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Therapy helps boy reclaim childhood
By
ROBERT M. COOK
Six-year-old Ryan Nichols loves to talk about
his favorite toys, which recently were scattered
throughout his family's living room.
He says he's especially fond of his NASCAR toys
and Leapster gamepad, which he plays with in his
bedroom.
Ryan also has been to Walt Disney World twice
and often wears a Mickey Mouse sweat shirt he
got there.
His parents, Frank and Dione Nichols, hinge on
every word Ryan speaks to them. It's something
they waited years to hear.
Their son, who has autism, now is reclaiming
his childhood thanks to ongoing speech and occupational
therapy, his parents said.
"When you start, there's so much to work
on," Dione said. "We've made great progress,
but the problem is the expectations keep going
up each year."
Ryan attends a full-day kindergarten program.
He also receives one hour each of speech and occupational
therapy once weekly after school at Easter Seals
New Hampshire in Dover.
Ryan has made new friends in his class and is
just learning how to ask appropriate questions
so he can converse with his classmates, his mother
said.
For example, Ryan is learning to ask, "Any
questions?" after making a show and tell
presentation, his father said.
There are so many things Ryan does now that he
couldn't when he was 3 and 4 years old, Dione
said.
"We wondered if he would ever ask for a
present" at Christmastime, she said.
This Christmas, Ryan asked for a Lego airplane.
He also opened his presents in less than an hour
on Christmas morning, his father said.
Like many children diagnosed with autism spectrum
disorder, Ryan is sensitive to various sounds,
such as the microwave or creaking on the stairs.
Dione said there was a time when Ryan couldn't
stand to listen to the car radio.
Frank said he also had trouble if they were in
a store and the public address system came on.
Watching videos like Disney's "Little Einsteins,"
and "Thomas the Tank Engine" helped
Ryan break down different sounds and music, Dione
said.
"This was the first year we could play Christmas
music in the house," Frank said.
Dione said Ryan "was a very, very happy
baby, pretty easy going," but she started
to notice signs that he was not developing properly
early on.
For example, when he was a year old, he didn't
wave goodbye or point at objects like other children
do at that age, she said.
At 2 1/2, Ryan would say some words, "but
I would never hear those words again,"she
said.
At 3 1/2 years old, Ryan talked more, but mostly
would repeat phrases he heard while watching videos,
his mother said.
If she asked him "Do you want waffles or
pancakes?" Ryan would reply, "Waffles
or pancakes" and not answer her question,
she said.
A former preschool teacher with some knowledge
of childhood development, she found herself doing
more research online and in books. Little by little,
she came to realize her son showed signs of autism
spectrum disorder - a diagnosis later confirmed
by the Seacoast Child Development Center at the
University of New Hampshire in Durham, where Ryan
was evaluated.
Dione said it's taken a lot of hard work and
patience to help their son reach this stage of
his development.
One of the most difficult aspects was figuring
the right type of therapy to help their son learn
to communicate and engage the world around him,
she said.
Her son attended a preschool program offered
by the local school district, but his mother said
she wasn't satisfied with the services they provided.
At age 4, Ryan attended the Dover Childrens Center
kindergarten program for a year and received more
than two hours of speech and occupational therapy
weekly.
"Ryan was very fortunate to have a wonderful
kindergarten teacher," his mother said. "They
focused more on pure childhood development."
They helped Ryan learn to play with other children
and made sure Ryan always was involved with class
activities, she said.
"At that time, Ryan would not do an activity
for more than a minute or two," she said.
The teachers made several possible activities
available at once, with roughly six things for
him to do at any given time. They would go from
one thing to the other as needed to guide Ryan,
his mother said.
At home, she and her husband continuously worked
with their son to reinforce the skills and learning
techniques used at school, she said.
Dione learned the best way to teach Ryan how to
do a simple task like drawing a picture was to
break it down. Instead of asking him to draw a
face, she would practice helping him draw the
eyes. Little by little, Ryan improved his speech
and play skills, she said.
Frank said they've also learned there is no hourglass
that governs how much their son can learn.
Many doctors and childhood experts told the couple
their son had to master certain skills by age
6 or his learning window would close.
But Ryan's speech and occupational therapists
told the couple the brain is malleable, and people
never lose the ability to learn, even if they
have autism, Frank said.
"You got to crack the code" when it
comes to helping children with autism learn, Dione
said. She compared the process of trial and error
to what Thomas Edison said about creating the
light bulb. Edison used to say he found 10,000
ways not to make a light bulb before he discovered
the right way, Dione said.
But the couple says they by no means believe
they've found the best or only way to help other
families who have children with autism. If there's
one common thread other people can take from the
Nichols' situation, it would be hard work and
never giving up, no matter what, they said.
"We had plenty of bleak days," Frank
added.
Now Ryan's father said he feels more optimistic
his son will have a good life.
"It gives me hope for a better tomorrow,"
Frank said.
As Ryan heads toward first grade, his parents
say there are still many challenges that remain
to help their son build his social and communication
skills. But they add that they also feel they'll
meet those challenges based on what they've experienced
so far.
"I'm proud of Ryan because he's worked so
hard," his mother sa
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