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Has anyone heard of Son-Rise therapy? vs ABA?
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<blockquote data-quote="susiestar" data-source="post: 467761" data-attributes="member: 1233"><p>Ic, you are right - any solution that fixes the cause of the problem will fix the problem. I just don't like anyone trying to insist that their solution is the only one and is the cure-all for some complicated issue. Sadly many people want that easy fix even if a true solution could be found if they just were patient and tried to figure out the problem rather than throwing a one size fits all solution onto the fire. </p><p></p><p>I think the girlfriend/cf diet can be amazing if it works for you/your child. Around here a LOT of people, even the sp ed teachers, have tried to force it on the parents of all of the sp ed kids. It won't even work for all of the kids with an autism diagnosis because the causes can be so complex and varied.</p><p></p><p>I do think trying it is great, esp if it is a diet that won't cause harm (no harm generally woudl come from trying a girlfriend/cf diet) or a therapy that doesn't involve invasive things like medications or surgery. We sure jumped on the brushing therapy and sensory diet for thank you when he was showing signs of an autism spectrum disorder. Those were mostly enough to allow him to function in school and life so far. So we didn't do medications for those issues. Heck, we tried the girlfriend/cf diet at least three different times. Same directions each time, same results. We just had 2 docs who were so totally sure that ALL Wiz' problems were due to that and they would NOT believe we had done the diet "properly". At least our allergist wasn't so dumb - I took all three copies of the same printouts and cookbooks that the other 3 docs had given us, along iwth the records of the results and what we ate each day. Cause I did it with Wiz.</p><p></p><p>Marg, at least here in the US the dad who wrote the Son Rise book has started schools that are supposed to use his methods to teach students. I do NOT think the people in my town who opened the school really understood the concepts because they INSISTED that it was only for those with down's syndrome and they had some other really bizarre requirements that I didn't list. From what I read of the book, they were using the same name/idea and the school's setup and practices were supposed to be "exactly" what they did in the book, but people here put their own spin on things and it just didn't work at all. Which is a shame because it sounded like it had a lot of promise when they started.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="susiestar, post: 467761, member: 1233"] Ic, you are right - any solution that fixes the cause of the problem will fix the problem. I just don't like anyone trying to insist that their solution is the only one and is the cure-all for some complicated issue. Sadly many people want that easy fix even if a true solution could be found if they just were patient and tried to figure out the problem rather than throwing a one size fits all solution onto the fire. I think the girlfriend/cf diet can be amazing if it works for you/your child. Around here a LOT of people, even the sp ed teachers, have tried to force it on the parents of all of the sp ed kids. It won't even work for all of the kids with an autism diagnosis because the causes can be so complex and varied. I do think trying it is great, esp if it is a diet that won't cause harm (no harm generally woudl come from trying a girlfriend/cf diet) or a therapy that doesn't involve invasive things like medications or surgery. We sure jumped on the brushing therapy and sensory diet for thank you when he was showing signs of an autism spectrum disorder. Those were mostly enough to allow him to function in school and life so far. So we didn't do medications for those issues. Heck, we tried the girlfriend/cf diet at least three different times. Same directions each time, same results. We just had 2 docs who were so totally sure that ALL Wiz' problems were due to that and they would NOT believe we had done the diet "properly". At least our allergist wasn't so dumb - I took all three copies of the same printouts and cookbooks that the other 3 docs had given us, along iwth the records of the results and what we ate each day. Cause I did it with Wiz. Marg, at least here in the US the dad who wrote the Son Rise book has started schools that are supposed to use his methods to teach students. I do NOT think the people in my town who opened the school really understood the concepts because they INSISTED that it was only for those with down's syndrome and they had some other really bizarre requirements that I didn't list. From what I read of the book, they were using the same name/idea and the school's setup and practices were supposed to be "exactly" what they did in the book, but people here put their own spin on things and it just didn't work at all. Which is a shame because it sounded like it had a lot of promise when they started. [/QUOTE]
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