Family Statement on Services Eligibility Redetermination

This past Friday our family received confirmation in writing via e-mail that Tony’s redetermination of eligibility for services under the Division of Developmental Disabilities in our state has finally been approved. While we are pleased this matter has been resolved, this has been a process I personally have found to be far too difficult and

Public Therapy Here, There, & Everywhere

As I have mentioned previously, when it comes to successfully working with Tony, his bond with a person matters. Evidence of this can be seen in many areas, and currently he is at his most cooperative only with the people he has more trust in. This is something that always has to be respected when

Rocking A World Of Constant Motion

When people meet Tony in an environment he’s less threatened by, I am often asked: “Is he always this active?” I can only go with the truth here, and that would be…Yes. Now go ahead and close your eyes, imagining that word as a flashing neon sign. While Tony certainly struggles to do certain movements,

A Hero & A Villain

Catzilla. His Royal Fluffiness. Dickens the Destroyer. Best Friend. Cat Moose. Hero. Villain. Like many of us, Dickens was complex. To the members of our family he was different things at different times (as we all are to the people around us), but at the end of the day he was loved from the first

Dickens: Hero, NOT Villain

Hey, guys! I’m back with another WAY COOL post! Today, we are talking about an amazing, beautiful cat that changed my life. Or, two, I guess. His name was Dickens. He was an AMAZING cat. I could tell him about my day, and he wouldn’t lecture me. He wouldn’t say “Hannah, you did that wrong”

Views From Our Shoes, Book Review

OK, hi! It’s me, Hannah! I am doing a book review this month. Today we are talking about a book that was published in the late 90’s. The book is called, “Views from Our Shoes, Edited by Donald Meyer.” But, on the cover, why does it say edited instead of written? The answer is that

June Gratitude & Some Reading

To Dr. Shane Hunt & Angelique…For Helping Some Sun to Shine As mentioned in last week’s post, the assessment recently requested by our local Division of Developmental Disabilities was completed by Dr. Shane Hunt, with assistance from one of his interns, Angelique. When I asked Dr. Hunt if he would be comfortable with me dedicating

The Stress Will Mess You Up

The afternoon of April 20th started out calmly. Andy and Hannah had left the home earlier in the day for an overnight church daddy-daughter camping activity, packing the commotion of preparations and excitement neatly away in the car with them. I had been telling Tony that they would be sleeping out with the trees and

You Say “Hello,” He Says “I’ve Gotta Go!”

By November of 2016 we had reached the point where Tony was no longer vomiting if people got too close to him, but it was still extremely challenging to get him into most public places. There are a number of reasons for that, many related to the differences in his sensory systems, but our little

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