Photo (c) 2010 Kelly Nicolaisen |
Here are some very cool upcoming autism events, iPad-related and otherwise.
- November 20th: Mellow Militia, developers of the Tiki Toss 3D app, will be donating an iPad and six art boards for auction at The Surfers Healing Art Benefit and an iPod touch to The Surfing Santa Contest on November 20, 2010 in Southern California.
- November 20th: TPGA contributor Susan Walton will be speaking about her new book Coloring Outside Autism's Lines at Kepler's in Menlo Park, at 7 PM. I am totally going.
- November 27: Come see pianist and autism dad Stephen Prutsman in a benefit performance for the Azure Program, San Francisco's Summer Camp for Children on the Autism Spectrum. I am very much going to try to go.
Everything is coming together for The Thinking Person's Guide to Autism book. I keep writing how blown away we are by the content -- both in quality (damn!) and quantity (hence the delays). We're going to be announcing the contributors on Tuesday November 30th, so stay tuned.
I interviewed three wonderful parents of wonderful kids with cerebral palsy for BlogHer: Jennifer Byde Myers, Ellen Seidman, and Bridget Henry. As I wrote,
"I'm used to Leo's quirks, I'm comfortable with them, they're just one part of the boy I love so much. But there's as much of an onus on me as there is on anyone else to get more familiar with other children with special needs and their stories."These families' stories are so different and so important; I hope you learn as much and love those boys as much as I now do.
On the family front:
- Leo took cold pizza for his school lunch yesterday, which was his first non-PB&J lunch in five years.
- He also got his little sister a snack -- complete with plate -- yesterday upon her request instead of trying to thump her. I was not involved at all -- no prompting, no encouraging, just a bystander with mouth agape. I'm going to get to use that incident for weeks, to remind Mali that her brother can be awesome. Though I hope socially savvy Miss Mali doesn't start taking advantage of her sometimes-too-obedient brother.
- It took Mali four months but: this week she finally had five days of good behavior in a row in both her Spanish and English classes! I'd been having to get in-person updates from her teachers ever day after school, since August. Her reward: PLANTS VS ZOMBIIIES.
- Mali's teacher conference went splendidly. Her primary teacher said that after a rocky rocky start, our girl's classroom performance is now all the things a parent wants to hear but which tend to bore or irritate readers.
- Iz's Science teacher said similar things about Iz. That class is legendarily difficult, with proportionately problematic parent-teacher conferences. The teacher requested a conference with me because she wanted a happy conference, and to pat our girl on the head for being a synthesizer rather than a regurgitator.
- Iz is joining a club soccer team. Lord help us. She and Seymour are beyond thrilled. And it's a team that focuses on skills-building, not just planning scorched-earth defeats. I guess this was inevitable, once we had the minivan.
I know I've read or responded to most of these things on Twitter, but I have to say...
ReplyDeleteIsn't it nice to be reminded that the *ahem* "fecal maelstrom" doesn't last forever? Sometimes, we really DO get rainbows and unicorns! ;-)
I'm so proud of them all!!!
ReplyDeleteAlso, I have an album for Iz which I think she'll like.
Mali is really going to enjoy Plants vs. Zombies. Moomin and I are experts at it if she has any questions!
Must be something in the air! My son has just started eating pizza again after i dont know how many years!
ReplyDelete