Top 3 Tips for Dealing with Bullying and Your Aspergers Child – Video


Top 3 Tips for Dealing with Bullying and Your Aspergers Child
http://www.davidsgift.com.au http://www.facebook.com http://www.twitter.com Over 80% of children diagnosed on the Autism Spectrum have reported experiencing bullying, and many of these children suffer severe post traumatic stress because of it. In this video today, I share 3 tips from my new E-book Aspergers, Bullying and School - How to Help your Child develop Bully-Resilient Strategies for School and For Life http://www.davidsgift.com.au

By: Sally Thibault

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Top 3 Tips for Dealing with Bullying and Your Aspergers Child - Video

Low Functioning Non verbal Autism Thayden almost 6yrs old – Video


Low Functioning Non verbal Autism Thayden almost 6yrs old
My son Thayden spinning with his ipad watching the fruit loops commercial, hes still none verbal and almost 6 yrs old. He has proloquo2go app for the ipad which is a tab to talk program. One of his favorite things to do is watch youtube videos!

By: AylahMay

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Low Functioning Non verbal Autism Thayden almost 6yrs old - Video

Hyundai RunKuwait Day 1 Wrap-up – Video


Hyundai RunKuwait Day 1 Wrap-up
Hyundai RunKuwait 2013 Team is gearing up for the run and making sure all equipments and food is ready for the 240k journey. RunKuwait is a 240 kilometer run which was first held on February 2012, when a group of runners led by Yousef AlQanai ran from the northern to the southern borders of Kuwait as a symbol of determination, willpower, and teamwork. This to show that monumental endeavors can be overcome with the right people and a common goal. The route was 240 kilometers that was covered in approximately 3 days (80 hours to be exact) overlapping the Kuwaiti National Liberation Days. Hyundai RunKuwait 2013 In this year #39;s RunKuwait the title sponsorship is by Hyundai Motor Kuwait, thus renaming the event to Hyundai RunKuwait 2013. Hyundai sponsors RunKuwait as part of their CSR initiative by supporting this year #39;s RunKuwait cause in helping both families and children with autism. Hyundai RunKuwait 2013 celebrates teamwork towards the common good for Kuwait and all who consider it their home. Part of RunKuwait event is to run for a cause every year and for 2013 we will be running to support Applied Behavior Center of Kuwait (ABC Kuwait), helping them to provide for the children with autism by raisings funds for their tuition, find out more on our Cause page. On the 23rd of February the runners will start from the northern border of Kuwait. The run will happen in the day time and runners will set camp in the evenings. For the 25th of February which is Kuwait #39;s National ...

By: AYMSTRONG

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Hyundai RunKuwait Day 1 Wrap-up - Video

Secondary Special Needs – Inclusion and Autism – Video


Secondary Special Needs - Inclusion and Autism
© Crown Copyright. Provided by Arts College Limited. artsuk.org Further resources available on http Licensed to Arts College Limited. Licence information available at: artsuk.org How ASD pupils are provided for in a mainstream school. Four boys on the autistic spectrum are observed during their school day to see how their individual needs are met by both mainstream and specialist staff. As autism is a developmental disorder, not a learning disability, the majority of secondary age children with a diagnosis attend mainstream schools. Difficulties relating to autism can be made worse by the busy secondary environment. Complete inclusion of pupils with ASD into school life can be difficult to achieve. The challenges of ASD are discussed by inclusion manager Craig Smith and mainstream teachers, and learning support practitioners demonstrate how they help in class.

By: ACLChannel0

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Secondary Special Needs - Inclusion and Autism - Video

Re to DSM 5 – Video


Re to DSM 5
Differences between Aspergers and HFA: 1. No language impairment 2. More rational thinking 3. More learning issues 4. More sociality (not as much as NTs, but still more than the other autism syndromes) 5. Deeper depression 6. Less likely to randomly bash out

By: necelticsox

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Re to DSM 5 - Video

Food, Family


Food, Family Aspergers Seminar BRISBANE
http://www.davidsgift.com.au http://www.facebook http://www.twitter.com BOOK TODAY http://www.davidsgift.com.au Don #39;t miss this information packed seminar delivered by people who have been there. Covering all aspects of raising a child on the Autism Spectrum: hearts;How Food Impacts Behavior, and how small changes can make a huge difference; hearts;How the diagnosis impacts on Dad #39;s, hearts;How to teach your child to be bully-resilient, hearts;How the diagnosis impacts on siblings, and what you can do to help ....and much, much more. This seminar will inspire, motivate and energise you to be all you can be, in raising a child on the autism spectrum. Make sure you check out the testimonials from others who have attended at http://www.davidsgift.com.au

By: Sally Thibault

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Food, Family

Social Skills and Asperger's- Training for your teen with autism – Video


Social Skills and Asperger #39;s- Training for your teen with autism
autismparenthood.com = FREE INFORMATION aspergerssociety.org = FREE SOCIAL SKILLS NEWSLETTER Help your loved one with autism or Asperger #39;s syndrome learns social skills. You can use Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People. Use the chapters along with my book, The Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young Adults to learn social skills. As you go through each chapter, use the suggestions in Dale Carnegie #39;s book with the Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young Adults to find an excellent pairing of general social skills training and advice geared specifically for those on the autism spectrum. To view this video go here youtu.be

By: AspergersGuide

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Social Skills and Asperger's- Training for your teen with autism - Video

Social Skills and Asperger’s- Training for your teen with autism – Video


Social Skills and Asperger #39;s- Training for your teen with autism
autismparenthood.com = FREE INFORMATION aspergerssociety.org = FREE SOCIAL SKILLS NEWSLETTER Help your loved one with autism or Asperger #39;s syndrome learns social skills. You can use Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People. Use the chapters along with my book, The Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young Adults to learn social skills. As you go through each chapter, use the suggestions in Dale Carnegie #39;s book with the Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young Adults to find an excellent pairing of general social skills training and advice geared specifically for those on the autism spectrum. To view this video go here youtu.be

By: AspergersGuide

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Social Skills and Asperger's- Training for your teen with autism - Video

Hey Sunday – Video


Hey Sunday
So basically having a lazy day. Read further to see some new news, science facts and whatnot! NY cannibal cop defense: It was only a fantasy; NEW YORK (AP) mdash; Gilberto Valle #39;s mind is full of sick thoughts mdash; and he wants a jury to know it. The New York City police officer accused of kidnapping conspiracy admits to thinking about abducting, cooking and devouring young women. His own lawyer has shown prospective jurors a kinky staged photo of a woman trussed up in a roasting pan to their test tolerance for the officer #39;s "weird proclivities." READ MORE HERE: http://www.usatoday.com Analysis: The near impossible battle against hackers everywhere; SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Dire warnings from Washington about a "cyber Pearl Harbor" envision a single surprise strike from a formidable enemy that could destroy power plants nationwide, disable the financial system or cripple the US government. READ MORE HERE: news.yahoo.com SCIENCE FACTS:;;; 1. There are 62000 miles of blood vessels in the human body -- laid end to end they would circle the earth 2.5 times 2. At over 2000 kilometers long, The Great Barrier Reef is the largest living structure on Earth 3. The risk of being struck by a falling meteorite for a human is one occurrence every 9300 years 4. A thimbleful of a neutron star would weigh over 100 million tons 5. A typical hurricane produces the energy equivalent of 8000 one megaton bombs 6. Blood sucking hookworms inhabit 700 million people worldwide 9. 65% of those with autism are ...

By: NessyOfTheAbyss Eddy

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Hey Sunday - Video

Social Skills – Autism / Asperger's Syndrome Teens Training – Mentors – Video


Social Skills - Autism / Asperger #39;s Syndrome Teens Training - Mentors
autismparenthood.com =FREE SOCIAL SKILLS INFO aspergerssociety.org = FREE NEWSLETTER How to help teens with autism and Asperger #39;s syndrome improve social skills. You can use Dale Carnegie #39;s book, How to Win Friends and Influence People along with my book, the Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young Adults. One great way to improve skill is to get a mentor. Mentors Many schools have peer mentoring programs; these are usually staffed by kids more likely to be kind, sensitive, and understanding to differences. They might be able to help your teen strike up a friendship. Or else try to use a university student as a mentor, for the same reason; more maturity, and if they work one-on-one with your teen, your teen will flourish in the attention and care of someone older. It will help to raise their self esteem and give them the courage to try to approach their peers. Reasons Teens with Asperger #39;s Have Trouble Making Friends Wanting friends is one thing, but making them and keeping them is another entirely. Intelligence has nothing to do with it. You need a certain social savvy to make friends that most teens with autism syndrome lack. A mentoring program can point out, real time, how a person on the autism spectrum can improve, what errors in social interaction they are making and a mentor can guide a teenager to improve by pointing out specific social errors as they are happening. You can watch this video here: youtu.be

By: AspergersGuide

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Social Skills - Autism / Asperger's Syndrome Teens Training - Mentors - Video

Social Skills – Autism / Asperger’s Syndrome Teens Training – Mentors – Video


Social Skills - Autism / Asperger #39;s Syndrome Teens Training - Mentors
autismparenthood.com =FREE SOCIAL SKILLS INFO aspergerssociety.org = FREE NEWSLETTER How to help teens with autism and Asperger #39;s syndrome improve social skills. You can use Dale Carnegie #39;s book, How to Win Friends and Influence People along with my book, the Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young Adults. One great way to improve skill is to get a mentor. Mentors Many schools have peer mentoring programs; these are usually staffed by kids more likely to be kind, sensitive, and understanding to differences. They might be able to help your teen strike up a friendship. Or else try to use a university student as a mentor, for the same reason; more maturity, and if they work one-on-one with your teen, your teen will flourish in the attention and care of someone older. It will help to raise their self esteem and give them the courage to try to approach their peers. Reasons Teens with Asperger #39;s Have Trouble Making Friends Wanting friends is one thing, but making them and keeping them is another entirely. Intelligence has nothing to do with it. You need a certain social savvy to make friends that most teens with autism syndrome lack. A mentoring program can point out, real time, how a person on the autism spectrum can improve, what errors in social interaction they are making and a mentor can guide a teenager to improve by pointing out specific social errors as they are happening. You can watch this video here: youtu.be

By: AspergersGuide

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Social Skills - Autism / Asperger's Syndrome Teens Training - Mentors - Video

Social Skills – Autism, Asperger's Teenagers Can Learn in Interest Groups – Video


Social Skills - Autism, Asperger #39;s Teenagers Can Learn in Interest Groups
AutismParenthood.com = FREE NEWLETTER http://www.aspergerssociety.org = FREE TRAINING MATERIALS Building socials skills is important for teenagers and adults as well as children with autism or Asperger #39;s syndrome. Helping your loved one with autism or Asperger #39;s syndrome learns social skills is not as hard as you may imagine. I suggest a lot of practice. You can use Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People and use that book along with my book, The Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young Adults to learn social skills. As you go through each chapter, use the suggestions in Dale Carnegie #39;s book with the Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young Adults to find an excellent pairing of general social skills training and advice geared specifically for those on the autism spectrum. Have your child, teenager or adult with autism join an Asperger #39;s or autism support group. This is a great way to practice what you are learning. Your loved one with autism can meet with others who are on the autism spectrum and practice their new social skills. They can also make new friends. For additional information, see my book, the Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young adults at http Watch this video here: youtu.be

By: AspergersGuide

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Social Skills - Autism, Asperger's Teenagers Can Learn in Interest Groups - Video

Social Skills – Autism, Asperger’s Teenagers Can Learn in Interest Groups – Video


Social Skills - Autism, Asperger #39;s Teenagers Can Learn in Interest Groups
AutismParenthood.com = FREE NEWLETTER http://www.aspergerssociety.org = FREE TRAINING MATERIALS Building socials skills is important for teenagers and adults as well as children with autism or Asperger #39;s syndrome. Helping your loved one with autism or Asperger #39;s syndrome learns social skills is not as hard as you may imagine. I suggest a lot of practice. You can use Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People and use that book along with my book, The Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young Adults to learn social skills. As you go through each chapter, use the suggestions in Dale Carnegie #39;s book with the Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young Adults to find an excellent pairing of general social skills training and advice geared specifically for those on the autism spectrum. Have your child, teenager or adult with autism join an Asperger #39;s or autism support group. This is a great way to practice what you are learning. Your loved one with autism can meet with others who are on the autism spectrum and practice their new social skills. They can also make new friends. For additional information, see my book, the Asperger #39;s Syndrome Guide for Teens and Young adults at http Watch this video here: youtu.be

By: AspergersGuide

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Social Skills - Autism, Asperger's Teenagers Can Learn in Interest Groups - Video

So It Goes – From Songs for Autism – Video


So It Goes - From Songs for Autism
Join the national campaign to make "So It Goes" the first GOLD RECORD inspired by autism! 100% of the profit from downloads goes toward helping families. Please share this beautiful song to inspire compassion and support for families living with autism. Music is a powerful thing. It touches hearts and conveys emotion like no other medium. The song "So it Goes" does that for autism, and we want to make it a Gold Record! Let #39;s show that nothing can stop us when it comes to standing up for our children. Let #39;s show that we can mobilize like no other! Visit http://www.SongsForAutism.org and buy a download to show your support!

By: ywait4ever

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So It Goes - From Songs for Autism - Video

The Old Have Been Persuaded to See Themselves as Worthless

One of the more depressing consequences of degenerative aging is the pervasive ageism of our societies. It is taken as read that the old are worth less than the young, are less deserving, their wants and desires less meaningful, their rights to the pursuit of life and happiness weak to nonexistent. This is something that even the old themselves are largely sold on, one of those shared cultural myths that isn't so much taught as absorbed and spread invisibly, clinging on to every story and conversation as a cloud of assumptions and implicit judgments of value.

The value of a life diminishes with age, or so goes the belief - and as we are creatures of hierarchy and position, it's a short step from there to trampling on the old in any number of ways. If the young get to it before the old trample themselves, in any case. Ageism is as much a matter of people telling themselves that they are of little value as anything else.

Below you'll find the rather gloomy viewpoint of a near-70-year-old, informed by the Tithonus Error, the incorrect view that extended life achieved through biotechnology will result in more and increasingly decrepit old age rather than more vigor and youth as is in fact the case. As Aubrey de Grey asked in a recent editorial, why do people completely ignore what the research community says on this topic? Or for that matter, why do they ignore history? The incidental lengthening of human life achieved over the past two centuries through general improvement in medical technologies has been an extension of youth rather than an extension of old age.

The public doesn't stick its head in the sand in the same way for heart disease or Parkinson's research. One might well ask why this happens for aging. Here is a telling sort of a quote when it comes to self-value:

Please welcome the 150-year-old woman

Maybe it's time to ask medical science to shut it down already. Maybe there's something about our bodies that has a sell-by date. Maybe we're not supposed to stare vacantly into space while eating up money and time. There is so much else for science to be doing. There are the cancers that get people in their 30s and 40s and 50s. There are orphan diseases, with not enough sufferers to warrant full-scale research efforts. There are those wounded in war and the challenges they present. Surely all of these matters deserve more attention than how to make sure a 110-year-old person lives to be 125.

I speak myself as someone on the cusp of 70. I am not fond of disease and decay, and I think medical science should be all over finding cures for whatever I've got. But I have visited nursing homes, and seen the floors of lost people, technically alive but not aware of their surroundings, bewildered by everything.

Is this really a vision of the future that you want to have, or you want your parents to have? The geriatric lifestyle seems an awful lot like just taking up space. That's not really anybody's ambition for their end-of-life situation, but it happens anyway. People run out of friends and loved ones; they disappear from memory and from society. And yet they survive.

The goal of longevity science is to roll out ways to slow, halt, and reverse aging: making people healthy and physiologically younger for longer, not older and increasingly frail for longer. Researchers are all agreed on that goal, and say as much in their publications and to the press. Yet as you can see, there remains something of a disconnect - the message has yet to come through to the public at large.

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2013/02/the-old-have-been-persuaded-to-see-themselves-as-worthless.php

Drugs to Slow Aging are a Matter of When, Not If

It is pleasing to see this sort of article emerging from a university publicity group - a part of the necessary trend within the scientific community towards making it acceptable and desirable to talk about extending human life through biotechnology. The silence of the research community on this topic across past decades was very harmful to the prospects for progress and funding in the field of aging research and longevity science.

That said, it is problematic that the vast majority of resources and researchers presently focus on modestly slowing aging rather than trying to repair and reverse the causes of aging. Based on what we know today, it is probably harder to safely adjust metabolism to slow down aging than it is to repair the root causes of aging to restore a metabolism back to its youthful state. Further, slowing aging is of no use to old people, whereas repair based approaches are useful - and given that people in middle age today will be old by the earliest possible time that therapies might emerge, it won't be all that great if all those therapies can do is slow down the progression of aging.

So more work on SENS and similar repair-based strategies, and less fiddling around with calorie restriction mimetics, longevity genes, and the like, is what we need to see if there is to be an effective near-term lengthening of human life. That result has to be based on rejuvenation, not slowing of aging.

Evidence is accumulating that not only is it possible to slow down aging, but that by doing so the onset and progression of multiple age-related diseases can be delayed. "Slowing aging should increase both lifespan and healthspan - the period of life spent in relatively good health, free from chronic disease or disability. A shared feature of most medically relevant diseases is that your risk of dying from them increases dramatically as you get older. Unlike traditional approaches, which tend to focus on a specific disease, targeting the aging process itself has a much greater potential to improve human health."

Many experts in the biology of aging believe that pharmacological interventions to slow aging are a matter of 'when' rather than 'if'. A leading target for such interventions is the nutrient response pathway defined by mTOR, a protein that controls cell growth. "Inhibition of this pathway extends lifespan in model organisms and confers protection against a growing list of age-related pathologies. Characterized inhibitors of this pathway are already clinically approved, and others are under development. Although adverse side effects currently preclude use in otherwise healthy individuals, drugs that target the mTOR pathway could one day become widely used to slow aging and reduce age-related pathologies in humans."

Link: http://www.washington.edu/news/2013/02/21/drugs-to-slow-aging-are-a-matter-of-when-not-if/

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2013/02/drugs-to-slow-aging-are-a-matter-of-when-not-if.php