Early Signs, Welcome to Autismlandia

As parents, if there is one thing we know in this life, it’s that our baby is perfect. Just look at him – so beautiful, so clever, so unique. My baby is going to grow up to be a grade-A student, talented musician, star athlete, heartthrob, and Harvard graduate. One just knows that their baby is special, only just beginning that long, fulfilling, exciting life ahead of him.

Yes, my baby is perfect, healthy, and just as I always dreamed. But, when somebody tells you that your baby is not “perfect,” that there is something wrong with him, he will never be normal and life will never be the same, there is a pain that stabs a parent’s heart unlike any other pain in existence. Basically, it’s like the life itself inside your body punched a hole in the world through the front of your chest.

I was doing some online research one day in December of 2005 when I came across a list of the early signs of autism. One could say that’s when I saw my own first sign, and it read, “Autismlandia Ahead,” a place you have heard of but knew nothing about and definitely had no plans to visit.

No pointing or waving by nine months, no babbling by 12 months, little to no eye contact, no response to their name when called, preferring to be alone, intense fixations with inanimate objects such as spinning wheels on a toy car or ceiling fans revolving, and repetitive self-stimulating behaviors.

I got a strange sensation as I took my time in that slow, dense moment before I turned toward my little boy sitting near me on the floor, spinning his picture books up close to his face, an activity that he loved to do for long periods of time. I approached my next sign, “Now Entering Autismlandia.”

With Diego now 15 months of age and not having met most of the developmental milestones on that list, I fought the instinct to discard my suspicion and retreat into a temporary state of denial, because I knew in my breakable heart that something was wrong. And I was right. There was the unmistakable sign ahead, “Welcome to Autismlandia.”

What ensued was a multitude of obstacles for us, beginning with the pediatrician whose advice was to “wait and see,” because he was still so very young and even still, it takes months of evaluation to diagnose a child with autism. Next came the insurance company, followed by waiting lists for a clinical evaluation. And after months of Early Intervention services like speech and occupational therapy, when the day finally came and what I already knew was finally confirmed, I, like most of the other parents new to Autismlandia, moved through the next series of tasks a parent must complete in moving forward.

First, you cry. Maybe even a lot. After all, although the love of your child does not diminish, you had some hopes and dreams that need to be grieved in order to move on. Then you get yourself together, spend all your free time researching everything you can about how to help your child, you buy a dry erase board to keep up with the sudden complex web of appointments with doctors and therapists who are now your new best friends, and then, you do something else equally important – you find a parent support group to help you make sense of it all and guide you as you take your first steps down the road that they have already begun paving for you.

When a mother of twin autistic 10-year old boys called me, I listened to her advice about treatments available, books to read, and all sorts of valuable information. I can’t recall any of it now. I can still recall, though, the last words she said to me before hanging up – words that I held onto for years, words that gave me the perspective I needed to keep going.

“It gets better,” she said. “You will be happy again.”

Now, many years later, it is better. I am happy again. And knowing the signs earlier on and quickly responding to them gave my child a chance to reach his potential. I could go on about how progress can be slow and how excruciating it is to watch your child struggle to tie a shoe or build a tower of blocks. I could list the hundreds of little wonderful things most parents get to take for granted, for example, hearing their child say “I love you Mommy,” which I waited five years to hear and which some parents will never get to hear their child tell them.

Knowing the early signs of autism is extremely important for parents of young children. Studies confirm that the earlier a child receives treatments such as speech, occupational, and behavior therapy, the better the prognosis. That little brain is exploding with developing neural pathways that can be built and strengthened leading to a better chance of developing speech, fine motor and social skills, and sensory functioning.

Now, as a source of support and an advocate for other parents new on the autism journey, I listen to their similar experiences, point them towards the best specialists, recommend the best books, and help them through the process of grief and overwhelming upheaval autism can thrust upon the lives of a family. There is, of course, something I never forget to say to that mom before I hang up the phone – the words of hope, of absolute truth spoken to me at the beginning of my own autism journey: “It gets better. You will be happy again.” Because it has to, because it just does.

For more information about autism and for more information about the early symptoms of autism, visit www.autism-society.org.

April is Autism Awareness Month.

By Jean Perry

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Children’s Books are Needed

Business has been as brisk as the weather at the Friends of the Mattapoisett Library’s second Saturday of the month book sales. So good, in fact, that the supply of children’s books is low. Now is a great time for a bit of spring cleaning, and for donating good quality children’s books to the Friends. Donations can be brought to the library during business hours; if you need to arrange a pick-up, you can contact the library at 508-758-4171, and the staff will put you in touch with the Friends. As always, your donations are tax-deductible and all proceeds benefit the library. The next sale is Saturday, April 11 from 10:00 am until 1:00 pm at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library.

Marion Candidates’ Night

The Tri-Town League of Women Voters will hold its Annual Candidates’ Night this year on Wednesday evening, April 29 at 7:00 pm in the Music Hall at 164 Front Street. It promises to include presentations by all contested candidates with a chance to hear their views on major issues as well as a brief overview of warrant and budget items.

There are going to be four contested races this year: Selectman, Moderator, Planning Board, and Marion School Committee. For the Select Board, challenger William Dale Jones will face incumbent Jonathan “Jody” Dickerson. After 35 years of service as Moderator, David Titus will step down following this year’s town meeting. Patricia A. McCardle and Matthew William Nowick will be vying for the gavel. The Planning Board race will have two openings on the ballot. Contestants will include two incumbents, Stephen Kokkins and Stephen Gonsalves, and two challengers, Jennifer Francis and Todd Richins. The Marion School Committee has two open positions on the ballot this year. Three candidates will seek to serve, including Michelle Ouellette, Jessica Harris, and David McDonald.

Two positions are unopposed: Assessor and Board of Health. Ray Pickles will seek a new three-year term on the Board of Assessors and John Howard wishes to serve on the Board of Health for another three-year term. There are no contestants for the Open Space Acquisition Commission’s available seat.

All contestants who have stepped up to run are to be congratulated for their willingness to serve in town government.

Key Dates to Remember:

Candidates’ Night – April 29

Town Meeting – May 11

Town Elections – May 15

For further information, please contact Nan Johnson at 508-748-0046. Sponsored by the MMR League of Women Voters.

April programs at Plumb Library

On Thursday, April 9 at 6:30 pm, Mr. William J. Goldsmith will present a talk on “Solving the Social Security Puzzle.” This seminar will address your important questions on Social Security such as:

– Will Social Security be there when I’m ready to claim?

– How are my benefits calculated?

– How much will I get?

– How do I get more?

Bill is a registered financial planner with more than 22 years of financial planning experience. Pre-registration is required. For more information or to register, call the library at 508-763-8600 or email info@plumblibrary.com. You can also register by visiting the library’s events calendar and clicking the “register” button on the Social Security seminar listing.

Learn to become a responsible babysitter with the Plymouth County Extension 4-H on Tuesday, April 21 from 10:30 am – 5:00 pm at the Joseph H. Plumb Memorial Library, 17 Constitution Way, Rochester. This full day interactive 4-H class trains young people to be responsible babysitters. Pre-registration is required. Please visit the library or www.PlymouthCounty4H.org for a registration form. Space is limited! There is a registration fee of $10, and the rest of the course is funded by the Friends and Junior Friends of Plumb Library. Deadline for registration is April 14. Participants should bring a peanut/tree nut safe bagged lunch. Each participant will receive a certificate of completion, a 4-H Babysitter Handbook, learn how to make your own babysitter’s bag, and a Boo-Boo Bunny. For more information, call the library at 508-763-8600 or email info@plumblibrary.com.

The Café Parlez’ selection for April is Under the Wide and Starry Sky, by Nancy Horan. From Nancy Horan, New York Times bestselling author of Loving Frank, comes her much-anticipated second novel, which tells the improbable love story of Scottish writer Robert Louis Stevenson and his tempestuous American wife, Fanny. Fanny and Louis meet at an artist’s colony in France, and begin their life-long love affair which thrived despite many setbacks, including Louis’ recurring TB, and the disapproval of society in general and both of their families. We will discuss this novel on Thursday, April 30 at 6:30 pm. Books are available at the desk, or bring your own copy.

For their April book, “Just the Facts” Nonfiction Book Discussion Group will be reading Empty Mansions: The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune by Bill Dedman and Paul Clark Newell, Jr. Empty Mansions is a rich mystery of wealth and loss, connecting the Gilded Age opulence of the 19th Century with a 21st Century battle over a $300 million inheritance. At its heart is a reclusive heiress so secretive that, at the time of her death at age 104, no new photograph of her had been seen in decades. Despite owning palatial homes in California, New York and Connecticut, why had she lived for 20 years in a simple hospital room, despite being in excellent health? Was she in control of her fortune, or controlled by those managing her money? We will discuss this book on Thursday, April 16 at 6:30 pm. Copies are available at the desk.

For the Week of the Young Child, the Plumb Library will be presenting our favorite ballerina Plumbelina! On Thursday, April 16 from 5:00 – 6:00 pm, children ages 3-8 can learn about ballet and practice a short routine. Pre-registration is requested. For more information or to register, call the library at 508-763-8600 or check our Events Calendar and click on the “register” button on the Plumbelina event.

April Vacation Programs

April 22, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm: Lego Challenge. Drop-in program. Create your own project or use our prompts.

April 24, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm: Fingerprint Art a la Ed Emberley. Drop-in program.

April 21 – 25: Help birds build their nests. Put out nesting materials such as embroidery floss, pine needles, yarn, or shredded paper. A MOBY program.

Yard Sale/Ham & Bean Supper

There will be a Yard Sale on April 11 from 9:00 am to 1:00 pm at The Knights of Columbus Hall, 57 Fairhaven Road in Mattapoisett. Donations for the yard sale will be accepted on April 10 from 11:00 am to 4:00 pm or call Jim at 508-863-3496 to arrange a pick up. No heavy appliances, heavy furniture or clothing please. Tables can also be rented for $20 each to sell your own items.

There will also be a Ham & Bean Supper on April 11 at 5:30 pm with entertainment to follow at the same location. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for children 7 to 12 years old. For tickets or information call Jim at 508-863-3496 or Rick at 508-758- 4933.

Summer Harbor Services Discussed

David Kaiser of the Mattapoisett Boat Yard met with the Mattapoisett Marine Advisory Board during its March 26 meeting to discuss services provided by his business for boaters in Mattapoisett Harbor and waterways.

Kaiser said that overall, the 2014 summer season had been a successful time for both the town and for his business, with just a few hiccups along the way.

“One of the concerns was Sunday pump-outs,” said Kaiser. He said that typically boaters contact the boatyard via cell phone to set up a pump-out day and time and that no one had complained about not being able to get a pump-out on Sundays.

“Sundays are problematic,” Kaiser shared. He said that it was tough to get “kids” to work on Sundays and that “not just anyone” can be tapped to run the pump-out boat. The skill level required was much more precise, he continued, than that required by a launch pilot.

“I’m happy to try and make that work,” he conceded. “We are not profiting from this,” Kaiser told the group, “but happy to assist the Town, as a business in the Town.”

Regarding launch services, he said that he has a solid group ready for the 2015 season and noted that these pilots are required to have several types of licensure and certification(s), including that provided by the Coast Guard. Kaiser commented that the cost associated with gaining these licenses can be as much as $700 and take up to three months to complete.

The issue of where to pick up and drop off boaters utilizing launch services was also discussed. The selectmen had wanted boaters to be able to get picked up and dropped off at the town wharves. Kaiser said that location was very difficult to access because of the marine traffic congestion. When he agreed to provide transportation services to boaters in the Mattapoisett Harbor and waterways, it was planned for pick up and drop off at the Barstow Wharf situated at the Town Beach, he reminded the board. To accommodate the Selectmen’s request, they had tried to go in and out of the Town Wharf area at Shipyard Park; however, this proved very difficult to negotiate and very time consuming.

The board members agreed that Barstow was not only better for Kaiser, but for the Town as well due to parking issues. At the Town Beach, parking was more readily available to day-trippers and easier to access by the launch service.

Kaiser said that new signage was ready to place at the Barstow Wharf informing the public how to connect with the launch drivers along with days and time of service. He asked that the MAB help him get the word out to the public.

Harbormaster Jill Simmons, also in attendance, said that she could work with the Highway Department to plot out parking spaces for better land use at the Town Beach.

They also discussed how to handle permitting parking spaces at this location since it is now fee based for non-residents. Further discussion with the town administrator was advised to try and come up with a viable solution.

Simmons gave a brief report noting that presently she and her team are reviewing winter damages to the piers and docks and that a new kayak rack will be constructed via a Boy Scout Eagle project in the spring.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Marine Advisory Board will be on April 30 at 7:00 pm in the Town Hall conference room.

By Marilou Newell

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Blue and Gold Banquet

In a ceremony held at the Cub Scouts annual Blue and Gold Banquet on March 28, over 40 members of Pack 32 moved up in rank and nine Senior Webelos where awarded the Arrow of Light Award. The Arrow of Light is the highest award received in Cub Scouts and an award that moves up with the recipient to Boy Scouts. The ceremony was held at the VFW Cushing Post officiated by Paul St. Don, Scout Master. After  the ceremony honoring the 9 Webelos, the scouts presented to their parents Arrow of Light pins to thank them for their support in earning the award. The Arrow of Light is much more difficult to obtain than a belt loop, an activity badge or even one of the other rank patches. To be eligible for the award, a Scout must be active in a Webelos Den for at least six months and have earned the Webelos Badge. He must be knowledgeable of the requirements to become a Boy Scout including the oath, law, slogan, and motto as well as understanding the significance of the First Class Scout badge and uniform. The Scout must participate in an outdoor activity with a Boy Scout troop, attend a meeting with the troop, and go on a Webelos campout. He is also required to earn a total of eight activity badges. The ceremony is in essence a ‘coming of age’ ceremony symbolizing that Cub Scouts are now ready to become Boy Scouts. Photos courtesy Jay Pateakos

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Photos from The Set

Once The Wanderer first reported the presence of a Hollywood film crew in Rochester on April 2 word quickly spread, and so did the rumors that stars of the film production “Joy” were in town for the day. There were no star sightings, however Rochester resident Hilary Wood was able to get some photos of the action from her front yard, after the surprise of an Amish-driven horse and carriage caught her eye as it passed her window on Hartley Road. Photos © Hilary Wood Photography

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FinCom Not Ready for Recommendations

As the town inches closer to Town Meeting, a regular topic of discussion for the Marion Finance Committee continues to be the fire pumper truck requested by the Fire Department, just as it was last year.

What has changed since then, though, is the FinCom’s acceptance of the high price tag that still hovers at $540,000. At the 2014 Annual Town Meeting, FinCom recommended against the fire pumper article and Town Meeting agreed.

This year, the committee appears poised to recommend a fire pumper article, although the discussion is still not over and another week remains before the committee finally makes its recommendations on the Town Meeting warrant.

On March 26, another proposed emergency vehicle joined the conversation, although the three FinCom members in attendance have not yet warmed up to the notion of a new ambulance without a good enough reason for it.

“I have seen no real justification as to why we need a new ambulance other than [they] said we need a new ambulance,” said Finance Committee Chairman Alan Minard. He said, basically, he was told simply that the department needed a new one and three bids unspecified that evening were provided to them.

“I don’t see how we do both in the same year,” said FinCom member Margie Baldwin. “Nobody buys two cars in the same year,” she added, trying to be practical as she put it.

Well, they are both debt, said Minard, and how much debt does the Town wish to take on right now, he asked.

Minard shifted back to the fire pumper and mentioned that on the night of March 25, the night before the FinCom meeting, there was a meeting of the Fire Engine Study Committee that resulted in a 3-2 vote to adopt the $540,000 number for the warrant.

Minard said the one bid that remained constant at that amount was for a truck with specs that “does everything but tell which way to tighten the bolts.”

Minard said he asked Fire Chief Thomas Joyce if he would buy that truck priced as such, and he replied, no. Minard said, by his estimation, the pumper should cost roughly $480,000, “But that’s not the truck they want to buy.”

“Then you have a fire chief who’s deciding what truck to buy and he’s leaving in June,” said Baldwin. Chief Joyce will retire on June 30.

The chairman said, “In any business situation this wouldn’t be the case,” adding that, before the truck goes out for bid, the Town better make sure the new chief is content with the pumper slated for purchasing.

Back to the ambulance, Minard suggested having Fire/EMS Deputy Chief Joseph Dayton provide the Finance Committee with further documentation on the necessity of a new ambulance.

“It’s the same thing we ask every ‘capital person’ to provide us,” said Minard. “The same thing we do to the police chief … why do you need a new truck?”

The Marion Fiscal Year 2016 budget rests at $20,457,508, a 2.74% rise from last year.

“So, we’re in pretty good shape there I think,” said Minard.

The next meeting of the Marion Finance Committee is scheduled for Thursday, April 2 at 7:00 pm at 13 Atlantis Drive.

By Jean Perry

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Friends of Marion Visiting Nurses Scholarship

Those interested in pursuing a career in nursing are invited to apply for a scholarship through the Friends of Marion Visiting Nurses, a nonprofit organization that awards annual scholarships to local high school seniors.

Recipients must be residents of Marion, Mattapoisett, or Rochester, and are chosen on the basis of academic ability, community service, and financial need.

The application and accompanying materials are due by May 15, and the award recipients will be notified shortly thereafter. To receive the scholarship application, email your request to orourke.laura@comcast.net.