Welcome to the Language Path
Creating communication within our community through connection.
Autism- Sense and Sensability
Autism is a world of undescribable beauty and feeling. Imagine walking through your world, feeling everything, from the seams on your shirt, to the warm breath that you may or may not recognize as your own, seeing everything, or seeing one thing so fully that nothing else matters.
A veritable sensory explosion. Otherwise, plan an escape to avoid bombardment. The first level gives way to the second level, which is human interaction. Sensitive beings can pick up on subtle emotional bodies around them. There are many other aspects in which kids with autism can feel causing just as many outcomes. This is how I see autism affecting many of my clients. It is important first and foremost for a child to feel safe.
A veritable sensory explosion. Otherwise, plan an escape to avoid bombardment. The first level gives way to the second level, which is human interaction. Sensitive beings can pick up on subtle emotional bodies around them. There are many other aspects in which kids with autism can feel causing just as many outcomes. This is how I see autism affecting many of my clients. It is important first and foremost for a child to feel safe.
Lessons Learned from Kids
Lesson #1: Assume every child is smart.
Lesson #2: Allowing for the most independence a child can handle will give them the greatest opportunities later in life and a fierce sense of accomplishment that cannot otherwise be attained.
Lesson #3: Connect with the children. Sometimes we don't have the answers, but they do. It's just a matter of unlocking the potential.
Lesson #4: Gentle discipline for small children involves a lot of awareness of the parent/ practitioner. This may be as simple as connecting to the breath, giving up all thought, and surrendering to that moment, bringing consciousness to both adult and child simultaneously.
Lesson #5: Sometimes children are way more capable than adults are prepared for.
Lesson #2: Allowing for the most independence a child can handle will give them the greatest opportunities later in life and a fierce sense of accomplishment that cannot otherwise be attained.
Lesson #3: Connect with the children. Sometimes we don't have the answers, but they do. It's just a matter of unlocking the potential.
Lesson #4: Gentle discipline for small children involves a lot of awareness of the parent/ practitioner. This may be as simple as connecting to the breath, giving up all thought, and surrendering to that moment, bringing consciousness to both adult and child simultaneously.
Lesson #5: Sometimes children are way more capable than adults are prepared for.