Blog post inspired by World Autism Awareness Day on Friday

I wanted to share the post from my blog at www.afterautism.com on Friday which I wrote as my way to create awareness for our children and our families. Please feel free to forward to anyone you think would find it useful. Together, our voice will be heard. Thank you AutismOne for bringing parents together in this wonderful forum and providing an amazing place for us to support, share and learn from each other.

Autism affects 1 in 110 children, 1 in 70 boys

What do you feel when you read this statistic? Does it elicit any emotion? What thoughts come up? Does it prompt you to ask the questions why and what can I do to help?

I hope so because this has long since been a hidden epidemic. Autism now affects 1.5 million individuals in the U.S. alone and is a rapidly growing public health issue. These statistics grab my attention and with today World Autism Awareness Day, I challenge you to think about what these statistics mean to you.

Ignoring the statistics or arguing about whom to blame won’t solve the problem. I believe if we listen we will find the answers.

The time to listen is now.

Children affected by autism have important lessons to teach us…VERY IMPORTANT! They will not be ignored. They encompass the answers. I believe our job is to listen to them and if they don’t have words, listen to what their bodies and behaviors communicate.

As a mother raising a non-verbal child with autism, I have my theories. One, that our environment has increasingly become more toxic and exposing our unborn children in the womb to the increased level of toxins and chemicals we breathe and ingest affects the overall system development of a baby. Our food products are filled with chemicals and ingredients I can’t pronounce and we share the air with the entire world.

So, what can you do? I offer three suggestions to consider.

Take action. Support organizations and researchers that are looking for answers. Support them financially, as a volunteer, as an activist…whatever feels right for you.
Offer your support to a family. If you know a family with a child with autism, ask them what you can do to help.
Get Creative. Think about what you can do to get involved in finding answers. Turn your focus towards this issue and start paying attention to increase your awareness. Listen to what you hear and discern what feels true and what doesn’t. Initiate conversations, ask questions.
And if you are a parent raising a child with autism I send you love and gratitude for all that you do to support and love your child through this journey with autism. You are the lynchpin for change. Together, we can be the voice for our children that is heard worldwide.

A list of the organizations I support .

www.defeatautismnow.com www.autism.com Autism Research Institute DAN!
www.tacanow.org Talk About Curing Autism (TACA)
www.generationrescue.org Generation Rescue
www.autismone.org Autism One, a non-profit, charity organization started by a small group of parents with children with autism.
www.iahp.org Institutes for the Achievement of Human Potential
www.autismtreatmentcenter.org Teaching center for the Son-Rise Program
www.masgutovamethod.com Svetlana Masgutova Educational Institute, The Masgutova Neuro-sensory-motor Reflex Integration (MNRI) Method
Commonweal Health and Environment Program
www.php.com Parents Helping Parents, a support organization in San Jose, CA for parents of special needs children
www.americanpersonalrights.org American Rally for Personal Rights, Vaccination choice. Parental consent.

I’d love to hear from you the organizations you think are making a difference. Please join me in the quest to find answers.