Autism Recovery Stories
Regrettably autism is a disorder that has no cure yet. There is very little known about why it impacts some people. The diagnosis itself is hard because at first the disorder is assumed as "bad-behavior" and other corrective steps are used. It has been found that if autism therapy is started early, there is promise for amelioration in some children.
Autism - A Very Agonizing Plight for Parents
It is exceedingly painful for parents to learn that their child is stricken by autism. This is even more so since there is no cure yet for this affliction. There is no way that one can be assured that the future will bring some hope. Autism therapy involves a series of exercises to bring the child out of his or her world, but as many frustrated parents have learned, it appears that the child has a door which they shut out against the world and nothing that one can do or say reaches them anymore.
Since autistic children close themselves off from their surroundings, it is very challenging to teach them at times because they stop observing - which is a critical tool for learning. Autism therapy tries to work around this obstacle through different approaches founded on applied behavioral analysis. Even so, progress in most cases is extremely slow; since the children do not respond to their outside surroundings, the positive reinforcement method - which generally is a very powerful tool - doesn't apply in this case.
There Are Modest Rays of Hope
There have been cases, largely when autism therapy began before the children were two to three years old. The children made an almost full transition. Such cases act as inspiration and promise for those parents who are struggling to deal with this blow. The educational facilities accessible for autistic children are very limited and very expensive.
Parents of these children are left at the mercy of their fate - most of whom opt for home schooling rather than fight the million and one challenges that fall onto their path when they enquire for state education facilities. Unfortunately, even the treatment of these children is extremely hard and expensive. There is an acute shortage of specialists for autism therapy, which stacks the odds against these children.
However, a spark of hope is there. In a number of cases, largely those where the autism therapy was started very early, there has been a total turnaround where the child became almost normal. Though the reasons are still not clear, the phenomenon holds a promise for a potential cure sometime in the future.