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The numbers continue to climb. 1-166
children develop Autism each year.
Why? They said it was the mercury in the vaccines. Then they could not
rule out the possibility of genetically distribution. It is a guessing
game. Unlike most other disorders and diseases that cause a person to
become handicapped, the autistic brain is still a mystery.
Autism has varying degrees of
disability. They call it a spectrum
disorder, because those afflicted can be very high functioning and
amazingly technical. They are so focused on one subject. This is a
category that many professors fall into. They have that one specialty
that they know absolutely everything about, but can they remember your
birthday? Probably not, but they can tell you what happened in their
field eighty years ago. This is called Asperger’s Syndrome, a variation
of autism. Then you have the very low functioning people on the autism
spectrum, who are barely able communicate. My nephew falls into the low
functioning category on the spectrum.
Many people wrongly assume that
autistic people are geniuses at
something. They say things like “Oh I saw Rainman, can he do that?”
Then I have to go into this long story about autism, and what they are
speaking of is known officially as an Autistic Savant, and no, he can’t
count cards so he is not coming to Vegas with you.
In his Autistic world, he just wants
to stay home and drive his mommy
crazy. He likes to watch Winnie the Pooh videos, and will rewind the
same sentence over and over and over and over and over and over, and
over…you get the idea. This is enough to drive a non-autistic person
crazy. Then one day, we heard him singing. He was nine. He was singing
along with Carly Simon to the Winnie the Pooh song. He hates it when
people sing, he will cover his ears, but he loves Carly Simon. It was
the first time we ever heard him sing. We almost cried. It still gives
me goose-bumps.
How do you tell if your child has
Autism? This is a question we hear
frequently. There are free rating scales available on the web today.
You will need a professional opinion, and if a diagnosis of Autism is
made, you can try to find resources from your state or local
government. There are local support groups available all over the
United States for parents and siblings. Some states do more to help
families with disabled children than others, so we strongly suggest you
look into what provisions your state has.
In the case of my nephew, we knew
something was wrong, when all the
other kids were doing things he was not doing. He did not want to play
with other kids. He acted like they were not there. To this day, he
does not play with toys, or other children. He could care less! He was
forming sentences one day, and then he just stopped. He lost his
ability to communicate. He stopped eating. He stopped everything.
Instead of moving forward in his abilities, it was as if time started
to go backwards.
On Christmas day his presents will
sit there if you don’t hand him one
to open. He is content to just have his videos that rewind. He has a
blank stare. It is unmistakable. You can see it in every school
picture. He is in a school that is trying to teach him life skills.
He loves to watch water go down a
drain, but now he also likes to watch
it go over the sink, and cascade over the bathtub, etc...so we are all
very cautious since my sister-in-law came home to ankle high water in
the living room. He must have seen someone watering a lawn, and decided
to water the carpet. He took the hose inside the house, and just turned
it on. Thank God I was not living there at the time, or I would have
had to move.
People will drive down our street,
and you can tell by their eye
movement, and the crinkled forehead look of disbelief that we let him
(on occasion), waste a little bit of water. We let him turn the water
on so he can watch it run down the driveway. Yes, it’s true. Sometime
we just let him. He has no excitement other than that, and he loves to
watch the water cut a path down the driveway. Now before you balk at
wasting water, what do your kids waste? He will never ride a bike,
drive a car, go out on a first date, go to the prom, get married, etc.
Most important, he will never initiate saying “I Love You” to his
mother. When he says it, she has to say it first to him, then he echo’s
it back to her. So what’s a little water in exchange for a little
happiness to someone who will never experience these other memorable
milestones in life?
One of the most important things you
can do for your Autistic child is
to include him or her in everyday events. Our Autism chapter will rent
out an entire movie theatre for families, so they can have a family
outing. When a new movie comes out, we try to arrange a Sunday morning
viewing in Schaumburg, Illinois, at Loews Movie Theatres. Without them
we would not have a venue for these kids.
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Lynn Strauch is also a founding
member of http://www.autismillinois.com
as well as the marketing director for 10000mb.com a web hosting company.
You may place our article on your
website as long as it remains in tact.
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