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Advocacy issues regarding autism treatment

in Texas

Messages In This Digest (3 Messages)

1a.

Re: daily care, tutoring, or individual

subject taught for special n From: asccnagla

2.

Free Autism Conference Presentations

From: Hunter Ryden

3.

They're Autistic - and They're in Love

From: mum592001

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Messages

1a.

Re: daily care, tutoring, or individual subject taught for special n

Posted by:

" asccnagla " nagla_alvin@... asccnagla

Sat Feb 21, 2009 9:56 am

(PST)

.

would you please email me off list if you would like me to post your

information on the ascc2 list.

Thanks,

Nagla

nagla_alvin@...

>

> We live in the Dallas area. I am a Special Education teacher (6

years experience) and have two boys with special needs (14 yr old

with Aspergers and 11 yr old who is Quadripegic).

> Are there families that could use quality care for their special

needs children during the day, so they could work? Or do you need a

qualified tutor or individual subjects taught. I am considering

coming home to do this. My special needs experience is from ECI -

High School...for students that are:

> 1.. Medically fragile

> 2.. Fragile X

> 3.. Downs syndrome

> 4.. G-tube fed

> 5.. Physically aggressive/Self Abusive

> 6.. Emotionally disturbed

> 7.. Quadriplegic

> 8.. Deaf/hearing impaired

> 9.. Blind/visually impaired

> 10.. Autism

> 11.. Cerebral palsy

> 12.. Cockaynes Syndrome

> 13.. Spina Bifida

> 14.. Gifted

> 15.. Etc and Etc...

> I am not afraid to learn and reseach to understand any physical or

mental disablity.

>

> Rahn

> ejrahn@...

>

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2.

Free Autism Conference Presentations

Posted by: "

Hunter Ryden " lhryden@... lhryden

Sat Feb 21, 2009 5:44 pm

(PST)

If

you cannot attend an autism conference this year, you can download

presentations from past conferences on the Autism One and DAN! websites for

free. There is a charge for the ASA and USAAA conference presentations.

There are some great ones to watch from the 2008 Autism One Conference by the

leading physicians and researchers. I especially liked the Geiers

presentation. Had I not watched Dr. Neubrander's presentation, I would

not have learned about B12-folinic acid injections which have helped my son

tremendously.

Here's the link:

http://www.autismone.org/download2008.cfm

For DAN! presentations, you can download them here:

http://www.autism.com/danwebcast/index.htm

Hunter Ryden

FEAT Austin (Families for Effective Autism Treatment)

www.feat-austin.org

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3.

They're Autistic - and They're in Love

Posted by:

" mum592001 " itcanfield@... mum592001

Sat Feb 21, 2009 6:15 pm

(PST)

Subject:

They're Autistic - and They're in Love

http://www.glamour.com/magazine/2009/02/theyre-autistic-and-theyre-in-love

They're Autistic†" and They're in Love

Lindsey Nebeker and Dave Hamrick each used to wonder if they'd ever

find lasting love.

Here's how they came together†" and how, side by side, they face the

world.

February 2, 2009

by Lynn

There are two bedrooms in the cozy , Mississippi, apartment:

Dave Hamrick's is like a dad's den, with a striped beige armchair and

a hanging map; Lindsey Nebeker's is darkly girly, with spiky dried

roses hung over a bed topped by a graphic leaf-print quilt. After work

on any given evening, Dave and Lindsey are likely to be orbiting the

home separately, doing their own thing. Dave may be flipping through

magazines, pausing to stare fixedly at design details or leaning in to

inhale the scent of the pages. Lindsey typically sits down to eat

alone†" from a particular plate with a particular napkin placed just

so†" and may slip so deeply into her own world that Dave has learned

to

whisper " Psst… " when he approaches so as to not startle her

and, on a

bad night, make her scream.

An observer might assume the two are amicable, if oddball, roommates.

But Lindsey, 27, and Dave, 29, are deeply in love. And they are

autistic. Every day of their relationship, these two beat tremendous

odds. That's because the very definition of autism suggests that for

adults with this disorder, love†" especially the lasting, live-in

kind

like Lindsey and Dave's†" is not in the cards at all.

About 1.5 million people in the United States (an estimated one fifth

of them are female) have autism, with varying degrees of severity. The

disorder can create sensory issues, like hypersensitivity to touch and

sound, and impair social skills. While some autistics are gifted

(often in music or math), they may be utterly baffled by the nuances

of small talk and eye contact. Expressing empathy can be virtually

impossible. Imagine a first date†" never a breeze for any of

us†" with

those limitations.

" I hear a lot of loneliness, sadness and fear among the autistic

adults I meet, " says Shore, author of Beyond the Wall and an

internationally recognized expert on autism who has the disorder

himself. " Without a natural understanding of communication, it's much

more difficult for people with autism to find and sustain an intimate

relationship. " They have hearts that feel; it's the funky wiring in

their brains that makes things so challenging.

Contrary to stereotype†" the Rain Man-esque loner who'd rather count

toothpicks than make friends†" adult autistics often know what

they're

missing out on and hope to find love, like anyone else. Since hanging

in a crowded bar or going on a blind date can be terrifying, many

connect through social-networking websites. Still, successful

relationships aren't very common, especially relationships in which

both partners have autism.

Lindsey and Dave have experienced their fair share of heartache: at

school, among so-called friends, in their search for partners. Yet

both have also summoned the courage to take a risk, perhaps the

biggest risk of their lives, for each other. Theirs is a

still-unfolding tale†" an unconventional story about unconditional

love.

Autism has been making headlines lately, especially now that more and

more children are being diagnosed with it. Celeb mom McCarthy,

for one, speaks and writes about her son's autism. The head writer for

Days of Our Lives developed a story line about an autistic child based

on her parental experience. Last fall, autism-awareness advocates

raised hell over the " Autism Shmautism " chapter in comic Denis

Leary's

latest book. Observations included " Yer kid is not autistic. He's just

stupid. Or lazy. Or both. "

The attention, good and bad, has made it somewhat easier for adult

autistics to find acceptance in the world. Former America's Next Top

Model contestant Kuzmich†" who has Asperger's syndrome

(considered an autism spectrum disorder) and who had trouble making

eye contact in TV interviews†" has become a role model. Danes

is

starring in a forthcoming HBO biopic about best-selling autistic

author Temple Grandin. Also helpful are sites like wrongplanet.net,

geared toward autistic adults, where users can find answers to

questions such as " How do I learn to flirt? "

Lindsey, an auburn-haired beauty with an artistic, bejeweled style you

might call peasant-goth, has been more fortunate than others

(including her severely autistic younger brother). When she was 19

months old and not talking, her parents tested her for autism, and she

got the benefit of early treatment. Today, her occasional wandering

gaze and the forced cheer in her voice make her seem just a bit off.

It takes effort, she says, not to sound " robotic. "

Even as Lindsey's speech caught up and her talent for playing piano

emerged, she developed habits typical of autistics: staring for hours

at the fibers of a carpet, for example, or performing soothing rituals

like stepping on cracks in the sidewalk. Classmates teased her

mercilessly, and she'd come home with kick me signs on her back. Real

friendship seemed painfully out of reach for the eccentric, awkward

girl who came across as blunt. In high school, when another student

asked Lindsey what she thought of her new makeup, Lindsey recalls, " I

told her it looked fake. She became silent, and I knew I had blown it. "

Depressed, Lindsey burned herself with a curling iron and cut her arms

with safety pins, hiding her injuries with sweatshirts. " Lindsey's

struggles were heartbreaking, " says her mother, Anne Nebeker, 63, a

retired teacher in Logan, Utah. " I was very anxious about how she

would manage as an adult and whether she would have a social life at

all or find love. "

Yet Lindsey's torment fueled a determination to learn the very skills

that eluded her. Her best resource: Dale Carnegie's self-help classic

How to Win Friends and Influence People. Advice as simple as " Be a

good listener " began to help, especially by college. The subtleties of

romance, however, remained a mystery. She'd fool around with a guy and

get dumped a few days or weeks later without explanation. " I had no

idea what I was doing that was scaring guys away, " says Lindsey. " I

felt like I had failed somehow. " In her early twenties, she gave up.

" I decided to focus on the friendships I'd managed to make, " she

continues, " and quit worrying about love altogether. "

That's when she met Dave. It was 2005, and they were at an autism

conference in Nashville. Diagnosed at three, Dave grew up with

pronounced fixations. He'd tote around empty Clorox bottles, and carry

a thermometer to assess the air temperature. Like Lindsey, he had

trouble making friends. Dave also has Tourette's syndrome, which can

overlap with autism; it's the cause of his near-constant head jerks

and occasional stuttering and grunting noises. His parents were told

he would always be in special education, never able to work or live on

his own. By fourth grade, he was in a mainstream class; he went on to

college, where he majored in meteorology.

When he and Lindsey met, Dave says, " I was hopeful, but realistic. "

They e-mailed and talked on the phone, then hung out again a few

months later at a conference in Virginia. On their last night there,

at a café, Dave took the plunge. Seeing Lindsey's hands resting on the

table, Dave reached for them. " When she didn't pull away, I knew I had

a positive result, " he says in his endearingly geeky, textbookish way.

The next day, he gave her a bouquet. " I'd never gotten flowers from

anyone, other than my dad after a piano recital, " says Lindsey.

Looking Dave in the eye was hard for her. So, she says, " it was a

relief to close my eyes and lean in to kiss him. I had my guard up,

but some part of me was willing to give it a try. "

Two years later, Lindsey and Dave moved in together. It's a big step

for any couple, but for autistics, it can mean merging two rigid ways

of life. Dave likes it cool; Lindsey likes it warm. Dave needs his

mattress firm; Lindsey needs hers soft. These may sound like trifles,

but what's merely irritating to others may be, for an autistic, 20

fingernails on 20 blackboards. They've discussed every last detail,

down to lightbulb preference.

When Dave awakes for work, Lindsey†" a night owl†" may

still be up from

the evening before. By noon, she's improvised a few riffs on her

beloved Steinway and is performing the 20-minute ritual of preparing

her three thermoses of coffee (touch of flavored syrup, drop of almond

milk, heat, adjust, repeat), which she will take with her to her

job…at Starbucks.

Being a barista isn't her Plan A. She dreams of studying photography

or special ed in grad school. Dave has turned his fixation on

temperature into a meteorology career (his e-mail name is

" weatheringautism " ). An entry-level forecaster at the National

Weather

Service, he finds his job exciting. It requires only limited

face-to-face contact with strangers; on a typical day, he gives

callers weather reports or heads out, alone, to release a weather balloon.

Both often come home exhausted, like actors who've been on stage all

day. That's one reason Lindsey and Dave need so much time alone after

work, and why they rarely call each other to check in and chat. " Every

day, we put out so much effort to speak properly in the workplace and

other social settings, " says Lindsey. " When we talk on the telephone,

our conversations normally don't last long because we get uneasy when

the small-talk script runs out. "

On weekends, they're more likely to prowl a bookstore than go to a

party or a restaurant. Their friends†" mostly from college and

conferences, some of whom are autistic†" don't live nearby. They

also

prefer to eat by themselves. Dave, as if he had superhero hearing, is

sensitive to the sound of chewing. He can eat only cooked

vegetables†" never raw, crunchy ones. Lindsey finds it so torturous

to

deviate from her food rituals that Dave's occasional invitation to

dine out can send her into sobs. " I just keep telling him, 'I'm so

sorry, I can't,' " she says. " I feel awful about it. "

Once in a while, with enough notice, Lindsey says yes and they'll head

to a bright and bustling pan-Asian buffet; it's the opposite of

romantic. Dave, lit up like a kid on Christmas Day, will happily put

away several crabs' worth of crab legs. Lindsey, wary of food she

didn't prepare herself, would rather prod stiffly at her wasabi than

moon over Dave. But what other diners can't see is something even more

tender than canoodling: Lindsey and Dave's willingness to step outside

their comfort zones to please each other.

Adjusting to sex took time. Lindsey was somewhat nervous about the

fact that she was a virgin and Dave was not. " Spontaneity was not an

option, " she says. " People with autism really have to mentally

prepare

for everything. " She felt bogged down by the procedures she'd

established in her head from seeing romantic movies like Pretty

Woman†" " OK, now I'm supposed to take off his shirt. "

Three years into

their relationship, though, they readily visit each other's beds.

Marriage, they say, is a possibility; children, they're less sure

about. Both worry about a genetic predisposition to autism, a valid

concern, especially given that both Lindsey and her brother have the

disorder. Even if they adopt, parenting seems perilous. " Dealing with

our rituals and sensory issues demands so much from us, " says Lindsey,

" that I don't know how we'd take care of someone else. "

Lindsey still gets depressed when people misunderstand her.

" Sometimes, after a bad experience, I shut myself off from the rest of

the world, " she says. " I don't have to face judgment in my

room. "

Recently, as a man at work was talking, she tuned out but kept nodding

and smiling (a frequent habit). Suddenly he blurted, " Did you hear

what I said? I got mugged last night. " Lindsey was crushed. " It's

exhausting, " she says, " to be 27 and still have to work at getting

interactions with people right. "

These are the times when she needs Dave most. " He reminds me that

tomorrow is another day, " she says. " He makes me feel like I'm worth

something. " Dave loves to stand behind her, wrap his arms around her

waist, press his nose into her hair and take long, deep breaths. Last

Valentine's Day, he festooned their bathroom mirror with plastic gel

hearts (he's been obsessed with the shape since he was a kid). They're

still there today.

Though connecting with others will be a lifelong struggle, Lindsey and

Dave have formed a bond that defies their autism. They may sometimes

come across as blunt to strangers, but speaking their own minds

clearly and directly†" just as they did when they moved in

together†" has

helped their relationship. There's none of the " if you have to even

ask what's wrong, then forget it " passive-aggressiveness many couples

experience, no expectation of mind reading. " People like Lindsey and

Dave put so much thought and dedication into making their relationship

work, " says Diane Twachtman-Cullen, Ph.D., a speech-language expert

who specializes in autism and knows the couple well. " ly, we

could all take a page from their playbook. "

Lindsey's mom is similarly awed. Anne Nebeker recalls that when

Lindsey and Dave came to visit her for the first time, " we went to a

local lake. The two of them were running around and splashing water at

each other, and I was so pleasantly surprised to see them doing a

normal-couple thing like that. Even when Lindsey calls him 'Hon' and

it sounds natural, not forced and rehearsed, I am amazed. I am so

happy to see her in love. "

These days, when Dave whispers as he approaches Lindsey, she'll

whisper back; it's become a term of endearment. " Psst…, "

he'll say

after he walks in the door and sees Lindsey in the living room. Her

face lights up when their eyes meet. " Psst! " she'll respond, smiling.

She knows that with Dave, she's in a safe place. " I'm so lucky to have

found him, " she says. " When I'm with him, I forget about my

challenges. "

Writer Lynn is a contributing editor at Glamour.

Photo: Courtesy of Gorden Nebeker

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