Louise: J’s proud parent

STAGE 1 (When J was 2 years old) I had heard of echolalia, but J’s language never matched what I had been told about that. Echolalia is commonly (and wrongly) described as being meaningless parroting without understanding, and it was certainly never like that with J. When J first learned to speak, he was memorising […]
Noah’s Blog

Noah’s Blog Thank you, Noah, for your interactive blog posts here! There will eventually be several video clips in this ongoing story, which is aptly title “To Stage 6 and Beyond,” so please come back for that. Please pardon the clumsy way that Video #1 ends, because we promise Video #2 will smooth over the […]
Maria’s Blog

Cece’s Story The Early Days Cece was born at 36 weeks. As an infant she was diagnosed with a rare genetic condition, and by 9 months old, we learned she also had a significant visual impairment. As a baby, she loved to be held, and was most content when she was with me, her Mama. […]
Christie’s Blog

Christie is a mom and a natural communication partner! Her blog is particularly instructive because Christie talks about how natural it was for *her* when her daughter emerged into Stage 4 — ‘dysfluencies’ and all. Not true dysfluencies, Stage 4 brings ‘mazing’ with it. This is so common that we have now come to expect […]