19 June 2014

Just a few of our Mom Sessions

Dear readers,

I titled this post as "JUST A FEW" which wasn't meant to brag but to inspire. Majority of these activities were only from my 2014 sessions with Miggy, my 11-year-old autistic son. As early as when Miggy was 2yrs/9 months old and diagnosed with the disorder in 2005, I already started my "tutorials," "therapies" and "modifications" with him. Why are those words marked in quotations? Because I am not a SpEd teacher nor a therapist. I am simply a mom. Hey, not just an ordinary mom but a special mom! A hundred percent hands-on mom!




My point here is that it doesn't take any medical or teaching expertise to do all these. All it takes is patience, will power, energy, and tons and tons of the overused and sometimes misused "UNCONDITIONAL LOVE."




Mom sessions may not always be formal academic activities. It could simply be in any form - tangible or not, educational or basic life skills; in any time of the day - night or day, dusk or dawn; in any place, but  MUST be born out of love, fun, acceptance and willingness to make your child a better, coping and able individual. Mom sessions could be short or long depending on your availability, but MUST always be quality time.




Some examples of Mom Sessions/Family Sessions which you do a lot but you're probably unaware that these are actually therapeutic/educational/improvement sessions for your child:

-Bedtime prayers with your child -"Lord, thank you for the....... Bless ......."
-Instructional bathing "ceremonies"
-Setting the table 
         Let him do it! It's okay if he breaks a china. Before he breaks the whole set, he probably would have already mastered proper table setting.
-Teaching table manners
-Teaching and prompting social cues
-Singing and dancing together
-Going to the church
-Shopping 
         Let him make the shopping list and be firm in buying only the ones on the list.
-Playing with him, teaching him taking turns and waiting
-Watching TV with him 
          All throughout talking and asking him questions and prompting answers.
-Assisting him with homework
-Bringing him early to school to attend the flag ceremony and morning prayers
-Eating out
-Watching him play the iPad and asking him questions about the game. 
          Caution when there's wifi. Always supervise and guide his downloads.
-Getting him ready for changes in his routine by discussing with him days before the modification. 

Hmmm.... what else? It is actually endless. Any day, anywhere, anything is an opportunity for learning. It just doesn't stop. It's a cycle that loops and presents itself all the time. Every single time. 


So to all the special mothers out there, I wish you good luck!