appleeater
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Appleeater, OT, do you know this book?:
http://www.amazon.com/House-Rules-Novel-Jodi-Picoult/dp/0743296443
if yes, what do you think of it?
Fuzzy
I'll be sure to look out for this, but I am in Canada and not everything BBC offers our broadcasting corpo buys from UK, sadly.I think the BBC's new programme (2/6 episodes released so far) called 'The A Word' does a better job of portraying both the difficulties of parents with a special needs child (in this just case diagnosed). They are very much struggling with knowing their son has autism but Joe himself still has a personality outside of his diagnosis.
I'm hopeful they will come to be more accepting of his diagnosis as the programme goes on.
I might be out of line, since I don't know the subject at all, except what I happen upon on documentaries and books like House Rules, or Mark Haddon's "The Curious ......" etc, but something makes me think since autism is such a wide spectrum
(and despite some progress achieved, still so terra incognita) that maybe your cousin was simply never
treated by someone as talented as a guy who treated a girl I saw once in a docu on PBS (I think).
She was like your cousin - violent, delayed and no language. Her parents somehow got in touch with a guy who worked at Dolphin Therapy Centre - I don't remeber where, though.
Dolphins weren't even as important as they were being used like a treat is for a dog. What was clear to me the guy was genius
as psychotherapist. A GENIUS.
SO talented as a teacher and healer.
Using dolphins, he managed to simply train the girl to get the behaviour he wanted from her. and since she yearned to swim with the dolphin, to touch the dolphin, she started to talk and obey simple commands. and after a while she absorbed a lot of positive behaviour!
And this was girl who every other professional in the field declared as "unreachable".
What struck me most he had oodles of patience, was very, very calm and wouldn't take no for an answer (but that doesn't mean
he was a bully, no, he took the time needed).
It was obvious, at least to me, everything can be achieved as long as it is with a special person.
For comparison, such special person to deal with dogs is Cesar Millan. Or, Ann Sullivan was, the Helen Keller teacher.
But ... - how many Cesars Millan or Anns Sullivan are out there, right?
Likewise, how many this talented psychotherapist such as this guy exist, eh? it is easy to learn something by work
and copy-apply 'the learned' into practice, but to do it with instinct, with "feeling the blues" (if you get my drift)- for this
you need the gift.
and that's why I suspect your cousin perhaps could have been better,
but, there simply is not enough such intuitive, gifted specialist out there so he simply wasn't lucky to happen upon such.
what do you think?
Fuzzy
My hearing is a relatively similar shape but further down the graph. I have what would be considered a very odd fitting for my loss bit it works for me. I fine certain noises painful and also not that useful to comprehension as I can't tolerate them existing, pls plus it's all distorted. I can HEAR the frequencies, but not in the right order, 8k sounds lower than 4, not higher. Some tones feel like there's a bug in my ear but there's no sound. Audios can never agree what I should do about those in my test, with some refusing to believe it's a possibility.
So I have power domes to block out unprocessed sound, really heavy settings for cutting out sudden sounds, and also quite a strong Soundrecover, even though it's not a match to my audiogram. That means it moves the painful noises to a place where I can make use of them and hear them without pain. They're actually moving sounds to a place where my thresholds are WORSE to help me hear them better. Works for me, and I keep a print of the settings I like and any new aids I tell them "This is crazy, but it's how I want them".