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autism acceptance

What do you need?

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What do you need?

What do you need?

The question is banging at the door I’ve closed in my mind as I lock myself away in my mental closet of a pity party, sitting on the cold dark floor, letting the tears continue to fall.

What do you need?” It demands from me.

Like my four-year-olds, I sit in the time-out crying, ashamed, and unable to find the words. 

I don’t know!” I want to shout back. “Don’t you think if I knew, I’d know how to ask for it? Or better yet, get it for myself? I’m fully capable.

As I breathe, I can feel the weight in my chest and I whisper… “I need this pandemic to be over.

The lack of response confirms what I already know, that it’s not over, not even close, and it may get far worse before it gets better.

What do you need?” The ask is softer this time, almost with more patience and understanding.

As the tears continue to fall, and I find a steadier breath, I try to think logically, of actual problems I’m trying to solve, not just the overwhelming feeling of weight… What are the little things that could help? 

The obvious come to mind: I need a break. I need sleep. I need to not answer to someone long enough to get myself from the 10 level of breaking, back down to a 2 or 3… that livable weight of reality that is easier to manage… When I’m at a 2 or a 3, if a twin pulls the other’s hair, or throws their cereal, a simple “whoops, we need gentle hands”, or “oh no, our cereal escaped our bowl” is my automatic response. When I’m at a 10, or a 12 like I feel like I am now, after another sleepless night with autism, my responses are not quite as kind. I’m a shadow of the parent I want to be, unrecognizably cold and shut down.

So, what do you need?” it probes again.

How do I get to a 2 or a 3? How did I before COVID?

I had scheduled time… scheduled time that was mine… mine without interruption. Yes, there was a list of things to accomplish, but it was my choice in how they were done. 

It’s been months since my children went to school, or could be taken on adventure for a few hours so I could find quiet. Yes, I could leave, but where would I go?

“Last time… what do you need?” I know my time is running out. The violins are quieting. And reality is calling. Game time decision. Wash your face, girl, or let the world see you crumble.

The truth is… I’ve operated on less sleep. I have three children, and survived through breastfeeding twins. I’ve done this. My muscle memory is already trained and built. I think I’m just resentful that I thought this chapter of my life would be over by now, but instead, plays on repeat.

The truth is… I do have help. I have an incredible nanny who comes five days a week to help me navigate what lately feels like impossible moments of parenting autism during a pandemic to navigate. 

The truth is… I find breaks. We gave up working on the twins’ school weeks ago when the baby napped so I could take the break. And on the nights I really don’t sleep, those two hours are enough of a power nap to keep me on track.

“Think”, the voice smiles, “What do you need?”

And then it hits me.

I need to know it gets better.

I need to know we’re not alone in this, and that someone else has survived it.

I need to know that this type of chapter in raising littles with autism, or twin boys, or just three kids in general didn’t destroy someone else’s marriage, turn them into a cold, shut-down and mean monster of a person, or kept them from giving up completely.

I need to know that someone else’s special needs children who were up all night every night, (we’re going on 17 out of 22 nights right now) eventually slept through the night.

I need to know that kids will go back to school, and that the administration responsible for making that happen is aware of the repercussions this time is having on children who’s needs can’t be met with remote learning.

If I can find the lighthouse to focus on, I can weather the storm, and ride the waves. I can refocus, and celebrate the small wins that get us inches closer to that brighter destination. Not sure what it is yet, but anything is possible when you are willing to work for it, harder when necessary, never giving up.

I can feel my body rise, my hands find my cheeks to wipe the dampness, and my feet find the steps before them that walk me back to reality. 

This may not be over anytime soon: the extra strain that this pandemic has placed on so many of our realities. But if I can’t control the uncontrollable pandemic, I can choose to accept it, and only focus on what I can control. 

Dear reader… if you’ve been there, and gotten through it… share so that those of us who are in it, know we are not alone. And if you are in it with us, if any of this resonated, know we see you, and you are not alone. I have no idea how to fix it, but I promise to keep sharing in case it helps in any small way. 

Here’s to the lighthouses that make the waves of any storm feel possible to weather. May you find yours soon. XO

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Are you grieving?

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Are you grieving?

The five well-known stages of grief are: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. Until recently, I didn’t realize what I was feeling was grief, but now that I’ve made my way through all five, I thought I’d share in case helpful for anyone else…


I can remember hearing people say “this isn’t a big deal”… and “I’m not taking it that seriously.”

I mean- yes, I agreed on the toilet paper ridiculousness. Milk, bread, cheese- sure, but toilet paper? Still don’t get it…

But those first few weeks, I feel like we were all in denial. I know I was. 

I thought, “this is temporary, everything will go back to normal tomorrow.”

For me, it lasted about two weeks- and only a week of homeschooling, since our school gave us the first week “off”.

After the first week of filling out forms, taking photos, working on apps, and ignorantly believing I could create the school day in our home in a way that our autistic twins would find comfort and confidence in the routine that ended without warning. 

And then, the second stage hit: anger.

Granted, I had every right to be angry. I lost my nana, the matriarch in my family. But, I found that I started blaming anyone for anything because, quite simply, I was really mad.

I was not alone- my four-year-olds were with me. They yelled and screamed, and stomped their angry feet (calming tactic in this household). They were sick of doing the bear hunt, or practicing the letter “C”. And they started to take it out on each other. 

At one point, not that I’m proud to admit it, I was even mad at their school. How could they think that our autistic toddlers could actually get the services they need from home? (Clearly unfair of me to say, their administration is amazing, but I was mad, and needed to stomp my angry feet).

This lasted about a week for me. My practical self found it’s way to bargaining, and started to wish for any hope of summer school, claiming that if only this was happening to me ten years from now, when zoom calls could work for our kids… or if only I had arranged for services in the home to help the boys with OT and speech, then maybe we’d be able to provide a similar structure to what their used to… or if only I could set up an outdoor playground, complete with trampoline and a swing set, the boys would have everything they need to fill their days which means they’ll sleep at night

I’m not going to lie… I did convince my wife to let us get the trampoline, and it was worth every penny! (If you need one, check this one out. Our friend did a ton of research and got it, and when I researched it, couldn’t agree more, and it’s SO amazing for the kids and their energy needs.)

And a swing set is in her shop, freshly painted, ready to be assembled thanks to an incredible human being who not only gave it to us for free, but kept it in his garage all winter when we forgot to pick it up last fall. SERIOUSLY incredible human being.

And then, last week… I hit the depression stage. I let my anxiety get the best of me… every time I read a headline that said school was officially done for the semester, that summer school wouldn’t happen for our kids… and that some areas were going to stay at the current status quo until August… I just got sad. Unbearably overwhelmed and sad. As it was raining, I gave our crew permission to quit school that week, saying if we got anything done at all it would be too small a win to count. The drama got a hold of me (and my kids, mind you) where I started to feel like this was the end… the end of all that was good… and how on earth could we ever get through this?

Thank heavens this week I found acceptance.

It’s like out of no where, it hit me. Snap out of it, Christina! Yes, we don’t know exactly when this is going to end - but it will end. Yes, it may be almost a full 9 to 12 months of school the kids have missed, but they will go back to school. Yes, the really tragic loss in this country will continue on, but eventually, it will stop. 

If you find yourself in any of the other stages before acceptance, maybe this mindset will help you give yourself a little grace, because whether or not you’ve physically lost something, you are experience grief. You are grieving what you thought your life would be right now, and the reality that a loss of that size has had an earthquake of an impact on your life. On what it was, what you thought it would currently be, and what it is to become. 

Defining moments are happening around you, and if you are like me, stuck in any stage but acceptance, you might be missing them. 

Luca Window 2.jpg

Moments I’m now paying attention to include: 

  • Letting Jack need to hold my hand to fall asleep at night, and only mine. As exhausted as I am, he’s not going to want to do that forever. And as much as it’s DRIVING ME BONKERS that he literally needs me all day, it’s a humble reminder that one day he won’t need me, or even want me, and that will be the moments I’ll wish to have back. 

  • Mustering up the energy every time Luca locks eyes, and excitedly begs “two eyes, nose, sharp teeth”, waiting with such sweet anticipation for me to make a scary face, raise my hands up with pretend claws and say “It’s a bear!” and chase after him for the 100th time that hour because he’s fixated on “The Bear Hunt”. I know it’s because it’s a world in which he and I understand each other, where I’ve gotten to his level, and listened and validated what he needs, despite any communication barriers. 

  • Having a toddler during quarantine has been such a unique blessing. Alex lights up my day every time she barges through a room, shifting her hips in excitement, without a care int he world. Her smile and giggle just melt your heart. And as I watch her love her brothers, with such unfiltered admiration, learning from them, and teaching them at the same time, it gives me such needed perspective. And the moments when I feel her learning from my wife and I, like how when she’s really tired, and just wants to be loved, or give love, she will let you hold/rock her, and will softly rub your back, almost like she knows you need it, but with an equal encouragement asking you to rub hers in return. 

My best advice, after making it through all five stages, is to just hang in there. You’ve got this. Look for the facts in the situation that will help ground you in reality. Just make it to acceptance where you can remember that although this is hard, awful, sucks, and even unbearable at times, there’s such incredible collateral beauty in all of it. XO

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How Parents Are Made

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How Parents Are Made

How Parents Are Made

“Children with special needs aren’t sent to special parents, they make parents special.”

When that powerful quote found its way onto my social media feed, I caught my breath. In the similar way to how Shonda Rhimes resonates every Thursday night in her opening and closing lines of each Grey’s Anatomy episode, it challenged me.

Since the twins’ diagnosis, I’ve settled on the mentality that we were given this family, because Steph and I could be to them what someone else couldn’t. I’ve cringed at my poor parenting, and picked up pieces of my broken heart during the really hard moments of COVID-19, and all the chaos it’s ensued on their diagnosis that catch me when I’m too tired or too frustrated to be the best version of myself. The last few days, in particular, in dealing with the loss of my Nana, has left me emotionally spent, with very little energy available for anything else.

I have questioned a million times over the saying “you are only given what you can handle”, and used it to comfort the exhaustion away, with some naive hope that we were special and chosen for our kids because we had the patience, kindness and life experience that would make us exactly what they needed; exactly what our magical children deserved as they navigated life with the autism diagnosis.

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And then the coin flipped.

What if we weren’t here for them, but they were sent for us? What if they were gifted to us to make us better people, make us more patient, more kind, and provide the life experience in raising them that we will ultimately need for something bigger in this life? 

This last week has been tough in our journey with autism, particularly in managing the constant behavioral outbursts. Not only are they boys, but add the twin factor, and the little sense of remorse Luca feels (currently), with every weight of remorse that Jack feels (hopefully only currently as well) and it’s been a non-stop fist fight for days. I will say, Luca has a serious potential career in baseball- as he can nail his brother in the face, every time, with his water bottle, from as far as 10 feet away. But last night, he decided to give his sister a try, while she was just sitting there watching TV, and the bruise is still fresh on her cheek.

Luca Dinos.jpg

When we try to talk to him about it, he scripts an “I’m sorry” and goes back to his business, without any explanation of why the behavior happened, or indication on how to redirect it (or even intercept it) in the future. I keep going back to remembering that all behavior is communication, but I can’t figure out the lesson in this. And just when I was finding comfort in the expansion of his vocabulary through the great work happening at his school, life got paused for the world, and I now worry that my lack of teaching experience will cause a regression in our sweet boy’s progress. I worry that my own inability to muster the energy he needs, that he used to get from a one-on-one presence in his aid, for an entire school day, where he was tended to, challenged, inspired, loved and entertained by, will make him angrier as each day goes by.

As I watch our daughter during quarantine, who takes her naps without fuss, plays joyfully with Jack in between them, eats anything (and everything) out of the pantry and fridge, and is more than content to cuddle up to a movie on the couch, I let that concept of children gifted to their parents sink in. If we ever needed to believe that we were decent parents and had any chance of being what our twins need for the next however many decades we are blessed with them, Alex gives us that reassurance hourly.

Because, if I’m being honest, on the really hard days especially lately during quarantine in COVID-19, a parent to a special needs child could be asking themselves, “what did I do to deserve this?” I know I have. Especially at 1am, when Luca is having another sleepless night with autism, and in his frustration he’s kicked me so hard in the face I know I’ll have a decent shiner the next morning. Despite whatever pity party my small violins start to play, they are always followed by the sad question of: “what did this beautiful, sweet boy do to deserve feeling like his only resort to communication is to fist fight or hurt someone until they understood what he was feeling?” 

I hope, dear reader, that as you read that statement you felt the humanity behind it. Because although those moments are few and far between, they are real, and they are something that I know I’m not alone in feeling. If I am to share our journey with you, I need you to see all of it. And maybe, by my sharing, it can help someone else to understand from my perspective they didn’t already have. 

For every moment our life gets so hard that I don’t know what I’m doing, that I question if I can keep going, or that I start to question why I was chosen for this, I have 1,000 more moments of joy, and completely rewarding love, and a reminder that I am worthy. Parenting, and every moment of it, is a gift. Parenting during COVID-19, however, is an even greater gift. Because during these unprecedented times we have to parent at a whole other level. Even though I know it’s a gift, and completely worth it, I’d be lying through my teeth if I didn’t admit to wanting to quit on the daily lately.

Many parents are being asked to work full-time jobs from their homes while ensuring their children don’t fall behind in school. Parents like ourselves, who have littles with special needs, are being asked to find greater patience, greater understanding, and quite frankly, a greater sense of fun to keep each day and every day healthy, safe, and open to learning for their littles.

I didn’t sign up for this. Despite being on every possible wait list for ABA services in the home, I hadn’t found time to apply for social security for the boys, which I was told would be the only way I’d ever get to the front of the list to get help, because I knew the incredible team that was working for them at school was killing it, so social security fell low on the priority list. I had no way to know that we’d be quarantined with returning to school a dream far off in the long distance future. We’re not even sure if they’ll get to go to summer school, or what will happen this fall if we get another wave of this. Even as I type this, the weight of my anxiety sits in my chest and it’s suffocating, knowing that in my email inbox is a letter from the school asking that I wave the state requirement for our kids to get the services they need- because during a state of emergency they cannot provide them at this time.

Staying solution-oriented, the only perspective I need to have is to just keep going. My family is healthy. We have an incredible nanny who is helping every day, which is leading to proactively stopping Luca’s aggression at least 50% more than I can on my own, resulting in 50% less chances of injuries that put our family needing to go to the ER. The kids are loved and cared for and safe. 

If I adjust my understanding from that we’re not given more than we can handle, to the idea that every test of the last few weeks, and last four years since we became parents, are lessons and opportunities to learn how to be a better parent, inevitably being able to handle more adversity, change and growth, then maybe COVID-19 won’t seem like a nightmare of a running a marathon I didn’t train for. Maybe adapting the student perspective, believing that every behavior is communication, turning on those listening ears I keep begging Jack to make sure are working on his head - maybe then this will start to feel more like the training piece… the starting from scratch, learning how to use my muscles to work for me, listening to what they need as they train for the many miles ahead… sharing stories with strangers to help pass the time, making life-long friends from the similar terrain we run together… maybe then, this will just be an introduction to the beautiful adventure ahead - the one where the finish line isn’t why you started running in the first place.

Every child is magical in their own way, unique and different and bound to be incredible humans one day. But those on the autism spectrum, as they dance outside the circle a neurotypical child typically operates within, showcases focused areas of attention where their magic can truly shine. Where there may be areas of learning that do not come naturally to them, it leaves room for the areas they truly care about, and due to that extra space of interest and excitement, can teach you things you may never have known before.

For my fellow marathon runners on this new terrain of parenting, remember to keep eyes ahead, breath through the tough moments where your body tells you want to quit, and rely on that muscle memory built from love, sweat and tears… If you need someone to run a few miles with, I’m here… with stories to distract you, and working listening ears at your disposal, for as long as the pavement lies ahead. You’ve got this. Xo

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And then, there's Alli...

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And then, there's Alli...

More often then not, when I share our journey with Autism, I’ll write in detail about Jack and Luca, as the diagnosis with Autism lies with them. But really, it’s all of our journey with autism. Not just the twins who are navigating each of their unique diagnosis, or us as their parents learning how to parent it every day… it’s her’s too.

Alli is neurotypical, at least from what we know so far. She’s spunky and sassy, and sweeter than sugar. Girlfriend has a waddle that puts a penguin to shame, and a heart of gold that can melt any of your worst fears away. She loves to go to daycare with friends, can’t only have one oreo - ever - and has a sweet spot for her Pop Pop, in a way that she never holds back from him.

Alex Strip Edited.jpg

When Alex is sick, all she wants to do is snuggle on the couch, and although she’ll chase after her brothers like the best of them, she’s also more then content to get lost in a good movie. When she’s hungry, she’ll eat anything from a cheese stick and raisins, to carrots and chicken, to won ton soup and crab rangoon - no limitations or hesitations on anything we put in front of her. She takes medicine when she’s told, especially when she doesn’t feel goo, and she’s slept through the night since 2 months old. When Alli wants something, she asks for it, and if you can’t understand what she’s telling you, she brings you directly to what she wants until you can figure it out long enough to get it for her. And Alex understands when something is not “safe for her body” without too much fuss or an argument, or our needing to remove her from a situation so she doesn’t hurt herself. Don’t get me wrong, she is a toddler, for sure, and there are caveats to everything listed above, but she’s a typical toddler, something that was foreign to us before our rainbow baby.

She’s our third child, and like most third children, she gets the benefit and the cost of having older siblings. She has tiny humans to learn from, and parents who aren’t on their first go-around, but she also gets less of the excitement when she accomplishes a first, and less of the individual attention. She has best friends at her disposal any hour of the day while at home - which right now, during COVID19’s quarantine, is incredibly handy - but she also has two other humans vying for her parents attention at all times.

She is neurotypical, and because of that, she’s provided us a different understanding of parenting, as we know she comprehends things that her older brothers cannot, and handles things differently as a whole. Although we treat all our children equally, the boys autism has taught us about certain comfort levels for foods, sensory overloads, learning, social settings, etc. For Alex, we’re learning, she’s pretty easy going, and outside of asthma and age appropriate bouts of stranger-danger, hasn’t really shown to have situations we need to prepare for every day like we do with the twins.

Where they excel, in certain areas of their magic, she may never thrive. She may never know the 80 different types of sharks that live in the sea (exaggerating on the number), or every line of the Big Bad Wolf in the 20 different adaptations there are out there. She may have to study really hard for a test, where her brother(s) have heightened memories and can remember anything from reading it once. She may thrive in social settings, have great groups of friends, and find that social interaction gives her great satisfaction, when her brother(s) may find great comfort in one or two friends instead.

I wonder what this will be like for her when she grows up. I wonder how this will shape her life, having two autistic brothers. I wonder what her perspective will be. I believe this child will be an empathic, someone who will be a caretaker, both in her field of employment, but also in her personal life. How could she not, growing up in the life that has chosen her.

Although I wonder about all the possibilities that could make her life full, and wonderful, there is a part of me scared to admit that I wonder about the chances that could make life feel like less, and potentially, resentful. Even the loveliest of human beings are human. Like in the amazing movie, Wonder, during the scene where the older sister admits that her parents never had time for her, and even those she loved her brother more than anything in the world, it could make her feel very alone at times- I worry that Alli could be sad that the twins require so much of our time.

I think, for all our children, all we can ever do is try our best, and hope for the best, while remaining aware and in tune at all times. This happy-go-lucky toddler provides no room for concern at the moment, and very well may read this one day and laugh at my “worries and wonders” because they were for no reason. At least, I’ll take comfort in that hope for now, continuing to share Alli’s story as well, because I do think it’s an adorable, important, and instrumental part of our journey.

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Can't vs Won't

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Can't vs Won't

Can’t vs Won’t…

It was a typical Saturday morning, wrestling kids over scattered toys in the playroom... too lazy to get out of pajamas, but full of pent up energy as the cold winter weather continues.

The house was a mess, and the playroom looked like it threw up all over itself. Luca was in search of something, but couldn’t communicate exactly what. I followed him out into the kitchen, as I watched his movements become frantic. Asking him if I could help, he replied with “bink” and I said “Ok,” but took a minute to grab a few toys on the floor in the other direction, so I could put them back in the playroom when returned to it, trying to be efficient with my efforts (because when are we not picking up toys!!!). It took a minute too long because when Luca saw that I said I would help, but my actions and body language told him I was saying no, his frustration overwhelmed him for being ignored. As it quickly bubbled over, he turned to notice his little sister walking toward him, pacifier in mouth (unconsciously rubbing it in his face), which set him over the edge. Before we knew it, he went to pull her hair to tell us how mad he was. He pulled so hard that when we separated him seconds later, strands were in between his finger tips.

After calming them both down, getting Luca his bink and putting him in a safe space while being held, comforting Alex separately, apologizing that we couldn’t protect her from just walking through the kitchen, Steph and I looked at each other scared. Luca’s aggression has peaked lately, and his go-to when frustrated is to pull hair. Poor Jack gets the brunt of it. And I can’t imagine how hard it is to be in Luca’s shoes where he has not found the words or understanding on how to safely express his feelings or ask for help to meet his needs, but watches both his brother (who used to share his struggles) and his little sister do so with ease. But as his parents, we are at a loss too. We don’t know how to give him what he needs as we aren’t trained in ABA or therapies to teach a child with learning disabilities to communicate. And what’s harder, is that Luca has the strength of a 5 year old (kid has a six-pack and is crazy strong) but the communication skills of a 2 year-old. Have you ever felt like you were trapped in the wrong body? Poor kid feels it to the extreme every day. 

To try to explain it another way… when we’ve worked with Alex over the last three months, since she begun discovering her sea legs, and becoming incredibly mobile with her sassy waddle, we’ve constantly been on the look out to ensure she avoids all corners to tables not realizing where her head now reaches. As she’s learning to navigate this world, we are constantly working to make her aware of the dangers around every corner, while letting her ride without the training wheels.

When I think of how this relates to Luca… his learning delays almost required him to live life with training wheels permanently attached for the time being, despite that he feels ready to fly without fear of eating pavement - not because he won’t… but because he can’t. He will be five years-old this summer, and his sister who hasn’t even reached her two-year-old birthday, knows how to express her emotions through words with more direct intention than he does. When Alex is sad, she screams, cries and asks for help. When Luca is upset, he bottles it up, holding it in, until he can’t hold it in any longer and it explodes out of him. As he is so introverted, we can completely miss for how long he is frustrated for until it’s so evident that we are in “danger” mode. In the moment it will feel like he’s acting out for no reason, but afterwards, when we retrace our steps, we realize that had we been paying better attention, we could have seen it coming, and more successfully prevented any hurt caused from our lack of notice.

Let me remind you. Luca’s magic is the love that bursts out of that small sweet heart of his. He can be the sweetest, kindest, most caring child. Our son is not a mean or vicious boy, but as we are working to give him the skills it takes to deal with the massive emotion that drives such aggressive acts, we are struggling with remembering and recognizing this one key factor of can’t vs won’t. In the moments we can realize that it’s not a situation of won’t - that he won’t just simply be kind to his sister, or won’t be more patient and trust that I’ll be with him as soon as I can, it gives us the perspective to remember that at this moment in time, he simply can’t be kind when his emotions are erratically racing through his body causing his temperature to feverishly heighten, and can’t wait any longer because maybe this is the 10th time he’s had to compete with two other human’s demands from his mother and at this moment he is tired of waiting. In those moments when we are patient and find grace to breath through any frustration we are feeling with the spiral of effects from this poor child’s moment of defeat, we are able to remember what we can’t vs won’t do as his parents. In those moments we are able to focus on the fact that as mature adults with learned perspective, if we don’t address him to let him know we hear him, it’s not that we can’t be the parents he needs, it’s in that moment, we won’t be the parents he needs, and so we choose to be better. We choose to keep paying attention, keep trying harder, and keep learning what he needs, even if those needs change daily.

We’ve been told by others to discipline the behavior, to put him in a time out, or simply “require more from him.” But I share this because it’s a perspective that may change the way you look any human behavior - understanding if someone can’t vs. won’t in the moment, can help you better determine how you could/should/do react in return. If Luca were to go in a time out, he would laugh- because he laughs when he’s sad or scared. It would not resonate with him, it would have the opposite effect. And heaven forbid he were to be “disciplined” - it would do nothing more than show him that violence is an acceptable response to unwanted behaviors. We can’t expect more from him at this moment in time. That little boy works as hard as he can day in and day out at school with his teachers and friends, and at home with his parents and siblings.

So, we choose to instead, meet him at his level. To remove him safely from the opportunity to hurt someone further. To make sure he knows we weren’t ignoring him and that he has our attention to help calm him down, for as long as he needs. To ensure his sibling(s) are safe from allowing the situation to escalate. Yes, there are times this feels impossible, this weekend being one of them, as Alex felt defenseless, and like a line we weren’t willing to let him cross yet. But in that moment, when we battled our own emotions, we relied on each other to hold ourselves accountable to remember can’t vs won’t.

Because we can be better parents. We can choose to take time to learn more about our son, and everything that he is, not just a diagnosis. We can pay extra attention to his body language, and ensure that when he asks for something, remember that he only asks if he really needs it, so to give it the importance it deserves.

Remember, behavior is communication. Just because someone isn’t using words to speak, doesn’t mean that you can’t hear them, it means you won’t hear them, and are choosing not to. Choose to listen.

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The Power of Siblings...

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The Power of Siblings...

Just the other day, I found myself admitting to another mom that I’m not sure we would have chosen to have more kids had we known of the boys’ diagnosis before getting pregnant. The second the words came out of my mouth I regretted it. But, as much as I regretted it, it was the truth. And that truth breaks my heart because I cannot imagine our life without this little neurotypical nugget. As I continue to work with parents of children on the spectrum, I think this share is important because adding siblings can be such a crucial transition and dynamic for a family, and a particularly different one for families with “differently wired*” children.

Alex at age 15 months.

Alex at age 15 months.

Alex was our “bow baby”, meaning she tied our family with a bow of completion. When we did IVF for the twins, we were so fortunate to have 11 eggs make it to day 5 of the process. We used the two for the twins, and then were in amazing shape with 9 frozen embryos to consider the future of our family, providing the twins siblings.

When the twins were a year-and-a-half, we felt like we were finally getting some sleep, and ready to try again. We had this SILLY concept that we wanted to get all the “hard” out of the way while it was “still hard” before we forgot what “hard” felt like. YA. I know all the parents and care-givers are laughing at that one. But you don’t know what you don’t know, right?

The first attempt at IVF was successful, but I was traveling for work, working nearly 80 hours in a four-day time period for one of our biggest events, and lost that pregnancy at nine weeks. It was a very hard loss to swallow. I knew it was my fault. I traveled across the country, barely slept, and worked on my feet for an on-godly amount of time during weeks 7 and 8. Not the smartest move on my part, but it was my job and I was “doing what I had to do”. It was a loss, and something that was very different than the 3 years and 11 IUIs that simply never took when trying to have the boys. And it was a loss that many do not talk about, because of the embarrassment, shame, sadness, and feelings of failure tied to it. But oh, the collateral beauty that came from that loss that has forever shaped our lives in such an important domino effect.

A little back story… When we were finally pregnant with the twins, my wife admitted she was curious to know what that “surprise” feels like for spouses (yes, typically the males in the relationship) when the wife gets to surprise them with the news they are about to be parents. I had concocted this plan in my head that for the second pregnancy, I’d surprise her. Now, with IVF, it’s not that easy. Especially as the doctors need legal consent from both parents of the embryos, so she needed to sign documentation, but I knew if we could just “start the process”, I could work out the shots and appointments on my own. I had even convinced our dear friend, Ashlee Rollins, to help me with the surprise. She was excited to be my partner in crime.

But life has different plans. One week Ash and I were secretly planning expanding my family, and the next she was undergoing chemo treatments for a wretched diagnosis of Cancer. During a time I thought I’d be sneaking away for “coffee with Ashlee” to get the implementation of an embryo, I was going to a hospital to hold her hand and listen to a doctor tell her she needed to understand the severity of her diagnosis, as treatment was no longer working, and it was time to accept what was ahead. Within six months of first learning of the diagnosis, we lost our young, vibrant, care-free, dependable, loyal, and irreplaceable friend, only two days after she celebrated her 24th birthday.

After she passed, I gave up thinking I could surprise Steph, knowing Ashlee was irreplaceable in that form of assistance. When I lost the first baby after the twins, I think part of me was just too bitter about everything to believe happiness could come from that pregnancy. That’s a truly wretched thing to say, but it’s the truth. We were heartbroken, and a baby that comes into this world deserves parents with mended hearts, that are full of love and ready to be actively present for their children.

After time, both required in between tries for the pregnancy, but also to where I felt like I could handle trying again, Steph and I went for a second round of IVF. We were truly fortunate, as that one took, and our family would begin to grow. The irony was that this baby’s due date would be June 7… Ashlee’s birthday was June 11, and we lost her on June 13. Yes, I’d be lying if I didn’t admit that part of me prayed the baby would be late, and tied astrologically to our friend in some way, but also knew that the chances of that happening would be so slim.

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That’s the thing about destiny though… this incredible little human’s fate was to be born in June, but she intended to be “ready when she was ready”, and couldn’t wait a day longer. Little Miss Alex (Alli) Rollins Young was born to us on June 4, 2018, at 11:59am, weighing in at 9lbs 12oz (girlfriend took ALL the room those twins left behind and then some). And as you can see here… the whole family fell in love with her immediately.

During the first year Alli was with us, it was so interesting to see how each twin took to her. Luca was trepidatious, always preceding with caution. Jack, however, constantly referred to her as “my baby”, was Mommy’s little helper, always grateful for a sibling who wanted this attention. Their bond was heartwarming beyond belief. As soon as Alex could crawl, she’d follow Jack everywhere. She knew to give Luca space, but any time Jack looked for her, she’d rush to be by his side, full of giggles that seem to be endless.

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These days we can find Alex and Jack playing hide-and-seek behind the curtains, or racing through the living room chasing each other, their bond continuing to grow with such adoration. Equally, however, they each fight for my attention, as Alli tends to observe all of Jack’s behaviors, repeating any she seems to deem worthy. They snuggle on the couch when they both first wake up, more mornings then I can count, and Alli will work every charming smile she can to snuggle beside him for a book before bed at night. There are days I look at them and think to myself, “oh to be loved like that, how that must feel for each of them.” And for a while, this thought would make my heart smile, and hurt in tandem, as I watched our other child watch the experience happen for his siblings, but not for himself.

Recently, however, Luca has let her play. Even when working his lines, and in his comforting and calm little world, he will allow her in. You’ll see her barrel her way toward him, anxious to see what he is so fixated on. Had she been Jack, looking to play with anything he’s playing with, we would immediately redirect Jack away to something “more exciting”, but with Alex, we let her use her magic as far as Luca will let her, before it upsets him. We know when Luca isn’t interested in her touching, as he’ll yell “buh-bye, see you later!”, or “help”, meaning he’s heartedly focused and cannot allow her disruption. But often, he’ll even let her disrupt his lines, holding back his frustration and the pain it’s causing him, just to be patient with her and let her explore. It’s like he is showing her his love for her, by letting her in his bubble, despite how painful it is for him. (Below is an early morning in the playroom, when Luca was busy forming a line of all his birds, and Alex was determined to insert herself in his world. He allowed her to play with the toys, sit near him, and even take a few birds from those he had sorted out from all the figurines in his mixed box to choose from.)

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And then, just a few weeks ago, Luca began to seek her out when she entered a room, to say “Hi!” If he was awake before she was, and I was bringing her down from her crib, he’d rush to the entry gate and make direct eye contact (big deal for us) and yell “HI!!!” waving his hands at her, before turning to go back to whatever he was doing. Every night since it began, when she comes home with Mama from her day at school, he rushes to the garage door with a “Hi, how are you” automatic response, connecting eyes, and then going back to his iPad. He’s even let her lay beside him in bed during story time, a few nights when Jack has fallen asleep before his siblings, and Alex is desperate to hang in her big brothers’ room before going to her room where no other companions sleep. And lately, when we tell Alli to give everyone “love” before nap, he’ll hear the reference, and look for his sister to make sure he’s included in the rounds of kisses and snuggles she intentionally spreads around the room. His arms may not make it around her, but he will allow her to hug him, which in itself is such an area of growth.

This may seem insignificant compared to the clearly connected images you see between Jack and Alli, but this is simply incredible, and what inspired this post about the power of siblings.

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Yes, Jack’s smiling face here is during a really fun play time with his sister. They were rolling around the floor laughing and wrestling, having the best time on a random Saturday morning while Luca played with his dinosaurs by himself less than 4 feet away. This pure joy she gives him is something no one else could, and something he was desperately wishing for from Luca. He has someone who is looking up to him, following his lead, naturally letting him help her and love her and need her for the rest of his life. She hugs him regularly, and gives him kisses every night before bed. She squeals elatedly when he enters a room unexpectedly, looking just for her. Their love for one another is like two pieces to a puzzle that could not function without another. It’s truly adorable.

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The thing that I think, however, is that Luca is smiling too. Maybe he won’t pose for a photo in the moment. Maybe he won’t wrestle her, or cuddle her on the couch, or even give her the kisses that Jack so sweetly will when she’s fallen and hurt herself. But Luca, looking for eye contact, wanting to greet her when she enters a room, that to me is his heart smiling. She’s pulling out his need to be needed by her, and his want to be important to her. While he played with his dinosaurs only 4 feet from his siblings, he was singing the sweetest song. He played so contently, that the noise of the two playing without him did not seem to phase him (keep in mind it normally would).

Naturally an introvert, as his parents we often try to not bother him, but what we’ve seen lately around his work to be present around her, makes us realize that maybe he doesn’t actually want to be an introvert. Maybe he just needs to practice the interaction to determine if he likes/wants/needs it. His teachers have noticed that he’s even begun to demonstrate a similar behavior with classmates. Looking to comfort a friend when they are in pain, make eye contact with a warm greeting when he sees them, and even play with particularly chosen mates on the playground each day at recess. Something has awakened inside of him where he wants to be noticed, and isn’t afraid to be known. I think this has stemmed from the little girl who is slowly stealing his heart, because she isn’t going anywhere, and he was forced to fall-in love with her fearless need to simply be part of his world.

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One key thing that our kids have taught me this year, watching them accept/approve and enjoy their siblings, that is there is a special power being brought into this world with other humans who are allowed to love you before they know any better - during all your innocence and learning. Yes, all relationships are different, and require effort, a give-and-take, and real work. But the sibling relationship, in my opinion, is how you learn how to be something to someone. They aren’t your parent, or an adult/elder/teacher/babysitter that requires your attention, respect, and obedience. They are your equal, your friend, your fellow “little”. They are whatever you let them to be. And like all great relationships, yes, some people are in your life simply for what you need them to be in that moment, but some people become those who define who you were, who you are, and who you will become.

Luca might be learning from Alex, things he was never willing or open to learn from Jack, but Alex will learn things from Luca that she could never learn from Jack as well. She’ll learn things from both of her brothers about the power of kindness, patience, understanding and respecting diversity, and loyalty. The life lessons they will each learn from each other they would not be able to learn in such magnitude from anyone else.

It’s true, what I admitted, that I’m not sure we would have had more kids had we known about the diagnosis prior to getting pregnant, because as parents we are beyond committed to our children, and littles are a stretch of emotional/intellectual/physical/financial means to raise as it begins with. But I could not be more grateful for the timing of our family bow, because I cannot imagine our life without her in it. If you’re parenting autism and questioning how siblings may feed new/additional challenges into the mix, or even just wondering if your neurotypical children who are so easy as a singleton would benefit from having a sibling, my only advice is to listen to your heart and let fate do it’s thing. Even on our hardest days juggling all three kids under the age of five, I still wouldn’t trade it for the world.

*Differently Wired: Taken from the INCREDIBLE Deborah Reder, author of “Differently Wired: Raising an Exceptional Child in a Conventional World”, is my favorite phrasing for the concept that our kids are part of “the one in five "differently wired" children with ADHD, dyslexia, giftedness, autism, anxiety, or other neurodifferences”. If you haven’t read it, and are raising a differently wired child, I highly suggest it! https://www.amazon.com/Differently-Wired-Aspergers-Giftedness-Disabilities/dp/1523506318/ref=sr_1_2?hvadid=78202832398504&hvbmt=be&hvdev=c&hvqmt=e&keywords=differently+wired&qid=1580762296&sr=8-2


PS: I’d be remiss to not share that I am the older sister to three of the most talented, driven, unique, and incredible human beings I could ever know. Each is extremely different, but ridiculously similar. They’ve shaped my past, defining every moment of my childhood in a way no other could; they are a pulse on my present, particularly in how I look to parent my children as I see their faces, demeanors, and characteristics in each of my children; and they will be a compass on my future, always keeping me on track but inspiring me and pushing me to move forward at all times.

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The LOVE in the lines...

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The LOVE in the lines...

This morning, one of Luca’s beloved bird figurines had an accident.

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Unsure of exactly what happened, my wife and I threw ourselves into triage mode when he ran to us panic-stricken over a very small broken plastic beak. The tortured expression of complete agony that filled his face was unbearable.

At first, I attempted to use clear tape, the smallest piece needed, telling him it was a bandaid, but it only made him cry harder for his friend.

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Steph then ran and grabbed the quick drying plastic glue, and clamped the two very small pieces together in the hopes it would dry quickly while I worked to distract Luca. I took him around the house quietly singing him songs, working to calm him down, reassuring him his friend would be ok.

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Alas, the glue did not work, and our poor boy exhausted himself, distraught that he had failed one of his birds, and that we, his parents, could not fix him. We hid the broken bird, and took him to the living room with his favorite candy, putting on his favorite movie, and held him until he forgot about it. Forgot about it for now, that is, as his memory is beyond compare. He will remember it, at which point, we’ll have to navigate that reality.

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We’ve been in this situation once before. While on vacation in Provincetown this summer, we had been on our way back on a walk into town, and he was playing with one of his Superwing toys. As he let it fly through the air while he sat on my shoulders, a bounce in my step made him lose his grip. Destiny had other plans as that little friend dropped to it’s demise, and right down a drain.

Only two blocks from the house we were staying, I held him tightly as he thrashed in my arms, running back to the house to try to find a distraction to help calm him down. Incredibly upset, he yanked at my hair, scratched at my face, and did everything he could to escape my grip and run back to save his toy.

When we made it into the house, where Steph had been getting some work done while the baby slept, we quickly explained the situation. While she tried to comfort him, I went to the toy room where the rest of the Superwings toys were, took out the duplicate of Dizzy, and tried to hand it to him, showing him there was another one - so not to worry!

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My wife, unlike myself, is much faster on her feet with this kind of thing. She shook her head at me, to which I hid the duplicate. She got down on his level, took his hands into hers, and locked eye contact with the sad face who’s tears were streaming faster than ever before. She said to him, holding his hands tight, “Is Dizzy in the drain?”, to which he nodded his head up and down. With great certainty, she then promised him, “I’ll go get Dizzy”.

She gave Luca to me, while sneaking the extra Dizzy from my hands, and rushed out the door. Following her lead, we guided Luca to the large bay window, so he could watch his Momma run toward where he had lost his friend, and disappear behind a hedge. He began to panic again, when he couldn’t see her, crying and thrashing, until after a few minutes that I’m sure felt like a lifetime to him, she reappeared holding the exact same friend he had lost down the drain. She held him tall in the air, her arm outstretched so he could see it, beaming with pride to show him that all was alright.

As soon as she entered the house, he grasped the airplane, calmed his breathing, and brought it back to where the rest of his collection remained, so he could line them up, and bring order back to the chaotic being he was living as for the last exhausting adventure.

Not going to lie… after we knew he was settled, I definitely looked at my wife and sarcastically said, “Feel like the hero?” to which she did her sassy shrug and strutted to meet him in the living room to sit by her son, basking in the glory of fixing a situation I couldn’t.

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The thing about this need for lines that I’ve learned from both of these experiences, is that it’s not about the line itself. There is LOVE in the lines that Luca, and children like Luca, create. There is time and attention to the way they each create their lines. There is tender care taken for each individual toy placed in the line. Luca will often study each toy chosen in his line to fully understand it - almost as if to see it not only for what it is, but for what it could be, as part of this greater picture he’s about to create.

What may seem silly to some, about the need to line everything up, to our boy, is respect for his things, and the beauty he sees in the collection of them as a whole. The angst and torture he feels when one is lost or damaged is heart breaking. It is not just a toy, but HIS toy, and the way he feels responsibility for it is beyond admirable.

My hope is the next time you see the lines… this perspective helps you to see the love in them, the way Luca reminds us each day, the every thing, no matter how small or insignificant to someone else, could mean the world to someone you care about.

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Weekend Adventures with Autism

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Weekend Adventures with Autism

That title might feel funny read, but I feel like this has been a key survival strategy to making our weekends entertaining, enjoyable, and agreeable to all five members of our family.

My mornings typically start around 4/4:30am with Jack, and then eventually Alex around 5/5:30am. Luca will stroll down the stairs at one point before 6, at which I’ve most likely already had at least one cappuccino. Steph will join the motley crew by 7, and then a full long day is before us.

Although I was always a morning person, the many #sleeplessnightsofautism have definitely made caffeine, and strong caffeine at that, a necessity for functionalities. I’m a planner, so by the time my wife joins our breakfast table adventures, reading books over whatever concoction the three kids decided worked for sustenance, or on the playroom floor playing among too many toys spread across the colorful tiles, I typically have an idea in my head for how I think we could most effectively spend the day. AKA, how we could distract all three kids with something exciting and entertaining, while ensuring the baby takes her two naps, there are decent meals at lunch and dinner, and she and I can agree on a pace that makes us still like each other by the time we get them back to bed. Any one else chase down the daylight hours like this?

As my wife owns her own business, there are usually “work hours” we need to make happen each day, so as long as we can ensure those are taken care of during Alli’s first nap that morning, it leaves a prime six or seven hours to take “an adventure with autism”. The latter disclaimer is because not every adventure is made for our family. We have to ensure the ride won’t be too long, that there won’t be long lines to wait in when at said adventure, that we aren’t near busy streets or in an area where Luca could run away, and that wherever we go won’t overwhelm either of the twins in any sensory fashion (particularly loud and bright activities can create havoc for our boys.)

Some “adventures with autism” require a third party rental adult, whether it be Auntie Sammy, or Granny & Pop Pop, or a favorite baby sitter… those are the ones where we face elements that Luca’s fight/flight mentality could put him in harm’s way, or that the offerings at the adventure hit different preferences for the twins.

This weekend, at around 6am, Steph was up early, and while the kids were enjoying their iPads, we dared throw the news on for a hot second. Across the TV came a plug on WMUR (our local news station) for a new aquarium in northern NH, called Living Shores. It showed hands-on experiences for kids, as well as an Aviary, which is Luca’s favorite thing. (If you follow us on instagram, I’m sure you’ve seen his many bird figurines.) We quickly googled it, and made a game plan to head up just as it was time for Alli to nap, thinking she could do so in the car. We even reached out to friends to come with us.

This is where lack of coffee and planning did not serve us well. Yes, we noted the 2.5 hour drive, but figured if kids napped, they’d be in SUPER good moods when they got there, and if it was over-stimulating, they’d have the ride home to relax. Clearly our friends that we convinced to join us thought the same thing, because they quickly packed their crew up of triplets, and headed north on our coat tails.

We purchased tickets ahead of time, and our first red flag flew when the time-slots available to purchase were only in hour increments. We had gotten the impression this would be an all-day affair, and as it was located within StoryLand, an outdoor theme park, figured it would have a similar amount of entertainment for the kids. But to drive 2.5 hours up, to spend ONE hour at a facility, and over $100 on the day, didn’t necessarily feel like we had our smartest adventurer hats on.

As we realized our start time was at noon, and would be in town by 11:15, we stopped at a local McDonald’s so the kids could have lunch and stretch their legs in the play place. Luca ran right to the maze, despite the kids that were playing in it already were some what loud. I could feel my chest rise in anxiety worried the noise would set him off, and watching the maze rise upwards of 15 feet, with very small enclosures to climb through, I wasn’t quite sure I’d be able to get to Luca in time if he became impatient trying to navigate past another child, or worst, if the noise echoing through the slides hurt his ears and he decided to go after said noisemaker. My wife gave me a look like, “please don’t make this more than it needs to be”, so I found a table with Jack and Alex so she could go get their lunch.

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Jack was extremely hesitant to play, and despite taking his shoes off and entering the maze, he made it about two minutes before he preferred to sit at the table with Alex and I and wait for his lunch. Luca played for a solid 30 minutes, continuing to run the maze/gauntlet with comforting repetition. It was so good for him to move his body. He is always happier when he can take on physical activity. Jack contently ate his lunch with Alex, and we ended up taking Luca’s in the car for him to eat on the remaining 10 minute drive to the Aquarium.

When we made it to Living Shores, the facility itself seemed small. I quickly realized we underestimated just what the day could entail, but thought it would be best to make the best of what we could, so we tried to amp the kids up and bring them all inside.

From the moment inside, Jack got very scared, and when Jack gets scared, he tends to get dramatically so. His voice will elevate, panic sets in both his tone and on his face, and he starts to search for ways to leave- whether by throwing a tantrum, or finding an exit himself. We did everything we could to keep them calm as we waited in the line to enter the facility.

We kindly asked the lovely gentleman taking photos before you entered to allow us to skip the line, as Jack was obviously not having it. Once inside, Luca lit up, walking directly to the walls of fish tanks on display. He could have watched them swim for hours, completely intrigued in their movements and grace. Alli stood beside him, glee and delight spilling out joyfully in her expressions, but my buddy Jack huddled behind my legs, holding on for dear life.

Steph moved ahead with Luca and Alex to give Jack and I space, and I did my very best to breath through my own panic that we had made a grave mistake bringing our children so far without doing enough research into what it would really entail. Jack and I talked through how he was feeling, and I assured him I would not leave him, and we would take it at his pace. I also reminded him friends were coming soon, and if he wanted to wait near the entrance for them, we could do that. That seemed to relax him enough so that he could start to enjoy the tanks of fish.

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It didn’t take long before Luca could hear the birds, as they weren’t more than ten feet from the tanks. Steph moved ahead and brought Luca and Alex to explore the aviary. I could hear his giggles when he entered the cage from where I stood with Jack down the hall. My heart sunk for a moment as I realized that here was an experience that could bring one brother such joy, and the other such pain. I stayed focused on Jack, who was hiding in the stroller, and kept watch for our friends.

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Eventually, our entire party was present, and we worked our way through the small facility of hands-on learning with the kids. Steph switched with me, bringing Alex with her, so that I could enjoy Luca’s delight and new obsession with one particular bird, who was very friendly. Luca could not get enough.

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It was such a different experience to watch his fear meet his excitement, turning into fearlessness and he worked to convince the bird to come to him. He watched the trainer as he reached out his arms and allowed the bird to climb over him. Luca would mimmic his movements, continuing to move closer and attempt to touch the bird. He was experiencing such joy.

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There were also tanks where you could touch the sharks, or let fish nibble at your hands. And the kids loved the sandbox with the animated sea creatures that appeared from an overhead projection.

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For families considering visiting Living Shores in Glen, NH, it’s located in the Story Land parking lot, and I would say that it’s well maintained, entertaining, wonderfully staffed, and great for what it is. If you have to drive a distance, I would suggest pairing it with another activity for littles, unless you are focused on littles who could spend hours in an aviary staring at one bird, like Luca could have if we let him.

It was yet another learning experience on one of our “weekend adventures with autism”, but different, and worth the pure joy we watched Luca experience.

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