Rehearsals for “All Shook Up" have begun! Last Sunday Sarah and I were at her school for three hours. The first hour was a talk by the director about all of the various nuts and bolts of the show and program ads (required for participation), and rehearsals. The next two hours were a read-through of the whole thing complete with clips of the musical numbers from the broadway show. In hindsight, Sarah and I probably didn’t need to be there for the whole read-through. It did give me a sense of the show as a whole, but I’m not sure how much Sarah absorbed of that. And it was a lot of sitting still and sitting quietly. Since Sarah doesn’t have any lines aside from singing in some of the songs, there wasn’t anything for her to actually do that day. She made it through remarkably well. There were only two times of screaming prone on the floor, and Sarah waited patiently for me to be done each time. . .
Sarah is a sparkly, passionate, stubborn child of 17. She has developmental delays and autism. When she was 4 I decided to run a Son-Rise Program, calling it Sarah-Rise. She wasn’t speaking or eating well or potty trained. Eye contact was fleeting, she didn’t play games or play imaginatively. She couldn’t read or write. All of that has changed. I started writing weekly updates so that people could follow our journey.
Sunday, January 28, 2024
January 28: Rehearsals and Ridiculous Car Business
Sunday, January 21, 2024
January 21: So Many Snow Days - Sort Of
There was only one day of in-person school last week. Monday was a holiday, Tuesday was a snow day, Wednesday was a “flexible instruction day” because of the cold, and Friday was another day for schooling at home, which is what a Flexible Instruction Day means. Having assignments to help Sarah complete took me right back to the pandemic days and I marvel that we all survived that time. She still has some worksheets to complete today to finish what was sent home for Friday. Thursday was the only day for in-person schooling and Sarah was so excited she was bouncing on a large exercise ball while waiting for her bus. On the days when she learned that she had to stay home she was very upset, sometimes screaming and crying for half an hour over the upset. Friday was doubly hearbreaking because not only did she miss the rides with her driver but she also missed gym class, which only happens on Fridays. Amy was delighted by the whole situation because it meant postponing MAPS tests, which are standardized tests that she does not enjoy. Friday afternoon the girls did an at-home gym class together to make up for Sarah’s missed class.
Sunday, January 14, 2024
January 14: Snow Delays, Sledding, and Schroth
Amy graduated from Schroth therapy!! She still needs to do the exercises at home, but she doesn’t need to go in to the Children’s hospital every week or two to see her physical therapist. This is huge. We are both so happy about it. I like her physical therapist very much, but it is a relief to no longer need to figure out childcare for Sarah for an hour on Wednesday afternoons, because the timing didn’t work well to bring her along to the appointments. Amy is ecstatic that she won’t miss any more science classes or rides home on the bus with her bestie. I am thrilled that I can start seeing some Wednesday afternoon clients or have that time to work on other things. I have a lot of book related tasks that need attention these days.
Sunday, January 7, 2024
January 7: Parties, School, and Being Present
Happy New Year! We celebrated New Year’s Eve at home with two other families. They are families of some of Amy’s best friends so she was not ready for the night to end at midnight. They could have played for many more hours. Meanwhile, Sarah went to bed at her usual 8:30! To pass the time until midnight Amy and her friends created a Bingo game based on events or important things from the year. Whoever won the game then got to tell everyone else to put on items of clothing or costumes from our dress-up bin. It was hilarious, with bunny ears balancing atop hats, and cat-paw mittens shoved onto feet.