Desperate Optimism
by BrianRobinson
 Kaleidoscopic
Jul 27, 2011 | 2632 views |  0 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

So I brought Xan home from camp early yesterday.  He was banging his head and acting like he felt bad, and I felt kinda cruddy, so I figured he might he getting something like I might be getting something.  It wasn't a smooth day when I got him home, either.  He whipsawed from happy to angry to whiny to complainly - puberty in 15/16 time.  I guessed he was more tired than anything, and we tried to get to him sleep early.

Didn't work AND he woke up at midnight after maybe two hours sleep.  So I got up too, and stayed with him in the living room.  After two more hours, he was sorta drowsy, so we tried sleep again.  That lasted an hour, and then the whining and complaining came up again.  It was a long night.  I saw the sun up and wasn't to doggone pleased about that.

When Tracy got up, she asked what kind of night we had.  I listed the litany of complaints, and then added in desperate optimism, "But at least I got to catch up on some of my magazine reading!"

That's a familiar thing to us - we search for infinitesimal silver linings in clouds so big they would cover Jupiter.  I do it to remind me that no matter how bad it seems to be, we have a lot of good things.  Yes, Xan is autistic, but by all accounts and opinions of his teachers, therapists and doctors, he's a genius.  (And of course we think so too, but that's kinda expected, isn't it?)  True, he doesn't talk much, but he's smart enough to get his points enough and we can sorta kinda figure out some of his signs, so at least it's not a complete mystery.  He does have issues with things like echoes, but he can function outside the house, so we don't have to schedule everything second by second. 

Of course, it may also be whistling past the graveyard, because the simple fact is any autistic person has a hard time of it.  In my last post I mentioned the policeman stopping to talk to me - what if he had separated us on suspicion of kidnapping?  What would have happened?  What if I'm in public with him and something happens - he wouldn't know to go get help or go to safety.  That's one of the reasons I started taking Tae Kwon Do, so I could defend myself and him if I had to. 

More general things affecting families in general people may not know - many doctors and dentists won't see autistic kids.  We met some people who had to drive to Birmingham to get their kids checkups.  (By the way, in Anniston, we've used Dr. Cabellero and Dr. Norby for doctor and dentist, respectively, and they have been wonderful in working with us.  In fact, they have often helped me over the phone when Xan was acting sick, giving me things to try before I had to take him in to one of them, because that can be a struggle.)  How do you get childcare?  It's a challenge for the parents, how can you expect your average babysitter to handle it?  We're lucky and careful enough that I stay at home with him - many families can't.  How do you handle a meltdown in public?  As you've seen by my adventures, it can look very bad.  And these are just the current problems - the future is a whole other set.

But I bet most families would choose to see the positives, listing what their child can do and how they're lucky in many ways.  It could be worse.  We probably know people who have it worse and still manage to find those tiny silver linings in their storm clouds.  It helps.

But still.  It's often nothing more than desperate optimism.

All Right, We Need a Good Story
by BrianRobinson
 Kaleidoscopic
Jul 27, 2011 | 867 views |  0 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

A few years ago, Xan's then-teacher asked if he could be used as a subject for the county - have some lady come in and interact with him with the teachers watching and seeing what handling an autistic kid was like.  I said sure, why not?

Came the day.  It was during the summer, and Xan wasn't too pleased about going to a school during his season of freedom, so he went in a little edgy.  For my part, I was hobbling in on a cane, after tearing two of the ligaments in my knee.  That hill to the school seemed AWFULLY long.

We go in, they set up, we start.

Right off the bat things go wrong.  The teacher had placed a bunch of objects on the table - shapes, dolls, toys, models, and the whoopsie one I could have headed off - food.  Xan seems to going through a continual growth spurt, and he saw that food and wanted it to the exclusion of everything else.  I was consulted with and said may as well let him have it, because he could out-stubborn every single person in there on their BEST days and his WORST one.

They decided I could sit up there with him and perhaps...encourage...him to show off what he knew, since he hadn't done a blessed thing but demand that food.  I tried but could tell he wasn't into it.  I wasn't that upset - I knew he was smart.  But I did hope he would show off a little bit.

The teacher leading the demonstration finally got to something he'd do.  "Can you find the circle?"  He reached for it.  "Good!"  (This was a tone of mixed praising and possible amazement he had listened to her.)  In a spirit of unbridled yet disbelieving hope she said, "Do you think you can find another one?"  I swear, he looked at her with utter disdain in his eyes - Nolan Ryan asked to pitch underhanded, Robin Williams asked to tell a knock-knock joke, Francis Ford Coppola asked to direct a school play disdain here.  For a child with limited vocabulary, he gets his point across.

He reached out, gets more circles, puts them together.  Then he gathered up different things of the same color, put them together.  Then he got various items that went together in a kitchen and put them together. All this to gasps and mutters of approval from the audience.  And after the kitchen items, he said, "Done!" and stood up.

I managed to hold off laughing until we got in the car.

Catching Up
by BrianRobinson
 Kaleidoscopic
Jul 23, 2011 | 1388 views |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Well, it's been a busy week.  Still volunteering at camp, and this Friday we went to Birmingham and stayed overnight.  (How is it that driving, where all you do is sit, push pedals and turn the wheel, is so exhausting?)  The Autism Society of Alabama had a Group Leader's conference, and since my wife has the local group she was invited.  We got to see Mr. Tumlin, our good friend, meet some more people, and Tracy learned some new things - like her walk last April took in almost $4000!  W00t!

The trip went pretty well.  The hotel had a pool, so Xander and I got to swim, and he handled it very well.  Perhaps common with other autistic parents, we've discovered that giving him a countdown - we're stopping in ten minutes, five, four, etc. - does help them get ready to transition to stopping something he likes.  Such as swimming.  He got to spend almost two hours at a time, and quit when told to.  He also spent almost the whole time in the pool without his life jacket, and loved it.  I'm not sure I'll tell the camp here to let him swim without it - he seemed to do that preliminary kind of swimming, where you bounce off the bottom of the pool, gulp some air, and thrash a bit.  You know, the kind that tends to attract some attention from lifeguards and curious passerby.

The trip was much, much better than last year's for us - Xander and me. 

Last year, Xan had one of THOSE NIGHTS the night before our trek.  The kind where you warn, warn again, explain just in case they don't understand, warn again for the last time, warn AGAIN for the last last time, warn for the absolute last time, threaten to punish, re-emphasize the punishment, and finally after exhausting every last possible chance and nerve, take something away.

In this case, I said he couldn't swim.

However, I did pack his swimsuit and life jacket at the last minute.  Because, as probably every parent knows, as soon as you take away something major from a child they tend to do something that makes you burst with pride...and you can't reward them with their favorite thing, since you took it away.  Betting the odds in my irony-filled life, I figured that would happen.

I want to point out that as it was at the last minute, they were kinda shoved in.  Somewhere.  I think...

Of course, Xan did something good.  I think I was getting a headache, so we were stuck in the room, and there was nothing on TV to keep him interested.  I begged for some peace and quiet, and he let me sleep uninterrupted for a couple of hours.  For any child, much less autistic, this may rank as a minor miracle.  So I said, okay big guy, you can go swimming.

I think you can guess where this goes.

Tear through the suitcase.  Can't find the swimsuit.  Didn't bring an extra one, because why think ahead?

Xan, completely understandably, gets mad.  I said he could swim as a reward, bragged on it, made sure to point out he did very good so he gets to swim...and then he doesn't.  He had a fit.  A fit, not a meltdown.  The difference between the two is like watered down Tabasco sauce and a habanero pepper, a slight cough versus pneumonia, or not getting arrested and almost getting arrested.

(foreshadowing)

The fit reached such heights that I took away the swimming again.  But I had to admit I was mostly at fault here, so that night, before going to a Group Leader's dinner, we'd stop at some shop and get him a new swimsuit.  Unfortunately, Xander is like a usual child when it comes time for clothes shopping and expressed his dislike of the activity.  Loudly.  Emphatically.  So I gave up.  He was in such a bad mood we skipped out on the dinner, just dropping Tracy off and going back to the hotel.

Long night ensued.

Next day.  D-day.

Tracy had some more meeting and we had to check out of the hotel long before she was done.  So we went back to the mall, to a bookstore.  I love books and Xander likes them, so I figured it would be a good place to kill some time, and perhaps after we'd check out the rest of the mall.

There was some kind of stage set up there.  Xander, who had picked out some books he wanted, handed them to me and went up there and did his twirling.  There were some little scenes set up, and he kept knocking them over.  A repeat of warn, re-warn, on and on happened until finally that parental magic moment of ENOUGH was reached and I said that's it, we're leaving, and you can't get these books.

THEN the meltdown happened.

As spectacles go, it was pretty entertaining for anyone not directly involved in it.  Screaming - and I mean screaming, not a slightly raised voice - check.  Red face, check.  Flinging himself on the floor, check.  Banging his head with nice thunky sounds on the floor, check.  After a fruitless attempt to calm him down, I get him up, grab his arm, restrain his head, and start dragging him to the door amid a chorus of incoherent screams and fighting.

If you think this looked more than a little suspicious, you think like a policeman.  To be more specific, like the policeman who happened to be in the store.

A bit of polite questioning occurred, which luckily was helped along by my having some Kids ID cards of Xander which clearly showed he was my son, something I had had made for emergencies...not this specific one, but still.  And by then Xan had calmed down, perhaps giving me some mercy and answering some questions about his name and birthday and the like that matched the ID cards. 

We ended up sitting in the car outside, waiting for Tracy, for over an hour.

The lost swimsuit was the first thing unpacked.

I almost gave myself a concussion slapping my forehead.

Mountains
by BrianRobinson
 Kaleidoscopic
Jul 16, 2011 | 1620 views |  0 comments | 13 13 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

One of my favorite movies is How To Train Your Dragon.  Xander likes it too - it's one of those movies I can crank up and he'll stay and watch.  There's a scene where Hiccup, the kid, is flying Toothless the dragon for the first time.  Toothless is injured after being shot down by Hiccup, losing part of his tail.  Hiccup, feeling guilty, has made a synthetic replacement but he has to control it with a foot lever.  Getting used to it, he has a cheat sheet of different positions.  He sends Toothless straight in the air, flying high.  But he loses his cheat sheet, reaches back and comes undone from his saddle.  He falls.  Toothless also falls, since his new fake tail collapses.

They fall.  You can't tell how far they've gone, until after a few seconds, a mountain appears behind Hiccup and quickly grows and rises off screen.  It's an effective shot; you see it and think 'the ground's getting closer'.  No matter how tall it is, it's still connected to the earth.  A warning.

In real life, Xan has his own mountains.  This weekend has been full of them.  We have no idea what is going on with him; not being able to tell us leaves us in a guessing game.  Does he feel sick?  Is he mad we told him no to something?  Is he upset he's not getting what he wants?  Does he want more attention, less attention?  Overexicted? Bored? Cranky? Tired?  On and on. 

It's been one of those days that seems to stretch on and on.  Every parent has them, when the child you would walk through fire barefoot for has you wistfully remembering the times of peace before you had them.  I wouldn't trade him for anything...but there are some times I'd come closer to entertaining offers.

So we have to watch carefully and see what signs we get.  Does he have a fever?  One of the more clear and easy to climb mountains.  Is he chanting something over and over?  That's what we've called looping, where he seems to get stuck on something he can't stop until he's all wound up and heading for a meltdown.  Is he saying "and by contributions"?  That means he's frustrated, more than likely because he can't have what he wants.  And if he's not doing any of these more obvious than other signs?  That means this mountain's a little harder to climb.

It's not easy.  It's a hard climb.  And sometimes it feels like that ground's getting closer and closer.

Inclusion
by BrianRobinson
 Kaleidoscopic
Jul 14, 2011 | 1260 views |  0 comments | 13 13 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

I wrote a post about how having an autistic child makes you alone in many ways, from what you deal with to having to pull back from society to celebrating individual triumphs and heartbreaks.  Paradoxically, Xan's autism has also made me probably more involved and included in some ways.

This week has been light on entries because Xan is in camp and I'm volunteering up there.  Six hours being in charge of a group of kids, with two of those hours spent walking around a pool in 95 degree heat to keep count of them, will wear you out and sweat you down. 

I imagine I hear some people slapping their heads in a facepalm, saying "Heat...pool...gee, what can the missing answer to THIS equation be?"  And contrary to majority vote and popular opinion, I'm not so dumb as to miss this body of cool water I'm pacing around.  Once I did try swimming with him and my group.  It was great, for a while - Xan and I played.  He loves the water, he loves playing with me (possibly the only area where I outrank Mommy in anything), and while we were in the water, everything went swimmingly.

But when it was time to get out...

Xan was overexcited and didn't want to stop, and ended up so frustrated at the good times ending that he tried banging his head on concrete.  Well, I say tried.  More like succeeded.  Thankfully, in response to my mixture of shock, fear and command voice, he only managed the one time.  But still.  Ow.

Any parent who has seen their autistic child headbutt something solid and strong like concrete, a wall, a table, etc. knows how amazingly tough and impervious to pain their skulls can be.  I call Xan hardheaded as a statement of fact, in grudging admiration, and also more than a little fearful recognition.  They'll also tell you they don't want it proven time and again, and in that spirit I don't get in the water with him much anymore.  I get to watch him have fun, and that means a lot.

The volunteers at the camp can handle him well.  But I like being there so I can try and end things before they start, head off problems before they become meltdowns, and warn unsuspecting people who think it's just adorable Xan's come up to them and taken their hands that "You're about to go for a spin." It's unknown how many squares acres of carpet cleaning have been avoided by my timely warnings.  I stay away from his group but am always a short walk away.

In addition to this, if something is going on at Xan's school I also volunteer.  I'm pretty much penciled in as soon as any field trip for his class is planned.  It's good to do and sometimes I bend the rules and get him something from a gift shop - an impossibility if I'm not there.  Doing good by doing well, as it were.

One of the nicer things about doing this is seeing what Xan can do.  In this recent camp, he's made a friend he'll go to.  He mainly manhandles this friend, pulling his head down so he can rub his hair or ask for tickle or things like that, and this guy is a saint in training to put up with it.  He does, with a smile.  Something we get crafts that seem to be more Xan's than the helper's hands - eyes off kilter, a casual regard of picture lines, some organized chaos of a picture that tantalizingly hints at some strange order I can just see out of the corner of my mind.  Some of the school outings have also shown me more of Xan, like the time we were in an aquarium gift shop and he reached out and grabbed a white whale stuffed animal - after we had left the whale tank, where a white beluga whale had hovered at the second platform where Xan had been, right over him, and they stared at each other for some minutes. 

(No, I don't think there was some communion of the minds or a recognition between two spirits or the like.  That would be a miracle and I'm a cynical person.  But on the other hand, Xan putting those things together like that was a kind of personal miracle all my cynicism crumbles in the face of.)

In being with him more outside the home, where in addition to the control and familiarity there's a lack of surprise and novelty, I get to be part of something else different, unexpected and unplanned.  In helping out, I get paid back.  I also get to be included in some of his successes, strides and surprises.

My son's exclusion from much of normal society has let me be included in some extraordinary moments.

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Dispute over records charge keeps JSU off teacher training ratings list
by Madasyn Czebiniak
Star staff writer
Jun 20, 2013 | 1358 views |  0 comments | 25 25 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Jacksonville State University’s teacher preparation program, one of the biggest in the state, doesn't have a ranking in the first-ever nationwide survey of teacher preparation programs. The authors of the study released this week say it’s because the university wanted to charge them $9,800 for data. “We thought that charge was excessive,” said Arthur McKee, the managing director of teacher preparation studies at the National Council for Teacher Quality. The council asked 1,100 colleges for information about their teacher preparation programs as part of what the study’s authors say is the first nationwide assessment of teacher training. John Hammett, dean of the college of education and professional studies at JSU, said school officials didn’t agree with the study’s methodology. “We didn’t think it was a valid evaluation of our program. They don’t look at the empirical data,” he said. Checking on teacher training The council was created in 2000 to increase the number of effective teachers in the nation. Researchers with the council requested syllabi, alumni surveys and outlines of the courses taught in each preparation program from teachers’ colleges across the country so they could see whether prospective teachers were receiving proper training. The council got responses from 608 schools. The review team was made up of 84 analysts under the supervision of McKee. They rated institutions on four standards: admissions, subject preparation, practice teaching and how well alumni felt the program served their needs. Chet Linton, the CEO and president of the School Improvement Network, said he thinks the country is at a point where everyone wants things to get better, especially when it comes to education. “Students need to be prepared for the work environment. They need to collaborate. They need to be able to use technology. But we don’t have teachers who can walk into classrooms and teach students those skills,” he said. Linton said colleges have the opportunity to implement Common Core training for upcoming teachers so they can hit the ground running when they start working. The implementation of Common Core teaching standards in teaching programs were included in the ratings. Hammett said the council graded JSU on Common Core math standards that had yet to be implemented. “We weren’t even doing that yet and they were trying to evaluate us on it,” he said. The price tag McKee said most institutions charged around $250 to provide information for the study. At least two other Alabama institutions asked for four-figure amounts to provide data, the council said. The University of Alabama at Birmingham asked for $3,395. The University of Alabama wanted $4,000. UAB spokeswoman Dale Turnbough declined to comment Wednesday. Attempts to reach officials of the University of Alabama’s college of education for comment were not immediately successful Wednesday. Hammett said he was confused by the council’s review of JSU’s education preparation programs because he eventually sent them the information they requested. Hammett said he originally told the council the information they requested could cost the group up to $10,000. Both McKee and Hammett said after the council shortened its list of requested documents, Hammett compiled the information on his own and sent it to them for free, he said. “I sent them six emails full of data,” he said. But by then it was too late. The deadline for information was mid-January. Hammett sent the information on Jan. 29, said Stephanie Zoz, the council’s manager of data collection said. JSU in the ratings JSU did not appear on the council’s overall program rating chart Tuesday because the university originally resisted the council’s request for information. The ratings scale went from zero, the lowest, to four, the highest rating. Hammett said he believes JSU should have received a four on the rating system, especially because it has been accredited by the Education Department and the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education. Attempts Wednesday to reach officials with the state Education Department were unsuccessful. Zoz said she could not say what rating JSU would have received if it had released its information earlier, only that the information would be added to the review next year. According to McKee, the council originally had ambitions of rating more than 1,100 programs but were still pleased with the effort’s progress. “The institutions we have in the review produce 72 percent of the teachers in the nation,” he said. McKee said he hopes to add JSU’s data to next year’s review. “We’re glad the dean wants to provide the information. We think it’s a happy ending,” he said. Staff Writer Madasyn Czebiniak: 256-235-3553. On Twitter: @Mczebiniak_Star
Second Cleburne commissioner probed in use of inmate labor
by Laura Camper
lcamper@annistonstar.com
Jun 20, 2013 | 473 views |  0 comments | 25 25 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Two Cleburne County commissioners’ use of inmate labor is being scrutinized by the Alabama Ethics Commission. The state body requested records connected to Commissioner Laura Cobb’s employment of a county inmate at a gas station she manages, according to documents provided by Cleburne County Probate Judge Ryan Robertson this week in response to a request from The Star. The Ethics Commission also has requested records of Commissioner Emmett Owen’s use of inmate labor. Cobb, who took office in January, interviewed the inmate, who was later hired to work full-time in the gas station on Alabama 46, she said. The inmate is paid $7.25 per hour, the federal minimum wage. Cobb said that inmate, Kevin Walker, was released from jail about two weeks ago and still works for the station doing cleaning and yard work. According to the records provided by Robertson, the Ethics Commission requested the records of the gas station’s payments to Walker as well as the records of Owen's payments to inmates at his place of business in Georgia. Cobb told a reporter she has not spoken to an investigator. The Ethics Commission does not discuss its investigations, a legal research assistant said last week. Owen has spoken to an investigator and last week he acknowledged taking prisoners to work with him at the Candler Building in Atlanta. Taking the inmates out of state is an infraction of the rules of the program, but according to John Hamm, director of member services for the Association of County Commissions of Alabama, it’s not against state law. Owen last week declined to talk with The Star about whether he had broken any other rules of the program. Cobb was "confused" as to why her employer’s use of inmate labor is being questioned now, she told The Star. “He (Walker) would not have been able to get out if he had not had a full-time job,” Cobb said. Walker told The Star Wednesday that he was grateful to be a part of the program. He said he started out doing community service through the program and later got the paying job at the station. It gave him a chance to pay his fines and support his two children while he was in jail, Walker said. It also gave him a chance to meet people in the community, said Walker, who is from Georgia. “I have community support to where I didn’t have any,” Walker said. The gas station, owned by Won G. Cho, has been using inmates through the program for two or three years, Cobb said. The station was having a difficult time finding reliable employees and the coordinator of the work release program suggested using inmates, she said. It’s worked out very well for the station, and it gives the inmates the opportunity to pay their fines, Cobb said. Cho’s daughter, Maria, confirmed Cobb's comments. She said the inmates have been hard workers and that they have helped her father, who is getting older, she said. “They’re really generous to my daddy,” Cho said. “They help him.” Lane Kilgore, jail administrator, said he could not find an employer contract for the gas station in part because he doesn’t know whose name to look under. The corrections officer who manages the program has been out sick and was unable to help search. But, Kilgore said, Walker is the second inmate who has worked at the station. Staff writer Laura Camper: 256-235-3545. On Twitter @LCamper_Star.
 Leonard “Mac” McQuown (Photo for The Anniston Star by Misty Pointer)
Leonard “Mac” McQuown (Photo for The Anniston Star by Misty Pointer)
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Heflin PD applies for free stuff
by Laura Camper
lcamper@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 225 views |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print
The city of Heflin Police Department has applied to receive tens of thousands of dollars of free equipment through a military surplus program. Captain AJ Benefield, interim police chief in Heflin, said the department is trying for a boat, two golf carts, three all-terrain vehicles and a 36-passenger bus through the 1033 Military Surplus program. It has been approved at the state level but is waiting for final approval, Benefield said. If the department gets all the requested items, it could total about $150,000 worth of equipment, he said. “And all of this is no cost,” Benefield said. The department does have to pick up the equipment and pay any fees or permits to transport it back to the community, he said. The department has gotten other equipment through the program including M16 guns and a bulldozer, Benefield said. “You have to do justification for your department to use these items,” Benefield said. The city could use the golf carts and ATVs to help patrol special events like the concert a few weeks ago or the upcoming Fourth of July parade, Benefield said. The boat could be used for a water rescue on Lake Heflin or at the watershed, he said. And if the city finds that it doesn’t use the equipment, with the exception of demilitarized weapons and such, after a year the department can auction it off to recoup their investment, Benefield said. Sgt. Kenneth Perryman, program coordinator for the state of Alabama, said by 2012, Alabama law enforcement agencies had received more than $16 million worth of equipment through the program. The program is open to all federal and state law enforcement agencies with arrest authority, Perryman said. The program was created by federal act in 1995 with a focus on counter-drug and terrorism efforts. Not all police departments have to deal with terrorism, but they do deal with drug arrests, he said. The program gives them access to high end equipment that they may not otherwise be able to afford, he added. “Whenever (the military) turns things back in, it’s available for law enforcement agencies,” Perryman said. The equipment can run the gamut from buildings, to aircraft, to weapons, to night vision goggles to protective clothing, he said. It’s all given away on a first-come, first-served basis, Benefield said. He gets emails when new equipment becomes available and lets the state know when he is interested in an item. It can take anywhere from two hours to two days to hear back from the state if the department’s request is approved, but it takes longer to go through the rest of the process, Benefield said. Approval for the equipment has to go through three departments, the state, the Department of Defense and the Defense Logistics Agency, which oversees the program, Perryman said. It can take a few weeks before the department will know for sure that it got the equipment, Benefield said. But it’s worth the wait. It’s equipment the department doesn’t have the money to go out and purchase otherwise, he added. “It’s a very beneficial program if used right,” Benefield said.
The Cleburne News - 06/20/13
Jun 19, 2013 | 28 views |  0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
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