The Boy in the Moon, Part 3

Peter Wow. The final part of the The Boy in the Moon is up, and once again Ian Brown sums it up with grace. This time he touches on the future for his boy, and frankly, maybe our boy too. Get out the Kleenex, but read it.

I’ve been wondering about Jon’s adulthood for his entire life; Laura has too. We’ve never discussed it directly, but have occasionally touched—just grazingly—on it. When I’ve alluded to it in converstation with friends and colleagues, without fully broaching the topic, there’s often a knee-jerk response: “Every parents worries about their kid.” I don’t know how to respond. Is this an attempt to soothe my fears, or do they genuinely not understand the situation? Or not want to, perhaps.

Brown even touches on the Latimer case with very similar thoughts to ours—so much of the analysis I’ve seen over the years strips the case of the context, and the context is the key.

A superb series. Thanks for this, Ian. Give Walker a hug for us.

My Weekend

Jon Dec 10/07

I had a great weekend. Yesterday Wonder Pets wasn’t on TV. I saw the ski conditins on the weather network. For a snack I had some pretzels. I like to have milk to drink. I played Wii with my dad. On the Wii I like to do my Wii Fitness test. Tonight I’m going to watch Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas with my mom and dad.

How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Wonder Pets

The Wonder Pets

PeterJon is into yet another preschool series, so why am I not pulling my hair out? He’s eleven years old, when is he going to take an interest in something a little more mature?

Jon’s TV history starts at age four with his early and continuing addiction to The Weather Network and Blue’s Clues. With Blue’s Clues, we spent a lot of time describing what was happening on the screen. Slowly, Jon began to recognize the animated characters.

Daffy on a snowy backgroundI introduced him to Warner Brothers cartoons, first with the short Duck Rabbit Duck because of the high-contrast visual setting (black Daffy Duck on a white snow backdrop). He moved on to cartoons with more complicated backgrounds, but always with lots of descriptive help from us. Jon’s interest ebbed and flowed. He took a big interest in Arthur (those are more sophisticated social stories), then downgraded to Dora. Ah, Dora the @#$% Explorer. She shouts everything anti-socially (indoor voice, Dora!) in semi-rhetorical questions, ostensibly teaching a word or two of Spanish.

Preschooler TV shows ask a lot of questions to the audience. This is totally understandable: that’s very much how adults speak to preschoolers to get information out of them. But visually-impaired kids tend to take this structure to heart in their language skills, generally breaking out of the question phase around 5 or 6. Jon has developmental issues added to this mix and it’s taken a long time to get him to start to make statements, instead of phrasing all information in the form of a question. And when he does, often they’re in the past perfect tense, the tense often used in questions (“I was going to the library this morning”, instead of “I went to the library”).

But Dora is behind us now, for the most part. Five months ago, Jon suddenly became transfixed by Elmo and the Sesame Street reruns Play With Me Sesame (all those old classics of Ernie and Bert, and Grover victimizing that poor blue-headed guy). Jon could suddenly make out the Muppets! Furry, fuzzy muppets finally made some kind of visual sense!

And then on the heels of that came the Wonder Pets.

The Wonder Pets is a show featuring essentially modern cutout animation: actual photos of a guinea pig, duck and turtle are cut out and animated on computer, with a busy backdrop of a classroom. It’s very much the kind of thing that Jon has had a really hard time seeing. And, all of the sudden after 9 years of hard work, he can.

Yes, we have yet to move on from shows for preschoolers, but this one is a little better than most. The three main characters talk amongst each other socially in statements; the plots are easy for Jon to follow and the humour is right up his alley. And each adventure is basically an operetta written by some Broadway composers (catchy little earworms that can only be removed by trepanning. For instance, I have a song about a getting a Brown Cow Down in my head right now, Jon says he’s thinking about the Baby Sea Lion song and Laura is humming “A basket, a basket…” Please make it stop 🙂 )

But it’s the vision thing that makes this a triumph. This is the first show that Jon took to because he could see it on his own. He can see when they are flying, he can make out the characters against the backgrounds. We’re delighted.

Of course, this means he’s totally nuts over the WP’s and talks about the episodes incessently. He had us download the album from the iTunes store. (Actually, I was attempting to show him that such a thing did not exist, and lo and behold it there it was. Ka-ching!) But enthusiasm is something this world needs more of, and it’s another step on the road.

The fun of developmental delay is until you get enough pieces fitting together, certain areas can’t move forward. Jon will move at his own pace. He’ll start to take an interest in material for older kids when he can process it, when it speaks to him. We continue to expose him to new things, and he’ll be the one who determines when it’s time to move on.

The Daily Coyote

Peter

The Daily Coyote is an interesting blog by Shreve Stockton, who has adopted an orphaned coyote pup and is raising him in a cabin in Wyoming. Incredibly cute pup pics start at the bottom. It will be interesting to see how long Charlie stays with them, before the call of the wild lures him away.

Hilarity

Peter We’ve been a little cautious exposing Jon to the web, but I finally got around to show him a couple of very popular YouTube viral videos, just to see if he got them. Boy did he ever. You’ve probably already seen these, but they were new to Jon.

He burst into a fit of uncontrollable laughter when he saw the Dramatic Prairie Dog (and replayed it several times):

And his lips turned purple as he laughed until oxygen ran low as he watched the Pandas…

…after which, he shouted “That’s hilarious!!”

😀