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  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #1 How Will I Know If It Is Autism? Ch. 1 Checklists, Ch. 2 Red Flags, Ch. 3 CDC. APPENDIX A Informal Autism Checklist, APPENDIX B Red Flags APPENDIX C Developmental Screening
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #2 Why Is It Autism? Ch. 1 Diagnosis & DSM-5, APPENDIX A ASD Screening Assessments, APPENDIX B PPD-NOS Pervasive Developmental Disorder, APPENDIX C Labels.
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #2 Why Is It Autism? Ch. 2 Denial & Misdiagnosis, Ch. 3 Doctors & Direction, APPENDIX D ASD Findings, APPENDIX E Developmental Screenings.
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3 What Is Most Concerning? Ch. 1 Gross & Fine Motor Skills; Part 1 Poor Eating, Part 2 Toilet Training. APPENDIX A Toileting APPENDIX B Wandering.
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3 What Is Most Concerning (Cont.), Ch. 2 Speech & Language Communication (Includes Nonverbal Assisted Communication, Tantrums & Meltdowns).
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3 What Is Most Concerning? (Cont.) Ch. 3 Cognition, Temperament & Personality, Theory of Mind (ToM)
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3C (Concerning & Challenging Behavior) Behavioral Support Ideas: 5 Point Rating Scales, Power Cards, Social Stories, Visual Schedules What Is Most Concerning? Behavior Visual Support ideas, during challenging times.
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3C Behavior Support Five Point Rating Scale < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3C Behavior Support Power Cards for Concerning ASD Behavior with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3C Behavior Support Social Stories for Concerning ASD Behaviors with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3C Behavior Support Visual Schedules for Concerning ASD Behaviors with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #4 When is it Sensory? Ch. 1 Sensory Issues; APPENDIX A Sensory Checklist, APPENDIX B Sensory Profile
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #4 When Is It Sensory? (Cont.) Ch. 2 Sensory Categories; Part 1. Hypo-Activity, Part 2. Hyper-Activity APPENDIX C (ADHD).
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #4 When Is It Sensory? (Cont.), Ch. 2 Sensory Categories (Cont.), Part 3 SIRs, APPENDIX D Sensory Issue Assessments, APPENDIX E Stereotyped Behavior, Enhanced Perception.
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #4 When Is It Sensory? (Cont.), Ch. 3 Sensory Integration. APPENDIX F Sensory Processing Scale (SPS), APPENDIX G Sensory Diet, APPENDIX H Sensory Categories
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #5, What To Do While You Wait? Ch. 1 Getting To Know Your Child, Ch. 2 Social & Personal Awareness APPENDIX A Social Isolation APPENDIX B Spoons Theory
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #5 What To Do While You Wait? (Cont.) Ch. 3 Child's Thinking, Learning Strengths & Weaknesses, Ch. 4 Working on Independent Daily Living Skills, APPENDIX C 8 Types of VPD, APPENDIX D Hidden Facts, APPENDIX E Learning Disabilities
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #6 Where To Look for Resources? Ch. 1 Networking & Support a. Autism CARES B. Gov. Websites. APPENDIX A - Autism Network (AANE); Ch. 2 Insurance & Intervention, APPENDIX B Request for Services Letter
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #6 Where To Look for Resources? (Cont.), Ch. 3 Laws- Federal, State, Local, IEP, APPENDIX C Section 504 Plan, APPENDIX D Transition Plan, Ch. 4 Family Law, Autism Education, Bullying, APPENDIX E Due Process
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #6 Where To Look for Resources? (Cont.) Ch. 5 Future Challenges; College, Career, Older Adult, Geriatrics. APPENDIX F Campus Life, APPENDIX G Respite Resources, APPENDIX H Additional Resources, APPENDIX I 8 Nurse Tips, APPENDIX J Guardiansh
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-0 Who May Help? Ch. 1 Instructional Programs,, Ch. 2 Therapies, Ch. 3 Other Therapies. APPENDIX A Early Intervention, Ch. 2 Therapies, Ch. 3 Other Therapies
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-1 Who May Help? Other Therapies ABA, CBT, DIR, OT, PECS, APPENDIX B Therapies Under ABA Umbrella
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-2 Who May Help? Other Therapies: RDI, SPD, ST, TEAACH
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-3 Who May Help? Other Therapies Programs Approaches; Meds, Diet,
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-4 Who May Help? CAMs 1. Acupuncture 2. Animal Assisted Therapy
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-5 Who May Help? CAMs 3. Anti Inflammation Therapy 4. Auditory Integration Therapy
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-6 Who May Help? CAMs 5. Chelation Therapy 6. Chiropractic Therapy
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-7 Who May Help? CAMs 7. Creative Therapy 8. Facilitated Communication
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-8 Who May Help? CAMs 9. Hyperbaric Oxygen 10. Immunoglobulin Infusions
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-9 Who May Help? CAMs 11. Massage Therapy 12. Mindfulness Meditation
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-10 Who May Help? CAMs 13. Neuro-Therapy 14. Physical Activity Program
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-11 Who May Help? CAMs 15. Stem Cell Therapy 16. Vitamin Supplements
  • GALLERY SLIDESHOW
  • *PREVIEW Books in Gallery
    • AMAZING ADVENTURES Extended Book Reviews
    • DIAGNOSIS, DOCTORS, & DENIAL Extended Book Reviews
    • SAVVY SOLUTIONS Extended Book Reviews
    • SCHOOL ON THE SHORT BUS Extended Book Reviews
  • ExtendedBookReviews~
  • Rules for David
  • A Friend Like Henry & All Because of Henry
  • No You Don't
  • Twirling Naked
  • Autism Mom's Survival Guide
  • A Spot on the Wall
  • A Child's Journey Out of Autism
  • Paula's Journal
  • How Can I Talk
  • 101 & 1,001 Tips
  • Hello, My Name is Max
  • What Color is Monday?
  • Spinning in Circles
  • Miracles Are Made
  • Secondhand Autism
  • I Wish I Were Engulfed in Flames:
  • 3500: An Autistic Boy's
  • Ido in Autismland
  • The Journey to Normal
  • All I Can Handle
  • He's Not Autistic, But...
  • The Horse Boy
  • Building in Circles
  • Autism Goes to School
  • I Am In Here
  • The Aspie Parent, the First Two Years.
  • Seeing Ezra: A Mother's Story
  • Autism: Turning on the Light
  • I Know You're In There
  • Autism: Why I Love Kids
  • Autism: Triplet Twist
  • Someone I'm With Has Autism
  • Making Peace with Autism
  • The ABC's of Autism Acceptance
  • The Long Ride Home
  • Autism by Hand
  • Knowing Autism
  • Autism Belongs
  • A Real Boy
  • A Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night
  • Today's BLOG When Is It Sensory? ADHD, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.
  • Mobile Special
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Help Us Grow
  • Paid Link Disclosure
  • Privacy Policy
  • Know Autism, Know Your Child
  • New Information
  • Previous BLOGs Good Ideas
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #1 How Will I Know If It Is Autism? Ch. 1 Checklists, Ch. 2 Red Flags, Ch. 3 CDC. APPENDIX A Informal Autism Checklist, APPENDIX B Red Flags APPENDIX C Developmental Screening
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #2 Why Is It Autism? Ch. 1 Diagnosis & DSM-5, APPENDIX A ASD Screening Assessments, APPENDIX B PPD-NOS Pervasive Developmental Disorder, APPENDIX C Labels.
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #2 Why Is It Autism? Ch. 2 Denial & Misdiagnosis, Ch. 3 Doctors & Direction, APPENDIX D ASD Findings, APPENDIX E Developmental Screenings.
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3 What Is Most Concerning? Ch. 1 Gross & Fine Motor Skills; Part 1 Poor Eating, Part 2 Toilet Training. APPENDIX A Toileting APPENDIX B Wandering.
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3 What Is Most Concerning (Cont.), Ch. 2 Speech & Language Communication (Includes Nonverbal Assisted Communication, Tantrums & Meltdowns).
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3 What Is Most Concerning? (Cont.) Ch. 3 Cognition, Temperament & Personality, Theory of Mind (ToM)
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3C (Concerning & Challenging Behavior) Behavioral Support Ideas: 5 Point Rating Scales, Power Cards, Social Stories, Visual Schedules What Is Most Concerning? Behavior Visual Support ideas, during challenging times.
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3C Behavior Support Five Point Rating Scale < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3C Behavior Support Power Cards for Concerning ASD Behavior with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3C Behavior Support Social Stories for Concerning ASD Behaviors with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #3C Behavior Support Visual Schedules for Concerning ASD Behaviors with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #4 When is it Sensory? Ch. 1 Sensory Issues; APPENDIX A Sensory Checklist, APPENDIX B Sensory Profile
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #4 When Is It Sensory? (Cont.) Ch. 2 Sensory Categories; Part 1. Hypo-Activity, Part 2. Hyper-Activity APPENDIX C (ADHD).
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #4 When Is It Sensory? (Cont.), Ch. 2 Sensory Categories (Cont.), Part 3 SIRs, APPENDIX D Sensory Issue Assessments, APPENDIX E Stereotyped Behavior, Enhanced Perception.
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #4 When Is It Sensory? (Cont.), Ch. 3 Sensory Integration. APPENDIX F Sensory Processing Scale (SPS), APPENDIX G Sensory Diet, APPENDIX H Sensory Categories
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #5, What To Do While You Wait? Ch. 1 Getting To Know Your Child, Ch. 2 Social & Personal Awareness APPENDIX A Social Isolation APPENDIX B Spoons Theory
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #5 What To Do While You Wait? (Cont.) Ch. 3 Child's Thinking, Learning Strengths & Weaknesses, Ch. 4 Working on Independent Daily Living Skills, APPENDIX C 8 Types of VPD, APPENDIX D Hidden Facts, APPENDIX E Learning Disabilities
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #6 Where To Look for Resources? Ch. 1 Networking & Support a. Autism CARES B. Gov. Websites. APPENDIX A - Autism Network (AANE); Ch. 2 Insurance & Intervention, APPENDIX B Request for Services Letter
  • FREE ASD BOOK UNIT #6 Where To Look for Resources? (Cont.), Ch. 3 Laws- Federal, State, Local, IEP, APPENDIX C Section 504 Plan, APPENDIX D Transition Plan, Ch. 4 Family Law, Autism Education, Bullying, APPENDIX E Due Process
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #6 Where To Look for Resources? (Cont.) Ch. 5 Future Challenges; College, Career, Older Adult, Geriatrics. APPENDIX F Campus Life, APPENDIX G Respite Resources, APPENDIX H Additional Resources, APPENDIX I 8 Nurse Tips, APPENDIX J Guardiansh
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-0 Who May Help? Ch. 1 Instructional Programs,, Ch. 2 Therapies, Ch. 3 Other Therapies. APPENDIX A Early Intervention, Ch. 2 Therapies, Ch. 3 Other Therapies
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-1 Who May Help? Other Therapies ABA, CBT, DIR, OT, PECS, APPENDIX B Therapies Under ABA Umbrella
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-2 Who May Help? Other Therapies: RDI, SPD, ST, TEAACH
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-3 Who May Help? Other Therapies Programs Approaches; Meds, Diet,
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-4 Who May Help? CAMs 1. Acupuncture 2. Animal Assisted Therapy
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-5 Who May Help? CAMs 3. Anti Inflammation Therapy 4. Auditory Integration Therapy
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-6 Who May Help? CAMs 5. Chelation Therapy 6. Chiropractic Therapy
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-7 Who May Help? CAMs 7. Creative Therapy 8. Facilitated Communication
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-8 Who May Help? CAMs 9. Hyperbaric Oxygen 10. Immunoglobulin Infusions
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-9 Who May Help? CAMs 11. Massage Therapy 12. Mindfulness Meditation
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-10 Who May Help? CAMs 13. Neuro-Therapy 14. Physical Activity Program
  • FREE BOOK UNIT #7-11 Who May Help? CAMs 15. Stem Cell Therapy 16. Vitamin Supplements
  • GALLERY SLIDESHOW
  • *PREVIEW Books in Gallery
    • AMAZING ADVENTURES Extended Book Reviews
    • DIAGNOSIS, DOCTORS, & DENIAL Extended Book Reviews
    • SAVVY SOLUTIONS Extended Book Reviews
    • SCHOOL ON THE SHORT BUS Extended Book Reviews
  • ExtendedBookReviews~
  • Rules for David
  • A Friend Like Henry & All Because of Henry
  • No You Don't
  • Twirling Naked
  • Autism Mom's Survival Guide
  • A Spot on the Wall
  • A Child's Journey Out of Autism
  • Paula's Journal
  • How Can I Talk
  • 101 & 1,001 Tips
  • Hello, My Name is Max
  • What Color is Monday?
  • Spinning in Circles
  • Miracles Are Made
  • Secondhand Autism
  • I Wish I Were Engulfed in Flames:
  • 3500: An Autistic Boy's
  • Ido in Autismland
  • The Journey to Normal
  • All I Can Handle
  • He's Not Autistic, But...
  • The Horse Boy
  • Building in Circles
  • Autism Goes to School
  • I Am In Here
  • The Aspie Parent, the First Two Years.
  • Seeing Ezra: A Mother's Story
  • Autism: Turning on the Light
  • I Know You're In There
  • Autism: Why I Love Kids
  • Autism: Triplet Twist
  • Someone I'm With Has Autism
  • Making Peace with Autism
  • The ABC's of Autism Acceptance
  • The Long Ride Home
  • Autism by Hand
  • Knowing Autism
  • Autism Belongs
  • A Real Boy
  • A Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night
WWW.SARASAUTISMSITE.COM

Latest BLOG ~
with < My Thoughts >
​by Sara Luker

March 2025 ~ Extended Book Review

3/31/2025

0 Comments

 

Hello Everyone,
 
This month’s BLOG will begin with a chance to view my slideshow GALLERY of Books and focus on the offered Extended Book Reviews. The slideshow shows the book covers, divided into the following categories ~

     AMAZING ADVENTURES
     DIAGNOSIS, DOCTORS, DENIAL
     SAVVY SOLUTIONS
     SCHOOL ON THE SHORT BUS
 
Hopefully, these stories will help parents, clinicians, academics, and all people #Autism, in connecting with those who have gone before us on their Autism Journey. March's BLOGs give snippets of my Extended Book Reviews; find full reviews on website MENU; along with a LINK to purchase the eBook. You will find each Autism story to be engaging, compelling, and as different as each family's Autism journey.

'From the 
Category – AMAZING ADVENTURES. Read the full reviews, plus LINKs to eBooks, on www.sarasautismsite.com. ​
Picture
​Paula’s Journal: Surviving Autism by Stephanie R. Marks (2012). Extended Book Review with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker

Excerpts from the book – (1% indicates location in the Kindle version of the book, instead of page numbers).

​1%       My name is Stephanie Marks and I have autism. I am 38 years old, dark curly hair, bright green eyes. I have tiny, slender feet and I am very short. I am non-verbal. I look like other people you meet. I love to laugh and I often pray.
 
Autism controls my life and I can never change that. The monster called autism might jump into my thought pattern at any time and disrupt the flow of my thoughts. 
 
When I was a child I could not find a way to stay in control.  I will let you see a few of my days through my eyes.  They are not in an order you can predict.

4%       People hug and kiss and carry on.  People show affection outwardly.  I have had to teach myself how to fit into the world of normal people.  It is the only way that I can fit.
 
Touching is not that comfortable.  I can love people without touching them.  They think I pull away because I don’t care but it is not that.  Sometimes touching adds too much stimulation. 
 
We are so different and yet we are so alike.  We both want and need love to be happy.  Why don’t we feel the same when we are touched?  Someone else’s brain says “Great.”  Mine says “Whoa.”  Click clack. Click clack. Click clack.
 
< My Thoughts >      “Why don’t we feel the same when we are touched?”  
 
In much of the literature, we find that persons with autism are under-responsive to 'touching'. And don’t often seek hugs, or other physical closeness. Probably, as Paula says, it feels too uncomfortable. Or, maybe as with 'eye contact', 'touching' is too intimate for very sensitive persons.
 
4%    A Day – Here I am sixteen and not even been kissed.  I am beginning to know that my dreams are just that – dreams.  No one sees me as sixteen – cannot see me as sixteen.  In my heart and soul I am as sixteen as anyone else is at sixteen.  …Happy sixteen, Self.  Click clack. Click clack. Click clack.
 ​
​Sicile-Kira, C. (2014) says that “Social relationships are important to all people, yet are difficult for many on the autism spectrum to develop naturally.”  “…having social skills, knowing about expected yet often unstated rules of behavior, and social boundaries.”  “…there are different ways of teaching what is needed to be learned about relationships.”  Some of the things she suggests are – Social Skills Training, Social Stories, Social Thinking, and hidden rules such as ‘assumed knowledge’, social hierarchies, and expected/unexpected situations.
 
10%     A Day – I am autistic and also nonverbal.  When I try to talk, funny sounds come out. They are not the sounds in my head.  In my head, I am thinking clearly.  In my mouth, I speak a foreign language.  Mom would try and try to help me make sounds.  I just could not and cannot.  I wish she would stop trying.  Speech therapy was helpful, but it did not teach me to speak.  When I cannot communicate, stress and frustration overtake my actions.   Click clack. Click clack. Click clack.

17%     A Day – Well, there are times when I will scratch and scratch until I break the skin.  It feels good at first and then it starts to hurt.
 
< My Thoughts >     "...starts to hurt."

Scratching and scratching until one breaks the skin can be a form of 'self-stimulation'. Also known as Self-Injurious Behaviors (SIBs).

Note: More about Self-Injurious Behaviors (SIBs). Go to MENU for – Know Autism, Know Your Child with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker. Read under UNIT 4 – When Is It Sensory? Chapter 2 Sensory Categories, a. Sensory Interests, a1. Self-Injurious Behaviors (SIBs).

According to Rattaz, C., Michelon, C., et al. (2015), studies show that (Self-Injurious Behavior) “SIB were frequently associated with other challenging behaviors… irritability, stereotypy, hyperactivity, and impulsivity.”

They go on to say that “…abnormal sensory processing was also found to be a strong predictor of self-injury, as well as impaired social functioning.” 
 
This group wants to find out if there was a difference between the kinds and the frequency of SIB and risk factors.  Their study found that “there was no difference between risk factors in regards to gender of associated medical conditions, such as epilepsy, and association with SIBs.
 
Also, there is no correlation between risk factors and parents’ socio-economic status.”  There was however, a higher correlation between a higher Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS) score and higher risk of SIB during adolescence.
 
Recent studies like Rattaz, C., Michelon, C., et al. (2015) include the Oliver, C., & Richards, C. (2015) study which encourages determining risk factors for SIB, in order to start early intervention. When targeted early, even before self-injurious behavior begins, the severity of the behavior can be controlled.  Early SIB markers, along with physical health assessments and a vigilance for discovering emerging behaviors.
 
17%     When I was small, I would bang my head and bang my head.  I know there are lots of theories about self stimulation.  Why choose to use self stimulation with an action that hurts?  Someone out there help me to understand.   At first it feels good and then it starts to hurt.  Self-stimulation – why would someone choose to do an action which hurts?  Someone out there help me to understand.  Someone who feels the same way I do, not someone with a theory.  Click clack. Click clack. Click clack.
 
< My Thoughts >      “Someone out there help me to understand.”  
 
My thinking is that self-stimulation is in response to something else that is going on, either in the environment or within the person.  Along with the strong impulse to ‘do something’, the self-stimulation may happen to offset an internal pain or ‘perceived pain’ that the person is experiencing. 
 ​
​References:
​

Rattaz, C., Michelon, C., et al. (2015). Symptom Severity as a Risk Factor for Self-Injurious Behavior in Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorders. Retrieved Online from – Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, Aug;59(8):730-40.

Sicile-Kira, C. (2014).  Autism Spectrum Disorder (revised): The Complete Guide to Understanding Autism; New York, New York: Penguin Random House Company.

End of excerpt from the eBook, Paula's Journal: Surviving Autism by Stephanie R. Marks. See the full Extended Book Review here, on my website.
 
Thank you for reading and sharing my BLOGs. Comments are welcomed, to be viewed and answered privately. My goal is to assist families, clinicians, educators, and all people ‘autism’, to continue their journey on the Autism Highway. At the end of each website Extended Book Review, please find a source to have the whole book to read.

Regards,
Sara Luker


​Paid Link Disclosure -

These Extended Book Reviews have an Amazon Link for actual book purchases. Please read this Paid Link Disclosure AKA Affiliate Links Disclosure:
     Sometimes there are paid links, also known as affiliate links, used on this site. My website, www.sarasautismsite.com, is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. This is an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. 
     I may earn or receive a small paid commission from referrals for book purchases made through posts, pages, and links on this site. But I try to remain unbiased and I do not accept paid reviews. All opinions expressed here are my own. 
     There is no extra cost to you when purchases are made using the provided links. By using the links I provide you agree that you’ve read this paid link disclosure statement. 
Thank you! 
Sara Luker

​​
0 Comments

March 2025 ~ Extended Book Reviews

3/30/2025

0 Comments

 
Hello Everyone,
 
This month’s BLOG will begin with a chance to view my slideshow GALLERY of Books and focus on the offered Extended Book Reviews. The slideshow shows the book covers, divided into the following categories ~

     AMAZING ADVENTURES
     DIAGNOSIS, DOCTORS, DENIAL
     SAVVY SOLUTIONS
     SCHOOL ON THE SHORT BUS
 
Hopefully, these stories will help parents, clinicians, academics, and all people #Autism, in connecting with those who have gone before us on their Autism Journey. March's BLOGs give snippets of my Extended Book Reviews; find full reviews on website MENU; along with a LINK to purchase the eBook. You will find each Autism story to be engaging, compelling, and as different as each family's Autism journey.

'From the 
Category – SAVVY SOLUTIONS. Read the full reviews, plus LINKs to eBooks, on www.sarasautismsite.com. ​
Picture
Autism: Turning on the Light: A Father Shares His Son’s Inspirational Life’s Journey through Autism by Keith Ambersley (2013). Extended Book Review with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker

Excerpts from the book – (3% indicates location in the Kindle version of the book, instead of page numbers).
 
Excerpts from the Preface of Turning on the Light by Keith Ambersley, eBook 2013, with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker

Ambersley, K. (2013)   3%       My name is Aaron, and my diagnosis is pervasive developmental disorder (PDD). Generally PDD is readily defined as autism, which is a more recognizable term.
 
This cognitive and receptive disorder prevents me from processing information quickly and accurately with the addition of speech and language delays and attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
 
Everything has to be explained to me at a slower pace so that I can make sense of it all. My dad says it’s not important when you get it, but more importantly that you get it!
 
I have many dreams, just like kids without this disability. My hope is to do my very best beyond autism. To be recognized for my ability and not for my inability.
 
5%       My dad is writing this book for me to share my story. My story tells of the many obstacles, challenges, and success I’ve encountered on my journey down the road of autism.
 
I want each parent of an autistic child to realize that no matter how daunting and frustrating the task, nothing is impossible! 
 
Each milestone and accomplishment, no matter how small, is a dream realized when put in the right context. I have a long way to go. 
 
< My Thoughts >      “Each milestone and accomplishments...” 
 
Achieving a goal, meeting a milestone, and accomplishing even the smallest task, is huge. Really, it’s hard for someone who is not on the spectrum to appreciate what this population must overcome ‘thinking-wise’ in order to reach even the tiniest of goals.
 
In teaching special education students and/or high-risk students I have found that are three ‘hard to learn’ skills keeping them from reaching their goals. It’s hard to learn, or even to think about – how to PLAN, how to PREDICT, or how to recognize CONSEQUENCES.

5%    Social change has moved the needle in a positive direction to preserve the right and dignity of children and adults with autism.
 
6%       Our family has chosen the path of autism light, which enables and engages our son Aaron so that he can set goals, live his dreams, and exceed his expectations at his pace and on his terms.
 
Wherever his dream takes him, we are right there in his corner to support and encourage him on his journey, to enable him to pursue areas of interest not yet known to us.
 
His dreams could also take him to different countries and cultures. With today‘s technological advancements and the global community becoming a homogeneous network of people, this dream is both conceivable and possible.
 
We find ourselves helping each other in so many different ways. He helps me to think outside the box for creative solutions to help him navigate the basic fundamentals of communication and social behavior, which I have taken for granted all my life.
 
7%       I had so many of my own dreams all lined up and ready to go for my son. Fate has changed that. My gift to my son is to support his dream wherever it takes him. This is the only dream that counts.
 
< My Thoughts >      “I had so many of my own dreams…”

Many parents dream about their 'future child'. Autism may alter that dream, but it doesn't have to become a disappointment. Thus, the title of my book - Know Autism, Know Your Child with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker.

Sicile-Kira, C. (2014) confirms that… “The idea that this is not the life you dreamed of…not the family you had hoped for is sometimes more that can be borne.” “Feel angry! You have a right to be. Learn to refocus your anger…” “Planning should now be a part of your new life. All the decisions you make are about reaching the new dream or vision for the future.”

Ambersley, K. (2013)  ​ 12%     A psychologist who evaluated my son shared with me that in a lot of patients he sees, he can immediately tell that the lights are out and there is “nobody home.”
 
That was a very profound statement that had me thinking, if the lights are out, what does it take to turn the lights on?
 
Autism is very unpredictable when looking ahead into the future. It is rather difficult to determine which of those autistic challenges and tendencies will stick for the rest of his life or gradually disappear over time…real change is possible and inevitable because corrective action can be taken now!
 
End of excerpts from the Introduction by Keith Ambersley.

Reference:
​

Sicile-Kira, C. (2014) Autism Spectrum Disorder (revised): The Complete Guide to Understanding Autism; New York, New York: Penguin Random House Company.

Thank you for reading and sharing my BLOGs. Comments are welcomed, to be viewed and answered privately. My goal is to assist families, clinicians, educators, and all people ‘autism’, to continue their journey on the Autism Highway. At the end of each website Extended Book Review, please find a source to have the whole book to read.

Regards,
Sara Luker

​​Paid Link Disclosure -

These Extended Book Reviews have an Amazon Link for actual book purchases. Please read this Paid Link Disclosure AKA Affiliate Links Disclosure:
     Sometimes there are paid links, also known as affiliate links, used on this site. My website, www.sarasautismsite.com, is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. This is an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. 
     I may earn or receive a small paid commission from referrals for book purchases made through posts, pages, and links on this site. But I try to remain unbiased and I do not accept paid reviews. All opinions expressed here are my own. 
     There is no extra cost to you when purchases are made using the provided links. By using the links I provide you agree that you’ve read this paid link disclosure statement. 
Thank you! 
Sara Luker
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March 2025 ~ Extended Book Review

3/29/2025

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​Hello Everyone,
 
This month’s BLOG will begin with a chance to view my slideshow GALLERY of Books and focus on the offered Extended Book Reviews. The slideshow shows the book covers, divided into the following categories ~

     AMAZING ADVENTURES
     DIAGNOSIS, DOCTORS, DENIAL
     SAVVY SOLUTIONS
     SCHOOL ON THE SHORT BUS
 
Hopefully, these stories will help parents, clinicians, academics, and all people #Autism, in connecting with those who have gone before us on their Autism Journey. March's BLOGs give snippets of my Extended Book Reviews; find full reviews on website MENU; along with a LINK to purchase the eBook. You will find each Autism story to be engaging, compelling, and as different as each family's Autism journey.

​'From the 
Category – SCHOOL ON THE SHORT BUS Read the full reviews, plus LINKs to eBooks, on www.sarasautismsite.com. 
Picture
A Spot on the Wall by Martha Squaresky (2014). Extended Book Review with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker

Excerpts from the book – (8% indicates location in the Kindle version of the book, instead of page numbers).

8%     Jay and I strolled out of the Regal Cinema…  We waited on the carpet in the long corridor for our friends…Jay turned, glanced to his left and saw Greg.  Our son.
 
Jay said “Martha.  Look!  There’s Greg.”  Jay tugged on my sleeve.
 
I heard him, turned to look at my son and said, “Greg!  Hi, Greg!  Are you going to the movies?  We saw a movie with Charlene and David.”
 
A bit confused to see Jay and me at the theater, he peered into my eyes, and then looked away as if mentally processing our presence in his life…
 
Evidently his private world no longer included us.  He moved forward, ignoring me.
 
< My Thoughts >      “…his private world no longer included us.” 

When your child is small, you want him or her to learn to become independent individuals. But then when it happens, after all the years of vigilant preparation, somehow parents are not ready for their child to leave the nest.

4%   “Go away.  This is my life now,” I’m sure he would have said had he been able to communicate his thoughts.
 
I convinced Jay they would call if there was a problem.
 
3%   You encourage your children to live independently in this chaotic world. That’s what all parents seek for their children. This story is about that seeking.

​Note: More about PDD-NOS (Pervasive Developmental Disorder), go to MENU for – Know Autism, Know Your Child with < My Thoughts > by Sara Luker. Read on this website under – UNIT 2 – Why Is It Autism? Chapter 1, Diagnosis & DSM-5;; APPENDIX B – PDD-NOS (Pervasive Developmental Disorder).

In the DSM-5, individuals who previously met the criteria for PDD-NOS are now diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). ASD encompasses a broader range of symptoms and severity levels, including: Social communication impairments, Restricted and repetitive behaviors or interests, and Symptoms present early in development. 
​
Therefore, PDD-NOS is no longer a recognized diagnosis in the current edition of the DSM. Individuals who previously received this diagnosis may be reevaluated and diagnosed with ASD or another appropriate condition based on the DSM-5 criteria.

85%   Greg’s fingers showed evidence of his own personal attacks.  For years during tantrums, he bit his fingers.  Calluses built up to the point that when we held his hand, we felt the hard spots on each side of his index fingers.
​
Greg felt better when he bit his fingers.  Maybe there was a release of endorphins that brought relief from whatever was causing Greg’s tantrums, thus making it a compulsive behavior.  In many ways his puking mirrored cutting.
 
My hope was that Greg understood the pain inflicted on him by a fellow sufferer of autism as nothing personal.  I wanted him to find peace from his personal demons as well.
 
< My Thoughts >       “Greg felt better when he bit his fingers.”

While often 'risky behavior', also known as Self-Injurious Behaviors (SIBs). SIBS are possibly necessary for stress relief. The child bits his fingers repetitiously, until it becomes a dangerous fixed behavior. 
 
Boesch, M., Taber-Doughty, T., et al. (2015) believe that “… an individual may not exhibit impairment in current functioning until environmental demands outweigh the individual’s capabilities.” One of those impairments causing Self-Injurious Behaviors (SIBs) is communication and/or language deficits.  “SIB’s are behaviors causing direct physical harm to one’s own body, resulting in physical injury and tissue damage,” (exhibited through self-hitting, self-pinching, self-biting). Occasionally they will bite others nearby.

99%   Greg is heroic.  He is living life independently despite having severe challenges in communication, meeting simple demands and making meaning out of life. That’s what I have to accept, and it’s the most difficult acceptance there is.
 
Greg doesn’t need me anymore.

< My Thoughts >      "Greg doesn’t need me anymore." 

​Ah, but that is not the end of the story... saga to be continued. 

End of excerpt from the eBook by Martha Squaresky. See the full Extended Book Review on my website.
 
Thank you for reading and sharing my BLOGs. Comments are welcomed, to be viewed and answered privately. My goal is to assist families, clinicians, educators, and all people ‘autism’, to continue their journey on the Autism Highway. At the end of each website Extended Book Review, please find a source to have the whole book to read.

Regards,
Sara Luker


​Paid Link Disclosure -

These Extended Book Reviews have an Amazon Link for actual book purchases. Please read this Paid Link Disclosure AKA Affiliate Links Disclosure:
     Sometimes there are paid links, also known as affiliate links, used on this site. My website, www.sarasautismsite.com, is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. This is an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. 
     I may earn or receive a small paid commission from referrals for book purchases made through posts, pages, and links on this site. But I try to remain unbiased and I do not accept paid reviews. All opinions expressed here are my own. 
     There is no extra cost to you when purchases are made using the provided links. By using the links I provide you agree that you’ve read this paid link disclosure statement. 
Thank you! 
Sara Luker
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