Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Lily is FIVE!!

Well, I'm finally updating. Lily is FIVE! I always said recovery by age five and look at her now! She's not fully recovered of course, but she's EXACTLY where I knew she would be! She has overcome so much and I am so proud of her! Reading, writing (the best in her class! This from a girl who would scream and cry in frustration of having to draw even one line on a piece of paper), singing, joke telling, manipulating (mommy, PLEASE?!), negotiating (how about I eat my dinner and then have TWO cookies?), artistic (her drawings are getting to be the highlight of my days...her people actually wear CLOTHES now! LOL) are only a few of her many talents. It's hard to see the autism most days, with the exception of some short emotional meltdowns and her difficulty switching her attention to you if she is engaged in play or watching TV. Also she still has  difficulty with sound sensitivity (toilet flushing is a big no-no) but over all she does very well with the day to day and the things that she needs to work on (your typical social stuff) will come with time and aren't quite as important now as they might be next year or there after. She will be in a regular kindergarten class next year, which was always our goal.

Though Lily is far into her recovery, I think about autism daily. My other little girl wonder, Meadow (who is now 20 months old), is a constant reminder of where we once were with Lily. She's incredible and her ability to communicate effectively without much speech is amazing. All of the little things she does are so appreciated. Her sideways glance, her naughty nature, her call to everyone for attention, her complete ability to understand most EVERYTHING. Meadow could be the poster child for the "neurotypical". She went through some speech issues though (she still is, but it's too early to matter now that she's got the ball rolling). When I took her off bottled water and started giving her filtered tap water (she was about 8 or 10 months old I think), she lost most of her ability to make sounds. With the exception of Mama and Dada, she only ever grunted. I had her evaluated and she didn't show the natural pattern of speech delay, it was definitely something more. Meadow babbled as a young baby and her second word was not "Dada", it was "Lily". She also could say "cheese" and "baba". She stopped producing sounds. Luckily this was her only area of impairment. As soon as I came to the realization that it was our water that was effecting her (some people might think I'm crazy, but my gut hasn't been wrong yet...and there can be some nasty stuff in your water system these days and few think about that), I started ordering Zepherhills water and had a cooler brought in. I not only use that for our drinking water but I cook with it and use it to wash our fruit. I started giving her epsom salt baths as a natural chelator and it started to help her develop her sounds again almost immediately. It's been a couple of months now and she now says a hand full of words, and all kinds of "almost" words ("Paaa" for "Pop" for example) and can say "cheese" and "Lily" again. I can still sense her struggling to put sounds together that she shouldn't have to struggle for (for example, she can say each sound individually, but can't put them together....like she can say "mmmmm" and "eeeeee" but can't say "me". But she's getting there. I was never concerned about her "speaking", she's a bit young for that and everyone speaks when they are ready, but not being able to make sounds? Hmmmm....been there before, NOT normal.

Our kids systems can be soooo sensitive, I'm not sure why that is but one thing is for sure...ENVIRONMENTAL TOXINS CAUSE AUTISM. No one disagrees with that. Meadow has not had one vaccination yet, but has had her brain compromised by some kind of toxin. Lily's toxins were INJECTED in her in large amounts, hence the major damage and longer recovery. Toxins are everywhere in our world, especially in today's world. That's why virtually everyone you know, knows SOMEONE affected by autism in some way.

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