Readiness Checklist
When is the ‘right’
time to visit PACE Place?
We have worked with
families at different stages of development with a variety of
diagnoses. We have worked with families with children under two years
of age and we have worked with families of teenagers. The children we
have seen have diagnoses of one or more of the following: Autism
Spectrum Disorder (ASD), Asperger’s Syndrome, Attention Deficit Disorder
(ADD), Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Pervasive
Developmental Disorder (PDD), Pervasive Developmental Disorder-Not
Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS), Non-Verbal Learning Disorder (NVLD),
Sensory-Integration Disorder, Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD),
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD), Anxiety Disorders, severe
to moderate speech and language disorders, hyperlexia, seizure
disorders, mood disorders, severe to moderate food allergies, eating
disorders, personality disorders, attachment disorders, and non-specific
delays in development. We have worked with home-schooled children and
we have worked with children who attend public and private schools.
Parents commonly
state, “We want a better life for children and for us.” “We want life
to feel less like work, and more like life.” Families who are
considering a trip to PACE Place can ask themselves these questions to
help determine if they are ready for the PACE Place Immersion Model. We
do not have a scale by which you can gauge your responses to the
questions below to determine whether or not PACE Place is right for
you. Only you can determine if your answers to these questions would
make a PACE Place Immersion experience worthwhile. If you would like to
email a family who has attended the PACE Place Immersion Model, please
email us at
www.paceplace.org. Provide a brief description of your child and
family and we will do our best to match you with a family who shares
your profile.
- Does a
diagnosis run your family dynamic?
- When someone
asks you to "tell me about your family" how far into your
description do you get before you mention a family member’s
diagnosis?
- Do you feel
like you just don’t understand your child?
- Do you feel
like you are doing all the work and getting none of the payoff?
- Does a "good"
day depend on what kind of report you get about your child?
- Do you feel
like other people can connect with your child more intimately than
you can?
- Are you
prepared to challenge every limitation you believe about your child?
- Are you
looking for a different way to think about your child’s difficult
behaviors?
- Does it feel
like you spend an inordinate amount of time waiting for your
child?
- Do you feel
like other people get to enjoy the "fun" side of your child but you
get deal with giving him medicine, haircuts, getting dressed, and
generally dealing with keeping his body healthy?
- Do you feel
like you need to plan every detail of your child’s development?
Otherwise, he won’t learn it.
- Do you feel
like your child’s unique course of development has led you to
become a different kind of parent than what you had envisioned?
- Are you ready
to redefine what is important to you and your family?
- Do weekends
with your family leave you feeling refreshed and re-charged?
- Do you look
forward to eating dinner together as a family?
- Do you look
forward to spending a long weekend with your family?
- Do you wish
you could be more spontaneous with your family?
- Do you look
forward to running errands with your children?
- Are you tired
of listening to the same song on the car stereo for the thousandth
time?
- Do people tell
you that your child is “intelligent” but can’t access it?
- Are there
situations you avoid because of your child’s diagnosis?
- Do you feel
like you are dealing with "a diagnosis" when you’d rather be raising
your child?
- Do you feel
like your family’s identity is defined by a diagnosis?
- Do you feel
like your child’s diagnosis has isolated your family?
- Are you
worried that you are not the parent you wanted to be?
- Do you feel
over-supported by your community? (e.g., your son has ASD, here is
what he qualifies for…)
- Do you feel
under-supported by your community?
- Does it feel
like you are your child’s therapist first, and parent second?
- Do you feel
like you have nothing in common with your own child?
- Does your
child share his/her experiences with you?
- Does your
child care about your experiences?
- Does your
child look to you for information when she/he is unsure or confused?
- Does your
child coordinate his/her actions with yours?
- What
percentage of your conversations revolve around a diagnosis?
- When is the
last time you were able to take time for yourself without feeling
guilty?
- Do you feel
like a competent parent?
- Do you want to
learn more about development and how it directly relates to your
child?
- Does opening
up your family life for a week to trained professionals seem like an environment you could learn from?
- Do you learn
well from hands on experiences while seasoned professionals provide
feedback in real time?
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