I visited two other "Schools" this week. The most obvious lesson learned from both, is that I am working way TOO hard at my facility, doing too much. The other psychologists were either: complaining and not working, socializing and not working; off looking for another job, on company time and not working; or home sick. Too interesting! I have already asked for a transfer to one of the facilities, and am looking forward to that happening...some day! This week, I also managed to lock my keys inside my car. There was a little puppy running wild. I stopped to call it, then got so upset that it was out in the desert, all alone, guess I just got too flustered. Last Sunday, I met my friends to hear an Irish tenor. I enjoyed it, they did not. This next week, family arrive from out of state for a family member's 50th BDay. It will be nice to see them all again. And, I have scheduled a massage appt on Friday, and have a function I am required to attend on Saturday. No drama this week!
Saturday, March 11, 2006
Friday, March 10, 2006
Multidisciplinary teams of physicians and scientists at the University of California, Davis, M.I.N.D. Institute have launched the nations most comprehensive assessment of children with autism to detect the biological and behavioral patterns that define subtypes of the disorder. Called the Autism Phenome Project, the large-scale, longitudinal study will enroll 1,800 children -- 900 with autism, 450 with developmental delay and 450 who are typically developing -- who will undergo a thorough medical evaluation in addition to systematic analyses of their immune systems, brain structures and functions, genetics, environmental exposures and blood proteins. Children will be 2 to 4 years old when they begin participating in the study, and their development will continue to be evaluated over the course of several years. The first phase of the research is funded by the UC Davis M.I.N.D. Institute and philanthropic donations. Children with autism clearly are not all the same, said David G. Amaral, research director of the UC Davis M.I.N.D. Institute and co-director of the project. The tremendous variation leads us to believe that autism is a group of disorders rather than a single disorder -- several autisms versus one autism. We are determined to provide the specific biomedical and behavioral criteria that accurately define distinct subtypes." Autism has common hallmarks: difficulties initiating and sustaining social interactions, impaired communication skills and restricted, repetitive patterns of behavior. However, these hallmarks vary in severity. In addition, some children with autism can have co-existing conditions such as cognitive impairments, seizures, coordination issues or gastrointestinal difficulties, while others do not. This heterogeneity has been a major obstacle to progress in autism science. Another obstacle involves access to reliable data. Autism science includes many quality studies on specific aspects of the disorder -- from genetics and immunology to behavior and imaging -- that can be difficult to combine and compare. With the Autism Phenome Project, UC Davis M.I.N.D. Institute researchers aim to overcome this limitation. We spent two years designing the project so that it would be both comprehensive in scope and fully capable of integrating data across disciplines, said Amaral, a neuroscientist who specializes in brain systems involved in memory, emotion and social behavior. Our goal is to identify specific types of autism and develop a database of biomedical information that can be shared with the worldwide community of autism scientists. This is crucial to refining our understanding of autism and to developing targeted treatments for a specific type of autism as early as possible so children can reach their fullest potential. According to Thomas R. Insel, a physician who is director of the National Institute of Mental Health, the Autism Phenome Project is an important new direction in autism research. Multifaceted biomedical approaches are exactly what is needed right now, said Insel. This is a monumental task, but one that needs to be undertaken if we are to accurately diagnose and treat people with autism. While the Autism Phenome Project is ambitious, Amaral believes its successful completion will shorten by decades the road to discovering the causes and treatments of autism, a neurodevelopmental disorder that now affects 1 in 166 children in the United States. The unexplained rise in autism prevalence has frustrated parents and scientists trying to find answers. The extraordinary biomedical tools currently available at the M.I.N.D. Institute make it the ideal environment for launching this clinical research effort, he said. The time is right for us to build a strong database of information that we can all share in order to speed the discovery process and clarify the variability that now plagues autism research. From there, we can more quickly identify causes and treatments, and by adding collaborative partners we will be able to gather as much information as quickly as possible. The UC Davis M.I.N.D. (Medical Investigation of Neurodevelopmental Disorders) Institute is a unique collaborative center for research into the causes and treatments of autism, bringing together parents, scientists, clinicians and educators. For further information, go to http://www.mindinstitute.org.
Tuesday, March 07, 2006
"The Thorns in the Rose".
A certain man planted a rose and watered it faithfully and before it blossomed, he examined it.
He saw the bud that would soon blossom, but noticed thorns upon the stem and he thought, "How can any beautiful flower come from a plant burdened with so many sharp thorns? Saddened by this thought, he stopped watering the rose, and just before it was ready to bloom... it died.
So it is with many people. Within every soul there is a rose. The God-like qualities planted in us at birth, grow amid the thorns of our faults. Many of us look at ourselves and see only the thorns, the defects. We despair, thinking that nothing good can possibly come from us. We neglect to water the good within us, and eventually it dies. We never realize our potential.
Some people do not see the rose within themselves; someone else must show it to them. One of the greatest gifts a person can possess is to be able to reach past the thorns of another, and find the rose within them.
This is one of the characteristic of love... to look at a person, know their true faults and accepting that person into your life... all the while recognizing the nobility in their soul. Help others to realize they can overcome their faults. If we show them the "rose" within themselves, they will conquer their thorns. Only then will they blossom many times over.
