August 17th, 2008
We tried a new Mexican restaurant Saturday night. Charlie was initially game to try the rice and beans and licked up some guacamole, then put his hands over his ears (classic rock soundtrack playing) and moaned. I finished up my burrito and took him back to the black car, which is so much a […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 2 comments
August 17th, 2008
It being the “dog days of August”; us being on vacation at the beach house; the 2008 Olympics taking place; Charlie being a boy who loves loves loves to swim—-I am indulging in making a bit of an Olympic (”citius altius fortius“).
More than a few people have said to me that life raising an autistic […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 12 comments
August 11th, 2008
Maybe you’ve heard about 9-year-old Lin Hao—-a survivor of the Sichuan earthquake who dug himself out of the rubble and then went back and got two of his classmates out—who appeared in the super-spectacular Opening Ceremony of the Oympics and about whom, as Grace Ibay at Kids Health Notes, writes, Chinese bloggers are talking about:
Not […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 5 comments
August 5th, 2008
The dry land swimming machine: Now while I hazard that Charlie might like the sort of swinging aspect, swimming without the sensory pleasures of water—nope.
Tags: asd, asperger, autism, autism blog, disabilities blog, disability, Family, family blog, Health, machine, olympics, Parenting, pdd-nos, Sports, swimming, Technology
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By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 5 comments
July 31st, 2008
From the July 30th Hereford Times, a story that brings renewed meaning to the notion of “climbing every mountain”:
Three Herefordshire men with autism have scaled Wales’ highest mountain and raised more than £450.
Peter Woodcock, 21, Sam Peers, 24, and Nicholas Bartlett, 26, climbed Snowdon in aid of Lammas Lodge Care Home in Lugwardine where they […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 4 comments
July 19th, 2008
That’s how professional surfer Izzy Paskowitz describes Surfers Healing, the one-day surf camps for autistic children that he’s been holding for over a decade all over the US. Paskowitz’s own 17-year-old son, Isaiah, is autistic and there’s no place like the water for him. The Daily Yomiuri reports that families are starting to come from […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 8 comments
July 10th, 2008
On Tuesday night Charlie faked needing help. On Wednesday afternoon, he helped himself.
We went bowling with our little “special needs bowling league.” We ended up sharing a lane with a boy same age as Charlie, with an older and younger sister—both of whom were easily assisting their brother. They brought over a metal contraption with […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 7 comments
June 22nd, 2008
A study underway at the University of Michigan seeks to get 60% of kids with disabilities (Down syndrome, autism) riding a bike in five days. Afterwards, the children are tracked for a year to chart the effects on their emotions and intelligence. Kinesiology division professor Dale Ulrich is overseeing the study; he started to work […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 21 comments
June 18th, 2008
Kendall Bailey is 19 years old, 6 foot 6, and a champion swimmer headed for the Paralympics in Beijing this September—–but he was almost rendered ineligible by the United States itself. Bailey has cerebral palsy, mental retardation, autism, and Klinefelter’s syndrome, which prevents his body from producing testosterone. Today’s New York Times profiles his dream […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 8 comments
June 17th, 2008
Two brothers, Jack and James Collier of Gastonia, North Carolina, created Aces for Autism, a week-long tennis clinic for autistic children. They came up with the idea in honor of their 12-year-old sister, Oliver. From the Gaston Gazette:
“There aren’t really a whole lot of sports opportunities for kids with autism,” said James, 15. “Olivia loves […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 5 comments
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