's > such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He's got spots, and > I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to > wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he'll be > getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens > the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won't be in > control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he's going to be bigger > than me. His brother's 6ft tall. He's very placid now but what if > he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope > that he'll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into > sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though > Rick and love PJ and worship the > > ground he walks on, I don't want either of them to look after him > out of duty. I don't want their lives ruined. I'd like to meet > other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to > have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, > when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and > said, " Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy. " And someone > else would say, " Oh, my kid did that last week. " People need to know > that they're not the only ones with severely autistic children. > Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 > Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 > 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk > > PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if > his nappy has leaked — " nine times out of ten " , she says — and > changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms > hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine > dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs > around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives > to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. " PJ loves going > to school, " ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and > some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower > and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and > , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then > bed. > > Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close > > Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children's Rescue Society, > says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had > little choice. > > " The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not > paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost > us £200,000 to keep it open. " ine Newman, director of children's > services for Manchester City Council, said: " It is regrettable that > Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the > council and the families of the young people who use it. We are > working with them to find a suitable alternative. " ELLA STIMSON > > > > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > > Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low > rates. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Me too! His diet was horrible. What is a trifle? > > > > This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the > UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker. > > > > > > > > http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html > > > > > > The Times April 20, 2006 > > Times 2 > > > > It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja > > Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son > after an anguished phone call saying she couldn't cope. A mother who > faces similar pressures explains When ine > Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently > committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not > surprised. > > NI_MPU('middle'); ine's son, , is > 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and > is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken > out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise > ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his > father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly > contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on > antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a > three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, > (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous > relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ > has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by > a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, > ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in > to care for him. Of the case of > > Alison and Davies, ine says: " It has happened before and > it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son > was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a > bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I > know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to > have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you're going to > lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a > child with severe autism. It's an absolute nightmare that you hope > you'll wake up from, but you never do. " Here, ine describes her > life with PJ... > > I know it's a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and > blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn't talk; he grunts. > Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He's very, very > hyperactive. He can't sit still for two minutes. That's why he's only > 5½ stone (35kg). He's always jumping up and down, grunting, and he's > bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his > knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says " mum mum " . But I > know he'll never say, " I love you mum mum " . If he ever spoke, those > would be the few words I'd want to hear. > > He knows that I'm his mum and that I love him with a passion. > When I say, " Give me a big love (hug) " , he'll offer me his cheek and > cuddle me. He doesn't know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to > talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. > The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye > contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that > moment in time he's really with us. Otherwise he's in his own little > world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and > thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I'm still changing > his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so > there's no way he can play outside. I've been in the garden and seen > a slug in his mouth. He'll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. > It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, > he'd eat that. He'd eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn't > watching. When he was younger, he used to smear > > the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring > in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He's still got a baby > gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he's at home, he > spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a > tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on > television. He'll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking > his body and nodding. He's always smiling, always got a grin on his > face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it > would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all > the foods that kids love. He'd eat a whole trifle by himself if I let > him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14- year- > olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok > trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I'm > doing. But they don't know how extra hard it is behind closed > doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed. > > For a split second, I thought, " If I do something stupid, like > take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after. " > But I thought about my other boys. And I'd never have taken PJ with > me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. > I've also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I'm ashamed that I > even thought that way. I'm a strong person, but I think there are a > lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably > wasn't strong enough to go to her doctor and say, " I feel suicidal " . > It's like admitting defeat, that you can't look after your own > children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken > away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. > He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with > bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he > couldn't do the same things as before. But I didn't really know > anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health > > visitor said that he didn't have very good eye contact. A > paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and > suggested nursery, so that he could be around other children. He > didn't come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of > children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing > the signs of autism. That's when I realised he was autistic. I knew > it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, > autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a > psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering > people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special- > needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the > women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew > something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I'd lost > him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked > like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and > > here was this strange little person that I'd have for the rest of > my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I > still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can't get > my head round it. When it's your child, it's devastating. And what > have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in > God but I'm angry with Him because He's made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn't > received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn't understand it so > it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so > angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it's > just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you > open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your > mind. You don't want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. > You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can't. It's > as if someone's ripped out my heart. People say, " I don't know how > you do it, ine, " but I have > > to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he > depends on me. PJ's condition affected my relationship with PJ's > father — it broke us up. We'd been together for five years. I don't > think he could cope, although he's still in contact with Rick. When I > met , he said, " I don't know if I can cope with this. " I told > him, " Thank you for being honest with me. " It's very hard on him, > because he's not PJ's dad, but 's so good with him. He won't > change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the > shops. And he'll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I've > lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a > bubble bath and just chill. I'm told that he'll probably get a place > somewhere else. I've noticed that social services provision has > improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had > Down's syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he > starts playing up, people see him screaming at > > the top of his lungs and think, " Why can' t she control her own > kid? " People look really, really shocked. I can't take him shopping, > and he misses out on his cousins' birthday parties because he can't > cope with crowds. He can't visit Santa at Christmas. And now it's > such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He's got spots, and > I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to > wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he'll be > getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens > the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won't be in > control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he's going to be bigger > than me. His brother's 6ft tall. He's very placid now but what if > he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope > that he'll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into > sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though > Rick and love PJ and worship the > > ground he walks on, I don't want either of them to look after him > out of duty. I don't want their lives ruined. I'd like to meet > other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to > have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, > when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and > said, " Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy. " And someone > else would say, " Oh, my kid did that last week. " People need to know > that they're not the only ones with severely autistic children. > Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 > Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 > 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk > > PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if > his nappy has leaked — " nine times out of ten " , she says — and > changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms > hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine > dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs > around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives > to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. " PJ loves going > to school, " ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and > some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower > and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and > , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then > bed. > > Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close > > Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children's Rescue Society, > says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had > little choice. > > " The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not > paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost > us £200,000 to keep it open. " ine Newman, director of children's > services for Manchester City Council, said: " It is regrettable that > Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the > council and the families of the young people who use it. We are > working with them to find a suitable alternative. " ELLA STIMSON > > > > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > > Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low > rates. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 I've got a friend with twin 6-year-old severely autistic boys. Not potty-trained non-verbal nightmare. They weighed 6 pounds when they got 62.5 micrograms of ethylmercury from 3 vaccines, all on the same day. I know the rest of the world does not give a shit, but this amount of mercury EXCEEDS THE FDA METHYLMERCURY LIMIT BY 220X. AND PEOPLE ARE DEFENDING THIS, CAN YOU @#$%^ & *! BELIEVE IT?! It's a friggin miracle that half of these parents have not already jumped off a bridge. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Should someone forward the story to Gerberding? And the AAP? > > I've got a friend with twin 6-year-old severely autistic boys. Not > potty-trained non-verbal nightmare. They weighed 6 pounds when they got > 62.5 micrograms of ethylmercury from 3 vaccines, all on the same day. I > know the rest of the world does not give a shit, but this amount of > mercury EXCEEDS THE FDA METHYLMERCURY LIMIT BY 220X. AND PEOPLE ARE > DEFENDING THIS, CAN YOU @#$%^ & *! BELIEVE IT?! It's a friggin miracle > that half of these parents have not already jumped off a bridge. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Just a small note. My understanding is that the numbers we banty about regarding 100+ times EPA numbers are actually for oral mercury, not for the injected mercury in the vaccines. With lower absorption from the GI tract, the injected form is actually significantly more efficiently introduced into the child's system than it would be from the oral introduction (from which the EPA numbers are generated). Depressingly, it's actually much worse. Re: It's us against the world I've got a friend with twin 6-year-old severely autistic boys. Not potty-trained non-verbal nightmare. They weighed 6 pounds when they got 62.5 micrograms of ethylmercury from 3 vaccines, all on the same day. I know the rest of the world does not give a shit, but this amount of mercury EXCEEDS THE FDA METHYLMERCURY LIMIT BY 220X. AND PEOPLE ARE DEFENDING THIS, CAN YOU @#$%^ & *! BELIEVE IT?! It's a friggin miracle that half of these parents have not already jumped off a bridge. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 They're not just defending it. In some cases, they're actively working to overturn legislation in order to inject toxic waste into the kids. Re: It's us against the world I've got a friend with twin 6-year-old severely autistic boys. Not potty-trained non-verbal nightmare. They weighed 6 pounds when they got 62.5 micrograms of ethylmercury from 3 vaccines, all on the same day. I know the rest of the world does not give a shit, but this amount of mercury EXCEEDS THE FDA METHYLMERCURY LIMIT BY 220X. AND PEOPLE ARE DEFENDING THIS, CAN YOU @#$%^ & *! BELIEVE IT?! It's a friggin miracle that half of these parents have not already jumped off a bridge. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 A doctor actually told one of my state Reps that thimerosal is good and needs to be in vaccines as much as possible. Nope, I'm not making it up and yep, I'll try to get the name of the doc, lol. Debi > > They're not just defending it. In some cases, they're actively working to overturn legislation in order to inject toxic waste into the kids. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Hey ! If she had an empathetic drop to her..yes! But, I could see her just saying this happens in the UK,,not here! Someone brought up Sheehan...maybe that is what would get G and the CDC...before they cross the moat into the new CDC castle, they would have to see a " " ,,or Dad..but as I am typing this, her real response would be " But the benefits outweigh any theoretical dangers..Just look at the MUMPS " .. > > > > I've got a friend with twin 6-year-old severely autistic boys. Not > > potty-trained non-verbal nightmare. They weighed 6 pounds when they > got > > 62.5 micrograms of ethylmercury from 3 vaccines, all on the same > day. I > > know the rest of the world does not give a shit, but this amount of > > mercury EXCEEDS THE FDA METHYLMERCURY LIMIT BY 220X. AND PEOPLE ARE > > DEFENDING THIS, CAN YOU @#$%^ & *! BELIEVE IT?! It's a friggin miracle > > that half of these parents have not already jumped off a bridge. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 " Any recc's for DAN-type doc in England? " There are DAN doctors in 22 countries, including a few in Great Britain. http://www.autismwebsite.com/ari/dan/danforeign.htm. There are Rescue Angels in 22 as well, but none in GB. http://www.generationrescue.org/what_rescue.php. > > > > This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the > UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker. > > > > > > > > http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html > > > > > > The Times April 20, 2006 > > Times 2 > > > > It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja > > Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son > after an anguished phone call saying she couldn't cope. A mother who > faces similar pressures explains When ine > Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently > committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not > surprised. > > NI_MPU('middle'); ine's son, , is > 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and > is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken > out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise > ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his > father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly > contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on > antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a > three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, > (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous > relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ > has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by > a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, > ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in > to care for him. Of the case of > > Alison and Davies, ine says: " It has happened before and > it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son > was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a > bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I > know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to > have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you're going to > lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a > child with severe autism. It's an absolute nightmare that you hope > you'll wake up from, but you never do. " Here, ine describes her > life with PJ... > > I know it's a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and > blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn't talk; he grunts. > Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He's very, very > hyperactive. He can't sit still for two minutes. That's why he's only > 5½ stone (35kg). He's always jumping up and down, grunting, and he's > bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his > knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says " mum mum " . But I > know he'll never say, " I love you mum mum " . If he ever spoke, those > would be the few words I'd want to hear. > > He knows that I'm his mum and that I love him with a passion. > When I say, " Give me a big love (hug) " , he'll offer me his cheek and > cuddle me. He doesn't know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to > talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. > The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye > contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that > moment in time he's really with us. Otherwise he's in his own little > world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and > thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I'm still changing > his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so > there's no way he can play outside. I've been in the garden and seen > a slug in his mouth. He'll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. > It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, > he'd eat that. He'd eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn't > watching. When he was younger, he used to smear > > the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring > in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He's still got a baby > gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he's at home, he > spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a > tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on > television. He'll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking > his body and nodding. He's always smiling, always got a grin on his > face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it > would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all > the foods that kids love. He'd eat a whole trifle by himself if I let > him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14-year- > olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok > trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I'm > doing. But they don't know how extra hard it is behind closed > doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed. > > For a split second, I thought, " If I do something stupid, like > take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after. " > But I thought about my other boys. And I'd never have taken PJ with > me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. > I've also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I'm ashamed that I > even thought that way. I'm a strong person, but I think there are a > lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably > wasn't strong enough to go to her doctor and say, " I feel suicidal " . > It's like admitting defeat, that you can't look after your own > children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken > away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. > He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with > bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he > couldn't do the same things as before. But I didn't really know > anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health > > visitor said that he didn't have very good eye contact. A > paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and > suggested nursery, so that he could be around other children. He > didn't come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of > children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing > the signs of autism. That's when I realised he was autistic. I knew > it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, > autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a > psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering > people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special- > needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the > women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew > something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I'd lost > him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked > like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and > > here was this strange little person that I'd have for the rest of > my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I > still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can't get > my head round it. When it's your child, it's devastating. And what > have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in > God but I'm angry with Him because He's made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn't > received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn't understand it so > it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so > angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it's > just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you > open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your > mind. You don't want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. > You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can't. It's > as if someone's ripped out my heart. People say, " I don't know how > you do it, ine, " but I have > > to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he > depends on me. PJ's condition affected my relationship with PJ's > father — it broke us up. We'd been together for five years. I don't > think he could cope, although he's still in contact with Rick. When I > met , he said, " I don't know if I can cope with this. " I told > him, " Thank you for being honest with me. " It's very hard on him, > because he's not PJ's dad, but 's so good with him. He won't > change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the > shops. And he'll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I've > lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a > bubble bath and just chill. I'm told that he'll probably get a place > somewhere else. I've noticed that social services provision has > improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had > Down's syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he > starts playing up, people see him screaming at > > the top of his lungs and think, " Why can' t she control her own > kid? " People look really, really shocked. I can't take him shopping, > and he misses out on his cousins' birthday parties because he can't > cope with crowds. He can't visit Santa at Christmas. And now it's > such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He's got spots, and > I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to > wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he'll be > getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens > the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won't be in > control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he's going to be bigger > than me. His brother's 6ft tall. He's very placid now but what if > he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope > that he'll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into > sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though > Rick and love PJ and worship the > > ground he walks on, I don't want either of them to look after him > out of duty. I don't want their lives ruined. I'd like to meet > other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to > have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, > when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and > said, " Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy. " And someone > else would say, " Oh, my kid did that last week. " People need to know > that they're not the only ones with severely autistic children. > Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 > Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 > 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk > > PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if > his nappy has leaked — " nine times out of ten " , she says — and > changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms > hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine > dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs > around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives > to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. " PJ loves going > to school, " ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and > some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower > and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and > , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then > bed. > > Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close > > Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children's Rescue Society, > says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had > little choice. > > " The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not > paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost > us £200,000 to keep it open. " ine Newman, director of children's > services for Manchester City Council, said: " It is regrettable that > Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the > council and the families of the young people who use it. We are > working with them to find a suitable alternative. " ELLA STIMSON > > > > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > > Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low > rates. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Well said . I've been wondering how the Gier's protocal was going for your daughter. We recently started valtrex for my low functioning 6 year old son and saw great immediate viral flares mixed in with great cognition and interactions. Hopefully we will all find the right protocals for our children. I only wish for this woman the knowledge that there is hope and where to go find it. I cry for the ones it is too late to reach. - >From: Nanstiel <erik@...> >Date: Thu Apr 20 12:43:55 CDT 2006 >EOHarm >Subject: Re: It's us against the world >This article is painfully familiar. My seven year old is barely at the development of a two >year old. And until recently, nothing we've done for her helped her development. That >appears to be changing rather quickly on the Geiers protocol. I'll be able to report more in >a few months. > >It grieves me to hear about the mother who took both hers and her son's life. I hope >nobody judges her, because we all know what autism has done to so many families and >marriages. We all need lots of love and support from those around us just to cope. >Emotionally AND financially! > > > > > >> >> This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the UK than here. Either >way, it is a heartbreaker. >> >> >> >> http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html >> >> >> The Times April 20, 2006 >> Times 2 >> >> It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja >> Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son after an anguished >phone call saying she couldn't cope. A mother who faces similar pressures explains >When ine Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently >committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not surprised. >> NI_MPU('middle'); ine's son, , is 14 and has severe autism. >PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs >school and is taken out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise >ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his father, who split up with >ine when PJ was two). She once briefly contemplated suicide but immediately sought >help. She is now on antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a >three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, (her partner of >two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous relationship (Rick and PJ share the same >father). For three years, PJ has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home >run by a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, ine spends a >week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in to care for him. Of the case of >> Alison and Davies, ine says: " It has happened before and it will happen again. >That woman was the same age as me and her son was only two years younger than PJ. I >read that could ride a bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I >know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to have a child that is >getting bigger than you, and who you're going to lose control over. People should know >the reality of caring for a child with severe autism. It's an absolute nightmare that you >hope you'll wake up from, but you never do. " Here, ine describes her life with PJ... >> I know it's a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and blood, but PJ is like a little >animal. He doesn't talk; he grunts. Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He's >very, very hyperactive. He can't sit still for two minutes. That's why he's only 5½ stone >(35kg). He's always jumping up and down, grunting, and he's bitten his hands so much >out of frustration that the skin around his knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says > " mum mum " . But I know he'll never say, " I love you mum mum " . If he ever spoke, those >would be the few words I'd want to hear. >> He knows that I'm his mum and that I love him with a passion. When I say, " Give me a >big love (hug) " , he'll offer me his cheek and cuddle me. He doesn't know how to kiss >properly. When PJ tries to talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. >The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye contact. It gives me so >much pleasure because I know that at that moment in time he's really with us. Otherwise >he's in his own little world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and >thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I'm still changing his nappies. It breaks my >heart. He is still a very young baby, so there's no way he can play outside. I've been in >the garden and seen a slug in his mouth. He'll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. It >sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, he'd eat that. He'd eat the >contents of his nappy if I wasn't watching. When he was younger, he used to smear >> the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring in his bedroom and >plastic covers over the bed. He's still got a baby gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love >him. When he's at home, he spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, >holding a tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on television. He'll sit on >the settee with his legs crossed, shaking his body and nodding. He's always smiling, >always got a grin on his face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it >would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all the foods that kids >love. He'd eat a whole trifle by himself if I let him. I like to dress him well — in the same >things that other 14-year-olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like >Reebok trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I'm doing. But they >don't know how extra hard it is behind closed doors. About two years ago, I got really >depressed. >> For a split second, I thought, " If I do something stupid, like take these pills, and die, >then PJ will be really well looked after. " But I thought about my other boys. And I'd never >have taken PJ with me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. >I've also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I'm ashamed that I even thought that way. >I'm a strong person, but I think there are a lot of women who are not as strong as me. >Alison Davies probably wasn't strong enough to go to her doctor and say, " I feel suicidal " . >It's like admitting defeat, that you can't look after your own children. I also think parents >fear that their children will be taken away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal >when he was born. He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with >bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he couldn't do the same >things as before. But I didn't really know anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the >health >> visitor said that he didn't have very good eye contact. A paediatrician told me he had >mild learning difficulties, and suggested nursery, so that he could be around other >children. He didn't come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of children >with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing the signs of autism. That's >when I realised he was autistic. I knew it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to >tell me. In fact, autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a >psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering people about it. He went >to special-needs nursery, and then a special-needs school. I have a nephew with learning >difficulties; I think the women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I >knew something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I'd lost him. It was as if >someone had handed me back a shell who just looked like him. It was as if the real PJ had >died, and >> here was this strange little person that I'd have for the rest of my life. I was grieving for >the perfect baby that I used to have. I still find it very very hard to accept him the way he >is. I can't get my head round it. When it's your child, it's devastating. And what have I ever >done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in God but I'm angry with Him because >He's made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn't received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn't >understand it so it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so angry. >You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it's just me and PJ against the world. >You get so low. From the minute you open your eyes to the minute you close them, that >child is on your mind. You don't want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. >You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can't. It's as if someone's ripped >out my heart. People say, " I don't know how you do it, ine, " but I have >> to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he depends on me. PJ's >condition affected my relationship with PJ's father — it broke us up. We'd been together >for five years. I don't think he could cope, although he's still in contact with Rick. When I >met , he said, " I don't know if I can cope with this. " I told him, " Thank you for >being honest with me. " It's very hard on him, because he's not PJ's dad, but 's so >good with him. He won't change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the >shops. And he'll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I've lost a lifeline. When PJ >was away I would light candles, have a bubble bath and just chill. I'm told that he'll >probably get a place somewhere else. I've noticed that social services provision has >improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had Down's syndrome, >everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he starts playing up, people see him >screaming at >> the top of his lungs and think, " Why can' t she control her own kid? " People look really, >really shocked. I can't take him shopping, and he misses out on his cousins' birthday >parties because he can't cope with crowds. He can't visit Santa at Christmas. And now it's >such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He's got spots, and I shaved him for >the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to wash him, and it upsets me to see him in >the shower. Soon he'll be getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty >frightens the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won't be in control. My >baby is a young man now, and soon he's going to be bigger than me. His brother's 6ft tall. >He's very placid now but what if he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I >die. I hope that he'll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into sheltered >accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though Rick and love PJ and >worship the >> ground he walks on, I don't want either of them to look after him out of duty. I don't >want their lives ruined. I'd like to meet other parents in Manchester in the same position. >Just someone to have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, >when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and said, " Do you know what? >PJ ate what was in his nappy. " And someone else would say, " Oh, my kid did that last >week. " People need to know that they're not the only ones with severely autistic children. >Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 Pennington Street, >London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind >0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk >> PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if his nappy has leaked — > " nine times out of ten " , she says — and changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg >atomoxetine, which calms hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. >ine dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs around to >some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives to take PJ to school. He is >accompanied by a carer. " PJ loves going to school, " ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has >orange juice and some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower and >pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and , and chooses a >teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then bed. >> Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close >> Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children's Rescue Society, says the decision to close >Mount Carmel was agonising but they had little choice. >> " The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not paying enough for the >services that they do use. It would have cost us £200,000 to keep it open. " ine >Newman, director of children's services for Manchester City Council, said: " It is regrettable >that Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the council and the >families of the young people who use it. We are working with them to find a suitable >alternative. " ELLA STIMSON >> >> >> >> >> --------------------------------- >> Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low rates. >> > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 , There are 6 Rescue Angels in the UK/GB/Eng. (I'll send them the article). > > > > > > This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the > > UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker. > > > > > > > > > > > > http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html > > > > > > > > > The Times April 20, 2006 > > > Times 2 > > > > > > It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja > > > Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son > > after an anguished phone call saying she couldn't cope. A mother who > > faces similar pressures explains When ine > > Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently > > committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not > > surprised. > > > NI_MPU('middle'); ine's son, , is > > 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and > > is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken > > out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise > > ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his > > father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly > > contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on > > antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a > > three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, > > (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous > > relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ > > has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by > > a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, > > ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in > > to care for him. Of the case of > > > Alison and Davies, ine says: " It has happened before and > > it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son > > was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a > > bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I > > know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to > > have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you're going to > > lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a > > child with severe autism. It's an absolute nightmare that you hope > > you'll wake up from, but you never do. " Here, ine describes her > > life with PJ... > > > I know it's a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and > > blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn't talk; he grunts. > > Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He's very, very > > hyperactive. He can't sit still for two minutes. That's why he's only > > 5½ stone (35kg). He's always jumping up and down, grunting, and he's > > bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his > > knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says " mum mum " . But I > > know he'll never say, " I love you mum mum " . If he ever spoke, those > > would be the few words I'd want to hear. > > > He knows that I'm his mum and that I love him with a passion. > > When I say, " Give me a big love (hug) " , he'll offer me his cheek and > > cuddle me. He doesn't know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to > > talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. > > The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye > > contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that > > moment in time he's really with us. Otherwise he's in his own little > > world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and > > thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I'm still changing > > his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so > > there's no way he can play outside. I've been in the garden and seen > > a slug in his mouth. He'll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. > > It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, > > he'd eat that. He'd eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn't > > watching. When he was younger, he used to smear > > > the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring > > in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He's still got a baby > > gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he's at home, he > > spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a > > tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on > > television. He'll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking > > his body and nodding. He's always smiling, always got a grin on his > > face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it > > would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all > > the foods that kids love. He'd eat a whole trifle by himself if I let > > him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14-year- > > olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok > > trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I'm > > doing. But they don't know how extra hard it is behind closed > > doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed. > > > For a split second, I thought, " If I do something stupid, like > > take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after. " > > But I thought about my other boys. And I'd never have taken PJ with > > me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. > > I've also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I'm ashamed that I > > even thought that way. I'm a strong person, but I think there are a > > lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably > > wasn't strong enough to go to her doctor and say, " I feel suicidal " . > > It's like admitting defeat, that you can't look after your own > > children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken > > away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. > > He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with > > bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he > > couldn't do the same things as before. But I didn't really know > > anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health > > > visitor said that he didn't have very good eye contact. A > > paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and > > suggested nursery, so that he could be around other children. He > > didn't come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of > > children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing > > the signs of autism. That's when I realised he was autistic. I knew > > it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, > > autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a > > psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering > > people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special- > > needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the > > women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew > > something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I'd lost > > him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked > > like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and > > > here was this strange little person that I'd have for the rest of > > my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I > > still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can't get > > my head round it. When it's your child, it's devastating. And what > > have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in > > God but I'm angry with Him because He's made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn't > > received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn't understand it so > > it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so > > angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it's > > just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you > > open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your > > mind. You don't want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. > > You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can't. It's > > as if someone's ripped out my heart. People say, " I don't know how > > you do it, ine, " but I have > > > to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he > > depends on me. PJ's condition affected my relationship with PJ's > > father — it broke us up. We'd been together for five years. I don't > > think he could cope, although he's still in contact with Rick. When I > > met , he said, " I don't know if I can cope with this. " I told > > him, " Thank you for being honest with me. " It's very hard on him, > > because he's not PJ's dad, but 's so good with him. He won't > > change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the > > shops. And he'll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I've > > lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a > > bubble bath and just chill. I'm told that he'll probably get a place > > somewhere else. I've noticed that social services provision has > > improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had > > Down's syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he > > starts playing up, people see him screaming at > > > the top of his lungs and think, " Why can' t she control her own > > kid? " People look really, really shocked. I can't take him shopping, > > and he misses out on his cousins' birthday parties because he can't > > cope with crowds. He can't visit Santa at Christmas. And now it's > > such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He's got spots, and > > I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to > > wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he'll be > > getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens > > the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won't be in > > control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he's going to be bigger > > than me. His brother's 6ft tall. He's very placid now but what if > > he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope > > that he'll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into > > sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though > > Rick and love PJ and worship the > > > ground he walks on, I don't want either of them to look after him > > out of duty. I don't want their lives ruined. I'd like to meet > > other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to > > have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, > > when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and > > said, " Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy. " And someone > > else would say, " Oh, my kid did that last week. " People need to know > > that they're not the only ones with severely autistic children. > > Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 > > Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 > > 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk > > > PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if > > his nappy has leaked — " nine times out of ten " , she says — and > > changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms > > hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine > > dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs > > around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives > > to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. " PJ loves going > > to school, " ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and > > some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower > > and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and > > , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then > > bed. > > > Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close > > > Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children's Rescue Society, > > says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had > > little choice. > > > " The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not > > paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost > > us £200,000 to keep it open. " ine Newman, director of children's > > services for Manchester City Council, said: " It is regrettable that > > Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the > > council and the families of the young people who use it. We are > > working with them to find a suitable alternative. " ELLA STIMSON > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > > > Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low > > rates. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 I just saw 5 or 6 rescue angels in the United Kingdom. One of them, Mandy, is really on top of things...contributes frequently to autism treatment. I 'll forward it to her. -------------- Original message -------------- From: " Barry" <kevanne88@...> "Any recc's for DAN-type doc in England?"There are DAN doctors in 22 countries, including a few in GreatBritain. http://www.autismwebsite.com/ari/dan/danforeign.htm. There are Rescue Angels in 22 as well, but none in GB.http://www.generationrescue.org/what_rescue.php.--- In EOHarm , "djberle" <dberle@...> wrote:>> Me too. Covered in goosebumps. but can't help but wonder if there > was some biomedical intervention (specifically diet!) he wouldn't > greatly improve. treat the "leaky nappies" diarrhea...supps and of > course chelate. The kid's got eczema, gut issues, ADHD...classic > case. I feel for this "mum." Anyone want to write her?> > Any recc's for DAN-type doc in England?> > > > >> > This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the > UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker.> > > > > > > > http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html> > > > > &g t; The Times April 20, 2006> > Times 2> > > > It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja > > Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son > after an anguished phone call saying she couldn't cope. A mother who > faces similar pressures explains When ine > Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently > committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not > surprised. > > NI_MPU('middle'); ine's son, , is > 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and > is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken > out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise > ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his > father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly > contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on > antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a > three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, > (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous > relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ > has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by > a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, > ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in > to care for him. Of the case of> > Alison and Davies, ine says: "It has happe ned before and > it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son > was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a > bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I > know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to > have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you're going to > lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a > child with severe autism. It's an absolute nightmare that you hope > you'll wake up from, but you never do." Here, ine describes her > life with PJ...> > I know it's a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and > blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn't talk; he grunts. > Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He's very, very > hyperactive. He can't sit still for two minutes. That's why he's only > 5½ stone (35kg). He's always jumping up and down, grunting, and he's > bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his > knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says "mum mum". But I > know he'll never say, "I love you mum mum". If he ever spoke, those > would be the few words I'd want to hear. > > He knows that I'm his mum and that I love him with a passion. > When I say, "Give me a big love (hug)", he'll offer me his cheek and > cuddle me. He doesn't know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to > talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. > The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye > contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that > moment in time he's really with us. Otherwise he's in his own little > world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and > thinking th at that should be my PJ, and instead I'm still changing > his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so > there's no way he can play outside. I've been in the garden and seen > a slug in his mouth. He'll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. > It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, > he'd eat that. He'd eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn't > watching. When he was younger, he used to smear> > the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring > in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He's still got a baby > gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he's at home, he > spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a > tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on > television. He'll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking > his body an d nodding. He's always smiling, always got a grin on his > face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it > would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all > the foods that kids love. He'd eat a whole trifle by himself if I let > him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14-year-> olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok > trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I'm > doing. But they don't know how extra hard it is behind closed > doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed.> > For a split second, I thought, "If I do something stupid, like > take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after." > But I thought about my other boys. And I'd never have taken PJ with > me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. BR>> I've also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I'm ashamed that I > even thought that way. I'm a strong person, but I think there are a > lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably > wasn't strong enough to go to her doctor and say, "I feel suicidal". > It's like admitting defeat, that you can't look after your own > children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken > away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. > He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with > bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he > couldn't do the same things as before. But I didn't really know > anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health> > visitor said that he didn't have very good eye contact. A > paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and > suggested nurser y, so that he could be around other children. He > didn't come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of > children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing > the signs of autism. That's when I realised he was autistic. I knew > it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, > autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a > psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering > people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special-> needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the > women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew > something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I'd lost > him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked > like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and> >&nb sp; here was this strange little person that I'd have for the rest of > my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I > still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can't get > my head round it. When it's your child, it's devastating. And what > have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in > God but I'm angry with Him because He's made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn't > received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn't understand it so > it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so > angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it's > just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you > open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your > mind. You don't want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. > You feel like running out of the house screaming, but yo u can't. It's > as if someone's ripped out my heart. People say, "I don't know how > you do it, ine," but I have> > to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he > depends on me. PJ's condition affected my relationship with PJ's > father — it broke us up. We'd been together for five years. I don't > think he could cope, although he's still in contact with Rick. When I > met , he said, "I don't know if I can cope with this." I told > him, "Thank you for being honest with me." It's very hard on him, > because he's not PJ's dad, but 's so good with him. He won't > change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the > shops. And he'll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I've > lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a > bubble bath and just chill. I'm told that he'll probably get a pl ace > somewhere else. I've noticed that social services provision has > improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had > Down's syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he > starts playing up, people see him screaming at> > the top of his lungs and think, "Why can' t she control her own > kid?" People look really, really shocked. I can't take him shopping, > and he misses out on his cousins' birthday parties because he can't > cope with crowds. He can't visit Santa at Christmas. And now it's > such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He's got spots, and > I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to > wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he'll be > getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens > the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won't be in BR>> control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he's going to be bigger > than me. His brother's 6ft tall. He's very placid now but what if > he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope > that he'll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into > sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though > Rick and love PJ and worship the> > ground he walks on, I don't want either of them to look after him > out of duty. I don't want their lives ruined. I'd like to meet > other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to > have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, > when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and > said, "Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy." And someone > else would say, "Oh, my kid did that last week." People need to know > t hat they're not the only ones with severely autistic children. > Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 > Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 > 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk > > PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if > his nappy has leaked — "nine times out of ten", she says — and > changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms > hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine > dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs > around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives > to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. "PJ loves going > to school," ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and > some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower > and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and > , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then > bed.> > Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close> > Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children's Rescue Society, > says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had > little choice. > > "The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not > paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost > us £200,000 to keep it open." ine Newman, director of children's > services for Manchester City Council, said: "It is regrettable that > Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the > council and the families of the young people who use it. We are > working with them to find a suitable alternative." ELLA STIMSON> > > > > > > > > > ---------------------------------> > Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low > rates.> >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Yes! Do! Get this name and let's talk to him about the benefits of thimerosal...we should all take a pill of ethylmercury EVERYDAY for good health and highly effective mental function!! > > > > They're not just defending it. In some cases, they're actively > working to overturn legislation in order to inject toxic waste into > the kids. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2006 Report Share Posted April 20, 2006 Yes! Do! Get this name and let's talk to him about the benefits of thimerosal...we should all take a pill of ethylmercury EVERYDAY for good health and highly effective mental function!! > > > > They're not just defending it. In some cases, they're actively > working to overturn legislation in order to inject toxic waste into > the kids. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 21, 2006 Report Share Posted April 21, 2006 like it would matter........ You know...its all for the greater good. > > > > I've got a friend with twin 6-year-old severely autistic boys. Not > > potty-trained non-verbal nightmare. They weighed 6 pounds when they > got > > 62.5 micrograms of ethylmercury from 3 vaccines, all on the same > day. I > > know the rest of the world does not give a shit, but this amount of > > mercury EXCEEDS THE FDA METHYLMERCURY LIMIT BY 220X. AND PEOPLE ARE > > DEFENDING THIS, CAN YOU @#$%^ & *! BELIEVE IT?! It's a friggin miracle > > that half of these parents have not already jumped off a bridge. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 21, 2006 Report Share Posted April 21, 2006 Prov 29:18 Where there is no vision, the people perish I actually cringe every time I read about a parent slamming their kid's head into a wall or beating him or her to death, and can't help thinking and wondering about it. What was that deacon thinking about when he squashed that poor kid to death? I understand what Boyd Haley meant by describing things for us parents as "mad child disease". Maybe some parent's kid got the light-dusting or autism-lite as its' called and they don't understand. Before a friend was willing to whisper to us, your son looks like he has autism, and we were off on the road to recovery, would run for days on three hour's worth of sleep. He would run twenty-two hours at a time, grab a thirty minute nap and run another twenty hours. What got me mad was he always had a thing for laying on my stomach and drilling his elbow into my throat. He had the Dusty bionic elbow routine down pat. Kerry and I learned to defeat his Chinese sleep torture by tagging up. Still for around two years he never got a normal night's sleep. Sometimes this meant an all-night session of Car TV, one of those auto sales cable channels. Red car. Blue car. Blue car. Green car. If I failed to repeat the car called out a 4 AM meltdown followed. didn't care about my sleep. So I just splashed some water on my face in the morning and went to work. You know when the needle on the stress meter is about to snap off, I always remember the kind folks that warned us autism transforms families into pariahs, the outcasts of society. Friends, family, doctors, insurance companies, schools, neighbors can and do disown us and our kids. It helps knowing this up front and makes taking the insolence not so hard. Fortunately we were told it'd be this way. Re: It's us against the world This article is painfully familiar. My seven year old is barely at the development of a two year old. And until recently, nothing we've done for her helped her development. That appears to be changing rather quickly on the Geiers protocol. I'll be able to report more in a few months.It grieves me to hear about the mother who took both hers and her son's life. I hope nobody judges her, because we all know what autism has done to so many families and marriages. We all need lots of love and support from those around us just to cope. Emotionally AND financially!>> This is a very hard read. We hear about this happening more in the UK than here. Either way, it is a heartbreaker.> > > > http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-2141717,00.html> > > The Times April 20, 2006> Times 2> > It's us against the worldAnjana Ahuja > Alison Davies jumped off the Humber Bridge with her autistic son after an anguished phone call saying she couldn't cope. A mother who faces similar pressures explains When ine Leonard heard about the tragic case of Alison Davies, who apparently committed suicide with her 12-year-old son , she was sad but not surprised. > NI_MPU('middle'); ine's son, , is 14 and has severe autism. PJ has a mental age of 2, cannot speak and is still in nappies. He attends a special-needs school and is taken out by carers two evenings a week for two-hour outings. Otherwise ine is a full-time carer (PJ has virtually no contact with his father, who split up with ine when PJ was two). She once briefly contemplated suicide but immediately sought help. She is now on antidepressants and has asked for counselling. ine lives in a three-bedroomed semi-detached house near Manchester with PJ, (her partner of two years) and Rick, her stepson from a previous relationship (Rick and PJ share the same father). For three years, PJ has spent two nights a month at the Mount Carmel, a care home run by a Catholic charity, but the home will close next month. Every year, ine spends a week in Spain without PJ; her sister Breda moves in to care for him. Of the case of> Alison and Davies, ine says: "It has happened before and it will happen again. That woman was the same age as me and her son was only two years younger than PJ. I read that could ride a bike and play football, which PJ has never been able to do. But I know what that poor woman went through. I know how scary it is to have a child that is getting bigger than you, and who you're going to lose control over. People should know the reality of caring for a child with severe autism. It's an absolute nightmare that you hope you'll wake up from, but you never do." Here, ine describes her life with PJ...> I know it's a terrible thing to say about your own flesh and blood, but PJ is like a little animal. He doesn't talk; he grunts. Nine times out of ten, PJ wants to run about wild. He's very, very hyperactive. He can't sit still for two minutes. That's why he's only 5½ stone (35kg). He's always jumping up and down, grunting, and he's bitten his hands so much out of frustration that the skin around his knuckles is dead. He does try to speak, and says "mum mum". But I know he'll never say, "I love you mum mum". If he ever spoke, those would be the few words I'd want to hear. > He knows that I'm his mum and that I love him with a passion. When I say, "Give me a big love (hug)", he'll offer me his cheek and cuddle me. He doesn't know how to kiss properly. When PJ tries to talk to people, he goes right into their face and starts babbling. The best times are when he smiles and gives me a little bit of eye contact. It gives me so much pleasure because I know that at that moment in time he's really with us. Otherwise he's in his own little world. The most upsetting thing is looking at other 14-year-olds and thinking that that should be my PJ, and instead I'm still changing his nappies. It breaks my heart. He is still a very young baby, so there's no way he can play outside. I've been in the garden and seen a slug in his mouth. He'll eat anything — worms, grass, mud, slugs. It sounds disgusting but if he could get faeces out of the toilet, he'd eat that. He'd eat the contents of his nappy if I wasn't watching. When he was younger, he used to smear> the stuff in his nappy around the room. We have laminate flooring in his bedroom and plastic covers over the bed. He's still got a baby gate on his bedroom door at 14, God love him. When he's at home, he spends most of his time walking up and down the kitchen, holding a tea towel for comfort. He also likes the music channels on television. He'll sit on the settee with his legs crossed, shaking his body and nodding. He's always smiling, always got a grin on his face. He eats the same food as me but I feed him, otherwise it would go everywhere. He loves Rice Krispies, sausages, trifle — all the foods that kids love. He'd eat a whole trifle by himself if I let him. I like to dress him well — in the same things that other 14-year-olds are wearing, and his brothers buy him nice things like Reebok trainers. The neighbours always tell me what a wonderful job I'm doing. But they don't know how extra hard it is behind closed doors. About two years ago, I got really depressed.> For a split second, I thought, "If I do something stupid, like take these pills, and die, then PJ will be really well looked after." But I thought about my other boys. And I'd never have taken PJ with me. I went to my doctor and told him. He gave me antidepressants. I've also arranged to go for counselling. Now, I'm ashamed that I even thought that way. I'm a strong person, but I think there are a lot of women who are not as strong as me. Alison Davies probably wasn't strong enough to go to her doctor and say, "I feel suicidal". It's like admitting defeat, that you can't look after your own children. I also think parents fear that their children will be taken away from them. As far as I know, PJ was normal when he was born. He was just starting to talk, at 2, when he got really poorly with bronchitis. He went into intensive care and when he came out, he couldn't do the same things as before. But I didn't really know anything was wrong until he was 2½, and the health> visitor said that he didn't have very good eye contact. A paediatrician told me he had mild learning difficulties, and suggested nursery, so that he could be around other children. He didn't come on. When he was 3, I went to a group run by parents of children with special needs, and a few of them said PJ was showing the signs of autism. That's when I realised he was autistic. I knew it in my heart and soul — I just needed someone to tell me. In fact, autism was diagnosed only last year. It needs to be diagnosed by a psychiatrist and we saw one only last year after I kept badgering people about it. He went to special-needs nursery, and then a special-needs school. I have a nephew with learning difficulties; I think the women in my family are carriers of a faulty gene. As soon as I knew something was wrong with PJ, when he was a baby, I felt like I'd lost him. It was as if someone had handed me back a shell who just looked like him. It was as if the real PJ had died, and> here was this strange little person that I'd have for the rest of my life. I was grieving for the perfect baby that I used to have. I still find it very very hard to accept him the way he is. I can't get my head round it. When it's your child, it's devastating. And what have I ever done to deserve this? I feel cheated. I still believe in God but I'm angry with Him because He's made my PJ suffer. PJ hasn't received his confirmation or communion. He wouldn't understand it so it would just be a big show for everyone else and I still feel so angry. You know what the problem is? Sometimes, I feel like it's just me and PJ against the world. You get so low. From the minute you open your eyes to the minute you close them, that child is on your mind. You don't want to lose your patience but your head is pounding. You feel like running out of the house screaming, but you can't. It's as if someone's ripped out my heart. People say, "I don't know how you do it, ine," but I have> to do it. PJ is my son. I think I love him more because I know he depends on me. PJ's condition affected my relationship with PJ's father — it broke us up. We'd been together for five years. I don't think he could cope, although he's still in contact with Rick. When I met , he said, "I don't know if I can cope with this." I told him, "Thank you for being honest with me." It's very hard on him, because he's not PJ's dad, but 's so good with him. He won't change nappies but will mind PJ if I want to pop to the shops. And he'll give PJ his food. With Mount Carmel closing, I've lost a lifeline. When PJ was away I would light candles, have a bubble bath and just chill. I'm told that he'll probably get a place somewhere else. I've noticed that social services provision has improved as PJ has got older, and his carers are brilliant. If PJ had Down's syndrome, everyone would feel sorry for him. But when he starts playing up, people see him screaming at> the top of his lungs and think, "Why can' t she control her own kid?" People look really, really shocked. I can't take him shopping, and he misses out on his cousins' birthday parties because he can't cope with crowds. He can't visit Santa at Christmas. And now it's such a shock to see him turning into a young man. He's got spots, and I shaved him for the first time two weeks ago. I cried. I have to wash him, and it upsets me to see him in the shower. Soon he'll be getting sexual urges, and that worries me big time. Puberty frightens the life out of any mother, and it scares me because I won't be in control. My baby is a young man now, and soon he's going to be bigger than me. His brother's 6ft tall. He's very placid now but what if he turned violent? I worry about what will happen when I die. I hope that he'll reach 21 before that happens, and he can move into sheltered accommodation with someone else his own age. Even though Rick and love PJ and worship the> ground he walks on, I don't want either of them to look after him out of duty. I don't want their lives ruined. I'd like to meet other parents in Manchester in the same position. Just someone to have a cup of tea with, or whatever. It would have helped so much if, when PJ was young, there was somewhere I could have gone and said, "Do you know what? PJ ate what was in his nappy." And someone else would say, "Oh, my kid did that last week." People need to know that they're not the only ones with severely autistic children. Parents wishing to contact ine can write to her c/o times2, 1 Pennington Street, London E98 1TT. National Autistic Society 0845 0704004 www.autism.org.uk Mind 0845 7660163 www.mind.org.uk > PJ's daily routine 6.30-7am PJ gets up. ine showers him if his nappy has leaked — "nine times out of ten", she says — and changes bedding. Rice Krispies plus 20mg atomoxetine, which calms hyperactivity. Nappy change and second shower, if needed. ine dresses PJ in school uniform and applies cream for eczema. PJ runs around to some music. Toilet and nappy change. 8.30am Taxi arrives to take PJ to school. He is accompanied by a carer. "PJ loves going to school," ine says. 3.45pm PJ returns. Has orange juice and some crisps. 6pm Tea followed by trifle or yoghurt. 7pm Shower and pyjamas. Orange juice. 7.30pm PJ shakes hands with Rick and , and chooses a teddy to take to bed. Quick runaround, then bed.> Why PJ's care home, his mother's lifeline, had to close> Kathy Batt, director of the Catholic Children's Rescue Society, says the decision to close Mount Carmel was agonising but they had little choice. > "The local authorities are not using us enough, and they are not paying enough for the services that they do use. It would have cost us £200,000 to keep it open." ine Newman, director of children's services for Manchester City Council, said: "It is regrettable that Mount Carmel should have to close. It is held in high regard by the council and the families of the young people who use it. We are working with them to find a suitable alternative." ELLA STIMSON> > > > > ---------------------------------> Messenger with Voice. PC-to-Phone calls for ridiculously low rates.> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 21, 2006 Report Share Posted April 21, 2006 What about Imus or Scarborough? Re: It's us against the world like it would matter........You know...its all for the greater good.> >> > I've got a friend with twin 6-year-old severely autistic boys. Not > > potty-trained non-verbal nightmare. They weighed 6 pounds when they > got > > 62.5 micrograms of ethylmercury from 3 vaccines, all on the same > day. I > > know the rest of the world does not give a shit, but this amount of > > mercury EXCEEDS THE FDA METHYLMERCURY LIMIT BY 220X. AND PEOPLE ARE > > DEFENDING THIS, CAN YOU @#$%^ & *! BELIEVE IT?! It's a friggin miracle > > that half of these parents have not already jumped off a bridge.> >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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