Noah's Miracle
Wednesday, January 29, 2020

They Are Not All Your People

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Years ago when I started a handful of special needs parenting support networks and sites it was a different world.  The social climate was ...
Friday, December 20, 2019

December Pain

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Luke, as most growing children do have an innocent curiosity about them.  He thinks absolutely nothing about blurting out "tell me ...
Saturday, November 30, 2019

Dear Special Needs Parent, I Sit Beside You At Christmastime -

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I hear your stories.  You see they often echo some versions of mine.  I sit beside you in the pain, the loss, the grief, the sadness and ...
Wednesday, November 27, 2019

A Family of Miracles - Brystal Sonoma's Story

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Today marks the one year anniversary of the brutal and vicious attack of one of our beloved Cairn Terriers, Brystal Sonoma.   She was in th...
Friday, November 22, 2019

Looking Back

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Maybe it's part of the human condition that purposely tries to block out all the bad.  If we dwell too long in the hardship then we lac...
Sunday, October 6, 2019

Raising Dion: Disability Hit and Misses

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I was really excited to watch the new series Raising Dion on Netflix.  Besides personally knowing the little girl who plays a supporting ro...
Wednesday, October 2, 2019

The Nightmare called "The New Target"

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I don't think many people relish change.  But in the land of special needs sometimes the word change can send shivers up and down your ...
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Noah's Miracle
Noah Mitchell Warden was born December 23, 2008, weighing 9lbs and 1oz by emergency c-section at 8:51am. Noah did not breathe or have a heartbeat for the first 13 minutes of his life. He was taken to Children's Hospital in order to have a procedure done known as brain cooling in attempts to minimize damage caused by perinatal asphyxia. Noah's brain cooled for 72 hours after which time the hospital ran an MRI and an EEG to determine the extent of the damage. Unfortunately, the results came back with devastating news. Noah had suffered "global damage" to his brain. As a result the prognosis was grim. They said Noah would mostly likely never walk, talk, eat or even breathe on his own. Today, Noah has the diagnosis of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy resulting in spastic quadriplegia cerebral palsy with athetoid movements. Noah's miracle has brought our story to all of you.
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