Practice routines that are designed specifically for a child with autism may improve behavior and school performance.
People practice skills in order to become fluent at those skills. Research shows that elite athletes require at least ten years of intense practice to reach their level of skill. The link between active practice and getting better is strong in most fields of research. This paper describes a model for teaching children with autism to perform a certain behavior quickly and correctly (behavior fluency). Fluency means that the children have better recall, are less fatigued, and can better apply learned behavior to more advanced skills.









Please comment on this autism topic.
Responding to interactive metronome
Feb 9, 2011 by AnonymousAs a certified Interactive Metronome Provider, I have experienced many positive results working with clients with Autism, ADD, ADHD, TBI, Asperger's Syndrome, Chronic Fatigue and seniors with balance/gait difficulty. There IS significant research on Interactive Metronome if one looks at the proper resources. Increased focus/attention, better coordination, improved motor planning, improved self-confidence, better eye contact, less impulsiveness, less anxiety, better grades in school are only a few of the gains that clients I have worked with have gained as a result of IM.
I have worked with close to 80 clients and have only had one client ( a 50 year old male ) with ADD who felt that IM did not help them in some way.
Living Gluten Free – Right to Heal
Feb 22, 2010 by karmic healthBy Sandi Star, CCN
After struggling for over 40 years with chronic migraines, IBS, Muscle and joint pain, fatigue, brain fog, asthma and a slew of other ailments and frustrations I decided to take a closer look at the cause rather than obsessing on the symptoms. I was tired of relying on doctors to give me answers and tired of the medications that only gave me side affects and little relief.
I had been committed to health and fitness for over 20 years, losing close to 50 pounds and 5 dress sizes, however I still had all the chronic conditions that played havoc in my life. I realized there was a key element missing and soon found out it was my reaction to gluten and dairy. I didn't know enough about food intolerance or allergies or at least put the two together. I never believed food could have such a serious impact on overall health let alone be the direct cause of my diseases. With what I know today I’m surprised my doctor didn’t put the connection together when he diagnosed me with Sjögren’s Syndrome (autoimmune disease). Sjögren’s is one of the symptoms of Celiac along with a long list as you will see below and nutrition plays a critical role in the healing process. By making the appropriate diet changes – (gluten and dairy free), I’ve managed to eliminate my migraines, IBS………etc., etc., and have the Sjögren’s Syndrome under control. Even better, I have eliminated all medications and use food and natural remedies for nutrition and overall health. Now that you know why I became a clinical nutritionist and why I started Karmic Health lets get into the details of why it’s so important to understand gluten and its relation to diseases.
Why the problem with gluten now? A lot has changed in the way we harvest food compared to 50 years ago. Some of the seed companies began engineering wheat kernels that could be more easily ground and produce fluffier flour to make the soft, delicious white bread for example had to have greater yields; it made more money for the farmer and increased sales.
Gluten is a composite of the proteins gliadin and glutenin. These exist, conjoined with starch, in the endosperms of some grass-related grains, notably wheat, rye, and barley.
Understanding what happens in the body and some of the symptoms will help millions of people who go undiagnosed. Celiac is the most common genetic disease of mankind (yet for every person diagnosed, 140 will go undiagnosed).
A wheat allergy is the body’s abnormal autoimmune response to a certain protein component of wheat; it’s exhibited by a severe sudden onset allergic reaction. Usual symptoms are immediate coughing, asthma, breathing difficulties, and/or projectile vomiting. It can cause life-threatening responses in allergic people. A true Wheat allergy affects less than 1/2 % of population.
Intolerance's are much more common than true food allergies but are harder to diagnose. Food intolerance is an adverse reaction to food that does not involve the body's immune system. Generally food intolerance is an inability to properly digest certain foods. In some cases food passes right through the body before digestion is complete.
Leaky Gut is an increase in permeability of the intestinal mucosa to luminal macromolecules, antigens, and toxins associated with inflammatory degenerative and/ or atrophic mucosa or lining. Put more simply, large spaces develop between the cells of the gut wall allowing bacteria, toxins and food to leak into the bloodstream. Leaky Gut Syndrome has also been linked with many conditions, such as: Celiac Disease, Multiple Sclerosis, Fibromyalgia, Autism, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Irritable Bowel Syndrome, Eczema, Dermatitis, and Ulcerative Colitis.
Celiac disease is an autoimmune disease caused by an inappropriate immune response to dietary proteins found in wheat, rye, and barley (gluten and
gliadin). This response leads to inflammation of the small intestine and to damage and destruction of the villi that line the intestinal wall. These villi are projections (small folds) that increase the surface area of the intestine and allow nutrients, vitamins, minerals, fluids, and electrolytes to be absorbed into the body. When the villi are destroyed, the body is much less capable of absorbing food and begins to develop symptoms associated with malnutrition and malabsorption. When the body is exposed to the gluten and gliadin proteins, it forms antibodies that recognize and act against not only the grain proteins, but also against constituents of the intestinal villi. As long as the patient continues to be exposed to the proteins, he will continue to produce these autoantibodies. Celiac disease is found throughout the world but is most prevalent in those of European descent. It can affect anyone at any age and is more common in women. It is thought to be an inherited tendency that is triggered by an environmental, emotional, or physical event – although the exact mechanism is not fully understood.
According to the National Digestive Diseases Information Clearinghouse, about 5 to 15% of close family members of a celiac disease patient will also have the condition.
Symptoms
There are literally dozens, if not hundreds, of symptoms of gluten intolerance. It all comes down to inflammation in the body! Many people believe the most common symptoms are gastrointestinal in nature - yet the majority of people with gluten intolerance (and celiac disease) have extraintestinal symptoms.
The most common symptoms of celiac disease include:
• Fatigue
• Addison’s disease (hormonal disorder)
• Gastrointestinal distress (gas, bloating, diarrhea, constipation, vomiting, reflux)
• Headaches (including migraines)
• Infertility
• Mouth sores
• Weight loss/gain
• Inability to concentrate
• Moodiness/depression
• Amenorrhea/delayed menarche (menstrual cycles)
• Bone/joint/muscle pain
• Dental enamel hypoplasia (dental enamel defect)
• Short stature
• Seizures
• Tingling numbness in the legs
The “cure” is a life long gluten free diet.
Making the Transition
1. Have a reality check. Remember this is a choice! If you want to feel lousy for the rest of your life and get worse as time goes on then continue eating gluten. If you want to start on a journey to heal; go gluten free!
2. Give it time. It takes time to heal. Take the 45 day challenge.
Within this time frame you will notice the brain fog is gone. Your body will start adjusting to a healthy weight. Yes, you will lose the bloating and weight around the middle. Don’t be discouraged if it takes a little longer to feel 100%.
3. Look at your current diet and go through your pantry and refrigerator to find the foods and meals you already eat that are gluten-free. You may need to keep a food journal if you haven't already.
Be sure to list condiments, ice creams, produce, snacks, and other foods.
This list will be helpful as you create menus around your new foods and give you encouragement that you're already on the right track!
4. Give yourself permission to eat things that you may have restricted from your diet before your diagnosis. Potato chips or GF cookies may not be appropriate for other people, but they are a treat in a GF diet in small doses of course. You will need to find treats for yourself initially as you adjust to this diet. Count calories after you are comfortable with your new way of eating, manage your portions instead.
Once you are comfortable with the switch start cutting back on refined grains, crackers, breads, etc., to help the gut heal quicker. In all honesty, bread will not be that important. It's all about taking baby steps!
5. Look at your current menus and meals and find ways to eliminate gluten from your diet. Replace bread in sandwiches with GF bread or green leaf lettuce and add your favorite fixings and condiments. Have breakfast burritos with rice tortillas instead of toast and eggs. Look for GF hot and cold cereals (must not have barley malt) and have those handy for a snack or meal. Replace bread and crackers with tortilla or corn chips, brown rice cakes or popcorn. For example, chicken or tuna salad on rice cakes or scooped onto corn chips is delicious. Popcorn is a filling side dish with soup. Be on the lookout for meals on your current menus or the menus of friends and family that are naturally gluten-free (roasted chicken, baked sweet potatoes and steamed veggies, for example) and make them a staple on your new menus. Surf the internet, watch cooking shows and browse magazines for ideas and adapt them as you see fit.
6. Clear out any and all foods that have gluten, wheat, wheat flour, oats, oat flour, rye, semolina, or modified food starch from your pantry. This will allow you to see how close you are to living gluten-free already. If you have family members living with you who are not gluten free, you might consider giving the "offending edibles" to them to be put in another part of the house while you learn to live and think gluten-free. As time goes on you can cook for the entire family without gluten.
7. Plan and prepare your meals ahead of time. Being caught hungry without a plan is not a good idea! Keep a few GF soups on hand in case of extreme hunger. Keep a small cooler in your car with snacks such as nuts, dried fruit and water. It helps to outline and pack any meals you're eating at home and away from home, including snacks. An example could be -
o Breakfast: scrambled eggs and mixed vegetables rolled in a rice tortilla, sliced apples, and coffee.
o Lunch: Lettuce with turkey, avocado slices, tomato, and mustard, 1 oz. chips, and 2 organic dark chocolate pieces.
o Dinner: Grilled fish or chicken with mixed vegetables, wild rice, and fruit.
o Snacks: 1 oz. almonds and popcorn.
o Desert: Coconut Ice Cream or fruit.
Tips
1. Be patient with yourself. You'll have days when being gluten-free is really depressing (maybe even "fall off the wagon"). This is normal.
Relax – it’s a process.
2. Carry snacks with you wherever you go. It's often difficult to find an appropriate snack when the hunger strikes. GF bars are great!
3. Arrange with the hosts of gatherings you may attend to bring your own sides or complete meals. Most people are very supportive of restricted diets.
4. Carry a small cooler in your car with small cold packs to store fruit, snacks and water.
5. Consider avoiding restaurants during your transition phase as you learn how to eat and think gluten-free. Grilled meats (over a flame), baked potatoes and salads without croutons are usually safe bets. But keep a log of places you eat, what you ate and how you felt afterward. Gluten is insidious and can turn up in the oddest places (french fries, for example which can be dusted with flour).
6. Get your hands on cookbooks or start collecting your own recipes in a binder.
7. Carry digestive aids (enzyme and bioflavonoid) with you in case of accidental ingestion. There are ones specifically for gluten such as GlutenFlam by Apex Energetics; available from your healthcare practitioner.
8. Consider taking a multi-vitamin to make up for vitamins and minerals you may lack with your new diet (ask your doctor or nutritionist if necessary).
9. Find a mentor or support system.
10. Breathe
About the author: Sandi Star, CCN
Sandi is the founder of Karmic Health, specializing in nutrition related to disease where a gluten and casein (dairy) free lifestyle is crucial; working with celiac, autism and all auto immune disorders. Sandi graduated from The Natural Healing Institute with a degree in Clinical Nutrition and is continuing her studies in Clinical Herbology. She has hands on understanding of many health issues and has dedicated her life in helping others reach their optimal health.
For more information related to this article please visit www.karmic-health.com or contact Sandi Star at 760.685.3154
© Copyright Karmic Health 2010
Party-time, excellent!
Sep 29, 2008 by AnonymousI think we’ve finally settled on the half Clonidine in the morning as a means to help Thomas settle and focus at school every day. The sleepiness and fatigue have worn off and his teacher reports that he’s doing fine. I forgot to give him his medication on Friday morning, but luckily it was Pajama Party Day, so all the kids were running amok. The teacher said that he was excited, but she chalked that up to the “party atmosphere” – a term that reminds me of my dorm days at college – so she wasn’t concerned about his behavior that day. He was not excited about wearing pajamas to school, but he did it. He was also concerned about the whole party thing, saying that he didn’t want to have a pajama party and that it would be “horrible.” What he’s really saying is that he doesn’t understand what a pajama party entails and that he is, if not afraid of the unknown, ambivalent about it.
When I picked him up after class on Friday, he reported that he had a great time and that the pajama party was “wonderful.” That’s really the word he used to describe it! My children have fabulous vocabularies, a trait that I’m proud they inherited from their mother. As a reward for not pitching a tantrum about the party and both of the kids staying in their own beds on Thursday night, we went to Chuck E. Cheese’s for lunch. It’s so great going on a school day when it’s nice outside because the place was a ghost town. They had fun and when the tokens were gone, they agreed that we should go home.
Jonathan and I had parties all weekend, or at least I did. My sister’s bachelorette party was Saturday night and I stayed over at the maid of honor’s condo. We had a great time, but the kids didn’t want me to go. Jonathan is out of the house all day last Sunday at the Bears game and they didn’t bat an eye about it, but if I take my hair dryer out from under the sink and start blow-drying, they know Mommy’s planning to leave the house and they start putting up a fuss. Jonathan does too, he’s just not as direct about it. Thomas gets upset when I walk the dog for forty minutes every evening, saying, “Don’t go Mommy! I’ll miss you!” Very cute, I guess.
I’m getting so old. At ten-thirty on Saturday night, I was having a hard time keeping my eyes open. The other ladies at the party were sort of the same. We kept looking at our watches and exclaiming, “It’s only eleven? Gee, it feels like 2:30 a.m! Do you have any coffee?” The maid of honor, in her infinite coolness and wisdom, went to the Cheesecake Factory and bought eight different slices of cheesecake which we all passed around and shared. We all sat there, our mouths full of whipped cream and cake, saying, “God, this is way better than any stupid stripper!” We all had fun, especially the bride. The next morning, I got up and went for a jog around my hometown, which was so much fun (except the jogging part). I ran by the houses we grew up in and our friend’s old houses. I was running by the junior high and remembered that the last time I ran down that block, I was probably being timed for a mile. I’m glad I wasn’t being timed this time.
Yesterday afternoon, my cousin Susie came to watch Thomas and Hayley while Jonathan and I attended a retirement party. The kids are so good for babysitters, and especially our family members. The kids know Susie from vacations, and it appears as though Hayley has the same stellar memory that Thomas does. We were telling the kids on Friday that Little Susie (so called because her mom, my aunt’s name is also Susie) would be coming to watch them and Hayley said, “Yeah, remember at the vacation house when she helped us bring food in?” Jonathan and I stared at each other for a moment and then remembered that Little Susie had helped us bring in groceries shortly after we got there. We never would have remembered that. The kids get confused and call her Aunt Susie sometimes, which is total payback because I used to babysit her and her older sister when they were young, and they called me “Aunt Jenny” or sometimes, my favorite: “Cousin-Aunt-Jenny.” Little Susie was also the one who, when she was three, told me that I had a lot of nose-hair. I’m still waiting for Thomas or Hayley to get her back for that one. It’ll happen – I just have to be patient.
So I wasn’t home for most of the weekend. We’re keeping next weekend open just for incidentals and anything I have left to get, buy or help with for Tina’s wedding in less than two weeks. I can’t believe it’s upon us! Rehearsal Dinner Friday, Jonathan is taking the day off work and my mother-in-law is taking the kids all weekend, probably through to Monday since that’s Columbus Day and there’s no school. I talked to my sister Tiffany last night, who will be flying in with her fiancé the Wednesday before the wedding and she has promised to bring candy and gifts for my children. I say load ‘em up on Friday…they’re going with Grandma!
We have a hectic and exciting two weeks to look forward to while also trying to keep things sane and on as much of a schedule as we can. I can’t even think about Halloween costumes or anything like that at least until after the wedding. My brain is aging. I can only take so many marbles rolling around up there at a time.
Never, ever
Jul 7, 2008 by AnonymousI always have a hard time finding things to write about in the summertime. Nothing much seems to happen after vacation. We went away to my mother-in-law’s cottage for the Fourth of July. I was supposed to drive up with the kids last Tuesday, but Hayley broke out in chicken pox-like lesions on Monday. She had just gotten the chicken pox vaccine the week before and I was suspicious. These bumps looked just like the blisters that come with chicken pox, but the doctor saw Hayley and said they were probably from some kind of bug. But just to be safe, we were not to spend any time around Julia, my eighteen month-old niece. My sister-in-law offered to take Thomas with her and Julia up to the cottage while Hayley and I were in quarantine. It was wonderful of her to do this, because Thomas would have been very upset if he couldn’t go Tuesday, as we planned.
I always get nervous when I send Thomas somewhere with other adults to look after him because I’m afraid he’s going to be difficult. Miraculously, he never is. Everyone always tells us what a little angel he is and how sweet he is. I guess that’s usually how it works out …your kids are always better for other adults. He went to the zoo in Madison and then to the circus museum in Baraboo where he rode an elephant! I really wish I had seen that – it must have been so cool!
Jonathan and I came up to the cottage on Thursday with Hayley. Thomas was indifferent to seeing us again. He kept telling me that he didn’t want to see me and that I could go home. I don’t think he was adequately prepared for us to arrive, but he got used to it quickly. Lately, he gets upset and angry when any activity is suggested. For instance, “Hey, who wants to go fishing?” Thomas will say, “No! Nobody can go fishing! Nobody! Never, ever!” Seriously, that’s exactly what he says. It’s very dramatic. The way I deal with this now is just to say, “Okay, Thomas. Tell me when you’re not in a bad mood anymore.” And he does! He knows that he can’t control anybody else in terms of what activities they participate in, but he gives his opinion anyway. After a few minutes, he says, “Okay, Mommy. I’m not in a bad mood anymore.” After that, he’s more tractable. Unfortunately, Hayley (who is always up for any activity) listens to Thomas when he pulls the old “Nobody Can Go (insert adventure here)” and they end up arguing around it. I don’t know why she listens to him, but it makes me crazy.
On the Fourth, we went for a nice boat ride and anchored off the shore to go swimming. Thomas actually went in the water for a while and I was very surprised! He kept getting in and swimming around very energetically and then getting out again. I could tell that he was making himself do it even though he was uncomfortable. He just doesn’t like swimming in the lake and I can’t really blame him. Especially when we’re out of our depth like that…who knows what lurks deep within the weedy bottom? I kind of have to make myself do it, too. But Thomas went swimming and I was so proud of him! Jonathan took us out again on Saturday and Thomas swam again. I’m glad he does it, now the goal will be to get him to like it.
We got Thomas to see two fireworks shows this year as well. Last year, he wouldn’t go out on the boat at all so he didn’t really see any. This time we all went out on the boat and Thomas really liked the display and had fun riding the boat at night. Hayley fell asleep before both fireworks presentations but it was just as well. She was copping a royal attitude all weekend and I had had way more than enough of it by Sunday morning. Everything – EVERYTHING – has got to be just so with her that it makes me crazy. She finally earned a serious time-out on Sunday morning and ended up falling asleep in Grandma’s bed. Undoubtedly, her rottenness was brought on, at least partly, by fatigue.
We went to the zoo today and the kids were not quite as good as the first time I took them a few weeks ago. We still had fun until it was time to go. Thomas was not ready to go when I brought it up, but I didn’t want to get stuck in rush hour traffic. That’s new thing he does. Anytime he’s asked to do something he doesn’t want to do, he says, “I’m not ready to do that yet. I’ll tell you when I’m ready.” Of course, who knows when that will be? Sometimes I play along, other times I don’t. He likes to pretend he has a wristwatch on sometimes and tell me that he’ll be ready to go at nine o’clock. It could be 7 a.m., it could be 2:30 p.m. He just makes up an imaginary time that he’ll be ready to go. Since he’s showing such an interest in time, I think it might be a good idea to get him a watch soon. Then perhaps I might get an accurate prediction about when he’ll be “ready.”
This week, my sister flies in from California for our littlest sister’s bridal shower. I’m so excited to see her! The kids know her as the aunt who sends them t-shirts and suckers from “Cow-fornya.” We’re all supposed to get together on Friday at Uncle Tom’s for a little pool party. Every time the kids see an airplane, they ask if Aunt Tiffy’s on it. There’s both a small community airport nearby and also O’Hare, so we see all kinds of airplanes. I’ve explained many times that Aunt Tiffy flies on the big ones, but they keep asking just for fun.