We interupt your farm plowing to bring you an important announcement about hope!

Posted by SugeyCE on January 20, 2010 under Standard | Be the First to Comment

Vote to help a child with autism

Vote to help a child with autism

“For hope is but the dream
of those that wake.”


           ~Matthew Prior, 18th Century Poet

Autism is the #1 Developmental Disability in the country yet it is incredibly underfunded and still poorly understood.  While money is going into research to find possible causes, 1 in 110 children in the US and 1 in 70 boys are all waiting for us to understand them and help them and their families in a real way.  Right now, you have a chance to spread hope to families in the US by supporting the National Autism Association in the Chase Community Giving Challenge on Facebook (www.voteautismnow.com). 

As I stated in a previous blog autism is a politicized topic and the groups that represent our cause are certainly privy to being both revered and hated at the same time based on stances they take.  This is not one of the times where our community can afford to be quiet and not help our children.  Before you choose to not vote for NAA because you might not agree with a specific stance etc… I want you to know what you’d be choosing not to vote for.  The money Chase is giving away would go towards NAA’s three-by-three plan:

 

  • Direct Assistance: Doubling the number of grants we are able to award to families in need of financial assistance for their children’s treatment and therapies. Significantly increasing access to lifesaving equipment for individuals at risk of wandering-related death.
  •  Education: Production of conference workshops, multiple audio and video PSAs and free toolkits addressing the issues of abuse in schools, wandering, safety and family support. Hosting three national conference events to educate clinicians and families on the latest advances in research, treatment and prevention.
  •  Advocacy: Successfully advocating for the most relevant scientific research, policies to ensure access to medical care, coverage for medical and safety devices, services and support over the life span, and protection from abuse.

Please take the time to watch this powerful video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EzDQyKgJYeo

Your two second vote can make the difference in a family getting a “helping hand” to get intervention for their children, provide them safety devices, services, and medical care.  It can help a family or professional discover the most current information about the condition so that we don’t have to continue to hold off on what this generation of children needs while we wait endlessly for our leaders to argue about the possible causes for it! And perhaps most importantly, your 2 second point and click can make all the difference in a family not losing their child this year for a wandering related death. 

Last summer our severely affected child wandered from our home for what was the longest 15 minutes in my husband’s and my life.  We ran out of our home barefoot on the hot summer pavement–our hearts racing, tears streaming down our faces as images of his beautiful face and laughter flash before us.  The sweet sound of his voice awakened me from the worst nightmare I have ever experienced and as soon as I had him in my arms and held him close we got in the car went to Lowes and turned our home into a fort!  We were lucky that years ago we let our neighbors know about our son’s condition and that we live in a quiet-low traffic neighborhood.  The number of parents that are losing their children with autism to wandering related deaths is sky-rocketing and you can make a huge difference by a simple vote.

So take a break from Mafia Wars, Cafe World, Sorority Life, Pirates, Farmville and whatever other Zynga addiction you have on Facebook and vote to keep the hope alive in the life of a child with autism! 

“Chase the Hope at http://voteautismnow.com

New Video for The United States of Autism

Posted by SugeyCE on January 12, 2010 under Documentary | Be the First to Comment

Here’s the newest promotional video for The United States of Autism documentary. It was put together for the Pepsi Community Challenge in 2010.

Gluten and Casein Free Pumpkin Pie Recipe that is DELICIOUS

Posted by SugeyCE on November 28, 2009 under Standard | Read the First Comment

Tommy cleaning out the pumpkin pie tin

Tommy cleaning out the pumpkin pie tin

If you are like us, your child may be on a special diet. This recipe will not work for all diets, so please keep in mind that this worked for my son’s specific allergies–GF/CF/Almond Free etc…  While Tommy has ALOT of allergies, other families we work with have to have their kids on ketogenic diets (high fat) because of epilepsy issues and others are on a Specific Carbohydrate diet (low carbs).  This recipe would probably not fit those diets because it does have a bit of carbs.

If, however, like us you have been searching for years for more recipes that could help our kiddos not “miss out” on anything, then this is something you will appreciate.  Tommy–with our help-devoured this.  Both Rich and I definitely even think this might even taste better than regular gluten rich, casein rich, fat rich pumpkin pie! It was delicious, so I hope your family enjoys it as much as ours did.

PUMPKIN PIE
Adapted from: Nourishing Traditions
TOTAL TIME: 55 MIN.* MAKES 8-12 SERVINGS

Ingredients for Crust:
1 box Kinnikinnick GF/CF/Allergen Free Graham Crackers
6 tablespoons Spectrum Organic all Vegetable Shortening (instead of butter)
1 /3 cup of sugar or other sugar alternative

1. Mix all ingredients together
2. Use shortening to grease up pie pan (9 inch pan)
3. Pour Crust mixture in pan and refrigerate for 1 hour.

Ingredients for Pie:

1 Graham Cracker Crust made from scratch (see above)
1 15 oz can of pumpkin puree or 2 cups fresh baked pumpkin
3 eggs
1/3- ½ cup honey or other natural sweetener, to taste
1 tsp dried ginger or 1 Tbsp freshly grated ginger
1 tsp cinnamon
¼ tsp sea salt
¼ tsp powdered cloves
¼ tsp nutmeg
1 cup coconut milk (full fat)

Steps:
1. Line a 9 inch pie pan with your choice of gluten-free crust. Crack the eggs into a large bowl and beat well. Add the rest of the ingredients until thoroughly combined. Pour batter into pie crust.
2. To avoid the crust getting burned, cover edges of pie pan with strips of aluminum foil until they just over the edges of the pie crust.
3. Bake at 325 for 45 minutes or until firm.

Per Serving (doesn’t include crust): 96 Calories; 4g Fat (37.2% calories from fat); 3g Protein; 13g Carbohydrate; 1g Dietary Fiber; 64mg Cholesterol; 77mg Sodium.

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