Autism adulthood Strategies and insights for a fulfilling life
Book - 2016
"Autism Adulthood features thirty interviews with autistic adults, their parents, caregivers, researchers, and professionals. Each vignette reveals firsthand a familys challenge, their circumstances, their thought processes, and their unique solutions, and plans of action. Sharing the wisdom that emerges from parents and self-advocates experiences, Senator adds her own observations and conclusions based on her long-term experience with autism. Told in Senators trademark warm, honest, and approachable style, Autism Adulthood paints a vivid and thought-provoking picture of many people grappling with grown-up, real-life autism. Senators is the only book of its kind, as real families share their stories and their creative solutions,"-...-Amazon.com.
- Subjects
- Published
-
New York, NY :
Skyhorse Publishing
[2016]
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Physical Description
- xxix, 280 pages ; 24 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references (pages [265]-274).
- ISBN
- 9781510704237
- Foreword
- Part I. Constructing Autism Adulthood
- Introduction: Beginning at the End
- "People First" or "Autism Pride"?
- Speaking of the full human picture...
- Day habilitation, day programs, and sheltered workships defined
- Chapter 1. Post Twenty-Two Planning: Facing Transition
- Beginning to plan for Nat's adulthood
- Group home, Adult Foster Care, Shared Living, and Self-Determination
- Lining up the ducks before graduation
- Chapter 2. If You Want Something Better, Create It!: Employment and Job Training
- Nat's early days of employment
- Planning Nat's post-graduate days-finding a day program
- Filling Nat's week: making peace with day habilitation
- Self-determination and being proactive
- Honoring behavior can be the bridge to communication
- A multi-organizational effort: The Teaching Hotel
- One family's research pays off: Rising Tide Car Wash
- A cottage industry born from Legos: Made by Brad
- Creating an opportunity within your community
- Chapter 3. Home Isn't Built in a Day
- House chasing: exploring every option
- Publicly funded group home with a theme
- A Place Called Home: a privately funded, inclusive house
- Private, self-supported farmstead
- The makeup of the home
- Opting for twenty-two at twenty
- Maximizing public programs to create housing
- Chapter 4. Staffing and Turning to Others
- Nat's caregiver
- Determining your own parameters for your staff
- Sometimes the best staff is right under your nose
- Finding staff for a farmstead
- Jeff Keilson, cofounder of Rewarding Work
- Ideas on the horizon: Caring Force, Inc.
- Combining higher education and dorm life with independent living skills
- Part II. Deconstructing Autism Adulthood
- Chapter 5. Helping Your Guy Find His Way: Acquiring Life Skills
- Dr. Peter Gerhardt: teaching our guys what they need in the world
- Make sure the skill you teach is relevant
- Aim for the greatest efficiency of skill acquisition
- Teach the right skills in the right context
- Consider risk as an aid to independence
- Navigating social norms
- Being autistic, gay, and coming out
- Nat and the girl on the T
- Chapter 6. The Struggles of Apparently High-Functioning Autistic Adults
- Autism and self-discovery through writing
- Freeing oneself from a legacy of domestic abuse
- Married, autistic, and happy
- Bouncing back after a mostly difficult life
- Chapter 7. Autistic Adults with Communication or Apparent Cognitive Challenges
- Nat's communication evolution/revolution
- A few words go a long way
- Verbal, smart, but still struggling
- When he can't speak for himself
- Chapter 8. Am I My Brother's Keeper?
- When a sibling is the guardian
- Growing up with an autistic sibling and loving it
- An older sib, a very different worldview
- Sibshops: offering critical support for the brothers and sisters
- A different kind of sibling
- Chapter 9. Autism Adulthood Health and Safety Issues
- Figuring out if he's safe
- Using my intuition
- A new diagnosis
- Another parents quest for answers about autism catatonia
- A leading neurologist weighs in on the benefits of a multidisciplinary approach
- Wandering, getting lost, and tracking
- Chapter 10. I Can Never Die, and Other Myths
- A lifetime of planning leads to equanimity
- The future involves fiends and family
- Opting for more independence
- A sibling firmly in charge
- Separation and letting go
- State House story
- Epilogue
- Resources
- Glossary
Review by Library Journal Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review