All the best,
Saturday, December 29, 2012
Holiday greetings 2012!
All the best,
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Talking turkey
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Live Blog, Part the Third
Power has remained on (i.e., no one has tried to simulate a power outage in our house -- cough -- MIKE HAMILTON -- cough).
Mike is driving to work this morning. No school for the kids. Still chilly and rainy, but all I've seen looking out our windows is some downed patio furniture at a neighbor's house. So we were lucky. There don't seem to be as many power outages in the area as I expected, so I imagine we will all have school tomorrow.
Thinking of all the New Yorkers/ New Jerseyans (?) out there. We lucked out around here.
3:06 pm:
The school I work in follows Prince George's County Public Schools for weather-related closings. PGCPS is open for business tomorrow, which means I will be getting my usual early start tomorrow. No announcements from Anne Arundel County yet, but I imagine they don't want to burn through three snow days before the end of October.
Le Pup had a session with the dog trainer this morning. Unfortunately, I think she smells the experience on him, because she is never particularly happy to see him. Either that, or the breeder graduated her from some kind of Protect the Homestead from Old(ish) Bearded Guys Certification Program. I wonder if or when Cookie might figure out that she's small.
Monday, October 29, 2012
Live Blog, Part Deux
Hurricane Sandy live blog
6 pm:
Off to the neighborhood hurricane party across the street! Our neighbor Mark has already posted on Facebook about his liquor stash (vaulting him to the top of our List of Houses to Loot if the Worst Happens), and is now making hurricanes in honor of today's weather disturbance. It takes more than 45 mph wind gusts to deter the Putnam Lane Driveway Drinking Society (or in this case, the Putnam Lane Get Away from the Windows Society).
5:14 pm:
Maddie says to her friend Emily via FaceTime: "Guess what I can do with my pants?"
Since I don't want to be arrested as a purveyor of internet porn, I decide to check what is happening with said pants. Luckily, her broadcast-worthy trouser feat was pulling the waistband up to her armpits.
Whew. A mega-dork, instead of a perv.
4:55 pm:
![]() |
Last look today at Patio Lake. |
4:40 pm:
So you're saying it isn't over? |
![]() |
Facetiming with a friend down the street about how bored they are. |
3:33 pm
Lights just flickered. One possible plus to a power outage: Leah is currently stimming on PBS Kids. Losing power would end my daydream of asking Lauren and her merry band of American Girl huntresses to take out the television.
3:30 pm
3:15 pm:
Lauren is teaching her American Girl to hunt, aided and abetted by her friend Shannon. Maybe that's the next Girl of the Year -- Artemis, comes complete with bow and arrow set, wall-mountable stag head, and chastity belt. Who wants to volunteer to write the required four-book set?
3:09 pm:
Mike gave the mutt some peanuts. Cookie expressed her thanks by barfing on the couch. Thank God for IKEA couches with removable slipcovers.
2:50 pm:
![]() |
Provisions check. Looking grim. |
1:55 pm:
![]() |
Hardware out, Maddie has her first popcorn in more than a year. |
1:25 pm:
11:45 am:
![]() |
The rain is picking up and our usual patio lake starts to form. |
10:55 am:
On a conference call from my kitchen office (yay, unused outlets). |
Maddie's orthodontist moved up her appointment from tomorrow so the lip bumper and palate expander come out at noon. Just in time for chewy Halloween candy.
10:13 am:
For the handful of people who have not seen this one on Facebook. It came in via e-mail this morning:
10:05 am:
One foul-weather perk: Cookie is extremely mellow. No sitting on my head, no arguments with the Swiffer, no standing on the deck protecting the homestead from random noises.
10 am:
(Runs inside and hides under bed)
9:20 am:
![]() |
Even better: Hurricane bacon and pancakes! |
9:13 am:
Hurricane bacon!
9:03 am:
Did I remember to mention that Notre Dame is 8-0? No? Well, GO IRISH!!
8:47 am:
As long as we're blogging, we might as well play a little Hamilton family catch-up. Maddie has revised her previous stance on having babies.
Not too long ago, she announced, "When I'm ready to have babies, I will go to the orphanage and ask for a boy who's potty-trained. Diapers are gross."
8:12 am:
![]() |
Um ... I need to go NOW. This is the routine, right? |
![]() |
So far, not much wind but a fair amount of rain. |
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Why a cure?
Arundel High School educates a spectrum of teens with autism, in both the functional life skills program and the general education classes. I knew going in that a few of this year's walk participants have autism themselves, and it made me wonder how they might feel about the word 'curing' in TACA's name. Not everyone loves a group that talks about a cure. Now and then, I'm unfriended on Facebook, or a comment reaches my ears that TACA volunteers are off the wall or simply terrible people. That's fine. I can take it. I wanted this audience to understand one of the basic truths of my life: I can advocate for treatments and even cures and still love my child just as she is. The two coexist just fine.
After introducing TACA, saying my thank-yous, and telling them they are the best class ever (as I do every year), this is what I told them:
What do we mean when we talk about curing autism? I'll tell you what it doesn't mean: It doesn't mean taking away the unique gifts some people on the autism spectrum have. Kids with autism are some of the funniest, smartest people I know. Some have gifts in music or in art, or can do cool things that most of us can't. I don't want to take away who they are. But I would love to make it easier for them to sit in a classroom where people are crumpling papers or tapping pens -- all the noises you probably hear in your classes every day -- without wanting to come out of their skins.
But as you've already heard today, autism is a spectrum. I see some people wearing the light blue walk t-shirts. I've also see plenty or darker blue shirts out there. All of those shirts are blue, but they are a lot of different shades of blue. The autism spectrum is like that too. On one end, we have the people with unique talents. In another place on the spectrum are people who have trouble expressing themselves.
Imagine for a minute the last time you were sick. You've probably all had a day this year when you woke up in the morning and didn't feel well. Maybe you had a sore throat, or the flu, or a stomach bug. You wake up in the morning and you know you can't go to school. What's the first thing you do? You come downstairs, tell your mom or dad, 'my throat hurts,' 'my stomach hurts,' 'I have the flu,' 'I have the West Nile virus.'
But what if you can't talk? What if you don't have the skills to express how you're feeling? How will you let people know you're sick? If you have autism, and you can't talk, the adults in your life probably use a lot of picture schedules and checklists to tell you what you need to do every day. Even while you're feeling like you might throw up within the next two minutes, you have someone waving something in your face, telling you it's time to brush your teeth or it's time to do math, when all you want to do is curl up and wait to feel better. Imagine how you might react to that. You might throw that schedule right back at the person who's giving it to you. I know kids who have banged their heads against the wall when they're in pain, or who lie on the floor and cry or scream, because that's what they can think of to do when something is wrong. My daughter can talk, but she's not good at telling me how she's feeling. Sometimes I can't tell that she's sick until she gets upset. That's hard for me to deal with, but a million times harder for her.
As freshmen in high school, you've probably all had a lousy day at school before too. Maybe when you arrive home, you tell one of your parents about this kid who was messing with you, or that teacher who yelled at you. Your parents probably try to find the right words to comfort you, but as a parent, I can tell you that inside they're sad. It hurts them too because they love you.
I can also tell you that if and when my daughter is able to do that with me, inside I'll be cheering. I will try to say and do all the right things to comfort her, but if you hear the sounds of a party coming from Crofton, that will be me. Not because I like seeing my child unhappy (I don't), but because I will know that we have found one of the biggest pieces of our autism puzzle. If she can tell me when something is wrong, my job to keep her safe, healthy, and happy just got a whole lot easier. Those are the things we need to cure.
I'm not trying to create a cookie-cutter child, or the prom queen or the class president. I'll settle for a long conversation. I talk with doctors and specialists and other parents because in the end, I want to talk to my daughter.
Monday, April 23, 2012
Leah's portfolio: The Phineas and Ferb series
At home, she often likes to subject her stuffed toys to a photo shoot. I find new poses on my iPhone camera from time to time.
I have no idea why the socks are important. Right now, wherever Phineas and Ferb go, the fuzzy socks accompany them.
Her first art class assignment was to create something out of cut/torn paper. No drawing. A challenge for our girl, who loves her paper and crayons. It was her first time creating art like this.
Loved this one. One of Ferb's feet was a casualty of the wind that day.
Another week, the kids were told to create an object with masking tape and color around it. She tore off little bits of tape and made a masking-tape Phineas and Ferb.
Then they had to remove the tape. Leah said, "Where are Phineas and Ferb?"
She picked up her crayons and restored order:
The series continued:
One week they had to draw feelings. Phineas and Ferb experienced a range of emotions:
The second part of that day's project was to depict two feelings on two sides of a mask. Leah made two sides -- one was Phineas ...
... and the other was Ferb.
She threw a fit during the origami activity on the last day of class. I have a feeling she was annoyed that she could not find a way to add to her Phineas and Ferb collection. Not even the prospect of making an origami Hello Kitty cheered her up.
To borrow a quote from the theme song, "Seriously, this is Ferbtastic."
Friday, March 30, 2012
New numbers, same reality
One in 88 hit me hard.
I wasn't surprised, sadly. This isn't the first time since Leah's diagnosis that the autism rate has taken a jump in the wrong direction. But this one felt more personal. The CDC calculated one in 88 using children born in 2000. Maryland was one of the states in the study, and our school district was one of the ones surveyed.
Leah was part of this new equation.
The announcement came with the CDC's usual platitudes about better diagnosis, and my usual frustration that the majority of US journalists parrot this information without questioning it. Interview a group of veteran special educators, and they'll tell you what the government and the medical community refuse to acknowledge: A couple of decades ago this was a far, far rarer disorder than it is today. The claims of better detection and diagnoses imply that there are significant numbers of adults with autism who have been mislabeled or have never been found. I'd love to see just one journalist choose to look for them, though I know how that story will turn out. They won't find much. If Leah and her special education classmates were 10, 15, or even 20 years older, there still would have been no mistaking them. They are children affected by autism.
It pains me that a growing number of families will be walking this walk, while we wait for more people to ask the right questions. When I read the news, I wonder how many of the reporters have looked away from the numbers long enough to contemplate what it's like to live in a family of a child with autism. If a reporter ever calls, I'll be happy to talk.
I'd tell them about Leah's younger sisters, twins, who practiced crawling in waiting rooms. They still look with envy at the gym equipment at the occupational therapy clinic. Therapists have come in and out of our house to work with Leah since Lauren and Maddie were born. I wonder how many families would welcome the idea that every one of their child's teachers comes through their front door, sidesteps their clutter, glimpses sibling squabbles, sees every incomplete chore, and hears snippets of phone calls now and then. Luckily many of Leah's therapists have welcomed all three of our children into their hearts, and even reconfigured plans sometimes to accommodate little sisters who hate to be left out. If you want Hamilton gossip, bypass the neighbors and go straight to the therapists.
I'd point out that the therapists don't work for free, although many of them have been worth ten times their salaries. Leah has been on a waiting list for more than seven years. When her number finally comes up (this summer, we hope), we'll have some funding to help her, almost nine years after her diagnosis. Our insurance doesn't cover the home therapies, which are funded from our own bank accounts, with help from extremely devoted grandparents. We pay out-of-pocket for specialists who charge hundreds of dollars an hour. They don't take insurance, but they do know autism (as much as anyone does), so we rely on them to understand our daughter's body in ways our pediatrician does not. Lab tests, supplements, prescriptions? Hundreds a month, even with insurance.
I'd probably suggest that Leah's social skills teacher (who also directs the work of the aforementioned therapists) is newsworthy in her own right, for the fantastic progress her students make. We drive 45 minutes each way every Saturday morning to take Leah to her group. Miss Angel (yes, really) has been part of our lives -- no, part of our family -- since Leah was four. Weekend sports and activities have to fit around the group schedule. Family outings? Not on Saturdays.
Not that family trips are all that relaxing. We think about exits before we arrive at entrances, and play a Hamilton version of zone defense. The parent covering Leah may have to leave a movie early or sit on a museum bench until a meltdown plays itself out. Disney World was the happiest place on earth for us until Leah was done for the day. Her way of letting us know was to throw her shoe overboard on the Small World ride. Enough years have passed that I can laugh about the time she came down the slide at Chick-Fil-A buck naked. At the time, I mentally cursed the glass playground enclosure and sent one of her two-year-old sisters up the structure to find her clothes. Her days of indiscriminate stripping are over, but she hasn't discovered modesty yet, either. Think Adam and Eve before they wanted fig leaves. Cute when kids are two or three. Leah will be 12 this summer.
I'd challenge anyone who asks to walk in the shoes of a sibling, who might find herself in the wrong place during a meltdown, and come out of it with a torn picture, a thrown toy, or a whack on the arm. Picture a child so anxious, she stopped talking to anyone for a couple of very long months, and took a couple of years to resume talking to friends. Imagine wondering, as a parent, what you could have done better to make that child feel safe.
While I could give a reporter an earful about the stress, the cost, the thousands of ways a family with autism feels utterly alone, I'd be leaving out part of the story if I withheld the moments of genuine joy, unlike any we might have experienced without autism. Leah's sense of humor and her capacity for love were not stolen by her autism, and she is probably happier overall than most 11-going-on-12-year-olds. We don't argue about clothes. Her fashion sense is simple, and easily satisfied -- if it's blue, or has Hello Kitty on it, it's good. The only time she shows interest in a cell phone is when she borrows mine to play games on it. When she looks me right in the eye (yes, she can do that) and says, softly, "Mommy," I cannot imagine my heart feeling more full. She will seek me out, always, even during the years when Lauren and Maddie will find my presence in their world annoying. I have a feeling that will be a huge perk.
This is what life with our 1 in 88 is like. Ask another family, they'll tell you a different story, with a few similar plot points: Not enough funding, not enough answers, not enough urgency from a government that will one day have to step in and take care of a lot of these children. The numbers are new, but the reality is the same.
If you want to help families with autism, visit our Family and Friends fundraising page. Once again, we are supporting TACA.
My nephew thinks I have an eating problem
During my visit to California in January, Liam insisted that my lap was the best seat at the table, and decided he needed to help me finish my dinner.