A Voice is On its' Way!


"Can you be at the East Oregonian office tomorrow morning at 9:30?" Carol asked over my voice mail. The SLP that coordinated and raised money so that Taylor would get a voice for Christmas (see the blog post "A Voice for Christmas") had called me the night before to go help her do an interview for the paper.
Yes, Taylor was getting his voice and yes, the Tango device had arrived in the mail. She had wrapped it with ribbons and a bow, and the plan was that this morning, Friday, December 21st, we were going to hold an interview for the paper and then go to Taylor's house with the reporter and photographer in-tow to get photos. (The article would be in either the issue Christmas Eve, or the day after Christmas - since there is no paper delivered on Christmas Day.)
I was excited to think that we were actually going to Taylor's house and that we were going to watch him open the greatest gift I could imagine being given to a boy this year. My Christmas spirit "richter scale" was registering a strong 8 or greater...major stuff!
I looked at my watch. It was 8:30 a.m. and I had several things to do in the office before I could leave. As I reached for my list, the phone rang.
"Hello, Lon? This is Ceci West from Blink Twice. I bet you weren't expecting to hear from me this morning!"
"No, I wasn't!" I said.
Ceci explained that she was the marketing director for Blink Twice, the company that makes the Tango. I had sent my blog story links to them several days before thinking the company would enjoy hearing the story.
"I had to get out my tissues while I read Tyler's story," said Ceci. "We wanted you to know that to sweeten the pot, we would like to give Tyler and his family a free, one-on-one webinar with our training and education specialist."
I felt the need to pinch myself. "This is great! Thank you so much!" I replied.
Ceci continued, "Richard, our president and founder read the blog entries too and just loved the story. I went in his office yesterday to tell him about it and he was already reading it."
"We are getting ready to go to Taylor's house and deliver the Tango here in a few minutes." I explained. "The SLP and I are meeting at the newspaper office first for an interview and then we are all going to the house."
"Well, Richard would love to give you a direct quote for the paper if you would like. I can connect you to him." offered Ceci.
I asked if I could call back once we were at the newspaper office and let the reporter get the quote. Ceci said that would be fine. We chatted for a few minutes more and then I was out the door.
At the newspaper office, I explained the new developments - the free training and the direct quote from the founder, Richard Ellenson.
The interview went well, and after we explained to the reporter how this amazing miracle had happened, we got out the phone and called Blink Twice. We were connected to Richard, who was genuinely excited and supportive. He shared that this story was making it a special Christmas for him too.
"Thank you for developing such a wonderful device that is making such a terrific Christmas for Taylor." I told him. "Let me turn you over to the reporter."
I handed the phone to her.
After a couple of minutes of writing notes, she said "Thank you," and then hung up.
"OK," said the reporter, "Richard told me that we were supposed to have a group hug. Since he can't be here, he said to share one and include him too!" We all huddled in a group hug and then got ready to head over to Taylor's house.
There will be pictures of Taylor opening his Tango under the tree, but in the meantime I will be sharing what happened that morning - after the article comes out in the paper and Christmas day has come.
I am so thrilled to have the honor to share this story with you and I hope you will continue to follow it as it unfolds. There is more to share, but this update has been enough for now! Get ready for some great pictures and the final story as Taylor finally gets his voice.
I am so thankful that I have seen that Christmas miracles really can and do still happen. I hope this is true for you too as you share with your family and friends over the next couple of days.
Merry Christmas!
Lon


A Chance to Act

Taylor (I can use his real name now),

got to do his part in the school play.

I thought you might enjoy getting to see him

in action.

His teacher said that he was able to focus on the "acting" because
he didn't have to think about how to say the lines. This was a new thing for him to be able to really be a part of a play. He had his lines programmed in the Tango so he could press the buttons in order to say each line. This Tango was on loan and had to
be sent back the last day of school before Christmas break. It was a lot easier this time knowing one was coming soon that Taylor could keep!



You can see he has his Tango device on his lap tray. It has a little stand to sit on.



We are all proud and happy for you Taylor!



A Voice for Christmas


I shared the story several weeks ago about Tyler, the boy who used a speech device called a Tango. (See the November 30 post)
He had really taken to it and had wanted to keep it. We had to say no, we were just borrowing it to see if it would work for him.
Well, there is A LOT more to the story and it is due to the efforts of many people. So sit back, relax and enjoy this GREAT Christmas story. You might even want to turn on the Christmas music here on the blog and grab a cup of cocoa. OK? Here we go...
A day or so after visiting Tyler and packing up the Tango device and shipping it back to the OTAP equipment center in Roseburg, Oregon, the speech pathologist, Carol called me.
"I have made up my mind that we need to find a way to get the Tango for Tyler. I don't know how and it seems pretty impossible to do, but I would like to see the $7,000 raised, the device purchased and here by Christmas."
Now this meant we had to have approval by the family as well as the district. It was going to be difficult to get all the details figured out on this. Carol shared these concerns with a gentlemen who had some contacts with foundations that might have money to give. He said, "Carol, you are just God's agent in this. If it is supposed to happen it will. Don't limit what can happen."
I gave Carol the number of our regional AAC sales company that dealt in the Tango and gave the sales rep a heads up on what we were looking at. The company, Aug Com Solutions, was able to ship us a Tango for a week and a half, until Tyler was out of school for Christmas. The purpose was to do a video taping to demonstrate how Tyler uses the device and play it for donation pitches. We also wanted to do a show and tell with the device while we had it to show foundations that would grant an audience.
The next challenge was the shipping. It was going to be $50 to get the device here in time and then ship it back. Carol asked the school staff if they could pass a hat and collect money to get Tyler's device back and try and raise the money to get him one. No problem there, the staff rallied and the device was on it's way! This was Dec 3rd or 4th. The race to get Tyler's voice by Christmas had officially started and the momentum was starting to build.
Carol and the special ed teacher, Jennifer, made an appointment to see the head of a local foundation. They also had found several charitable groups, Wildhorse Casino's foundation and corporate donations that might be possibilities.
The day of the first appointment a terrible ice storm shut schools down and stopped traffice on the roads - they had to re-schedule. Several days later, they took the device, a copy of my first blog entry to read if needed, and the prayers of lots of people.
The wife of the foundation director met them at the door. "Come this way," she said, as she led them to his office. Carol shared with them that they were there to ask for help funding a speech device for a boy with cerebral palsey.
"I don't care what it costs," the wife said, "You had better give them what they came for!" She apologized as she had a prior appointment and let herself out.
Carol and Jennifer shared the device and showed the director what it could do for Tyler.
"So how were you thinking of raising the money?" he asked.
"Well," started Carol. "we were hoping that we could get this by Christmas for Tyler. So if you were willing to give us half the money, and loan us the rest with no interest until June, we would work to pull in the rest this winter and next spring."
"How much is it?" he asked.
"7,000 dollars" replied Carol.
He thought for a moment. "I think I would like to just purchase the entire thing".
"Can I hug you?" asked Carol. "You just need a hug for being willing to do this!"
He smiled. "If you come up with this need again for another student, let me know. I might like to help with getting another one too."
Carol and Jennifer went out on the porch and hollered "Whoo Hoo!" jumping up and down. It was actually happening!
The next step was convincing mother. You see, as any good parent would be, she was concerned about using any device that would become a crutch and stop further language development. Our job was to let her see him use the device and convince her that the Tango would actually support and encourage more speech and communication.
I came over a day before the meeting with mom to prep Tyler on how to use the device. I showed him a secret weapon on the device that kids from day one have been able to use to warm a mother's heart. (Be prepared, you will learn what that is in a few minutes!) Tyler also had a school play that was being video taped for a classmate that couldn't participate because he was in the hospital. Jennifer had programmed the Tango with Tyler's lines so he could "say them" in the play.
The next day, we met with mom. I came early and everyone was in a staff meeting. I walked down the hall, and behind me, Tyler came in with his mom and older brother. Tyler ran to me in the way only he can and threw his arms around me. "You must be his buddy Lon," said the mother.
We shook hands and introduced. I led them into the speech room where the Tango laid on the table waiting for Tyler's demonstration. Tyler wanted to turn it on and show her right away. I told him he would have to wait. Carol, Jennifer and the principal would be there shortly. I shared some information on the device with mom and began to build my case. I casually threw in some of the advantages to having the device and we also made small talk about the holidays, plans and interests in general. By the time everyone came in I had made some new friends!
Tyler pressed "power" as soon as the first adult came through the door. He began to have it share his thoughts. The first one was "This is cool!"
Carol shared with mom the plan to use this to supplement his speech - not replace it. Tyler busied himself with our "secret weapon"...
"I love you mom" came floating up out of the Tango as Tyler wrapped his arms around his mother.
"Who could say no to that?!" I asked with a smile.
"I think this would be great for him," said mom.
"We have the resources to get it, but needed to make sure you were on board before we could proceed," explained Carol.
We all laughed and cried as Tyler teased and joked with the many comments he had mined on the device during his week with it. We all left the meeting feeling that we were experiencing the real miracle of the season.
"When do I get mine?" asked Tyler today while I went to visit.
"It was shipped today," said Carol. "the check is in the mail and the company has two devices they are trying to get delivered by Christmas day and yours is first on the list."
Tyler smiled.
His play is tomorrow afternoon. Three men (I'll call them three wise men), were instrumental in Tyler getting this device. One was the first acquaintence of Carol that gave her the advice to not limit what could happen. The second was the man who gave some seed money and referred her to the third man who donated the $7000 for the device. These three wise men will be at his play tomorrow afternoon where they will be officially thanked in a school assembly by Tyler and the school.
We helped Tyler program what he will say to them:
" I want to shake your hand."
" Thank you for giving me my voice."
Thank you Tyler for giving us a reason to believe that miracles really still happen at Christmas!
Merry Christmas everyone!
Here is the Tango site if you want to see the device. The home page has some great videos.
Post script:
The mother has released permission for us to video "Tyler" with his Tango. The play is being taped tomorrow so maybe we can post a clip on here. The Tango company has heard bits and pieces of this story and are excited. If Tyler gets his device in time, our local paper, "The East Oregonian" is planning to get a picture of Tyler and his device for the front page on Christmas morning. Aug Com Soutions wants a copy of the video and further demonstrations to see if Tango might want to post one on their site. I will keep you posted on all these things. ALSO...I LOVE and appreciate comments. When I look and there is a comment I am excited. It lets me know people really are coming here and reading. There are exciting things planned ahead in the next few months on how I am going to use this blog to link many of us together to do good for kids - so spread the word - refer friends to this blog and let me know your thoughts.
Thanks!
Lon


Smaller Pieces


Christmas is coming. How are you doing? Are you getting overwhelmed with all the tasks on your "to do" list? Between work, family and church/community services does it look like there is no time to focus on goals that really matter to you? Do you look at personal and professional goals you have set and feel there are too many obstacles for them to ever happen? I have a secret for you...
See the chocolate? There is an awfully big chunk over there. But it has been broken into smaller pieces. Have you ever started on a big chunk of chocolate and broken off little pieces to eat until you looked over and it was gone? You probably thought "Oh my! Did I eat all that?"
Our lives get busy and the goals in front of us looks unreachable. Well, it's time to sit down and slow down. Take some special time to break down your goals into smaller pieces. Find a way to set mini-goals or action steps that will draw you closer to your big goal. If you give yourself 2 small tasks a week that will somehow bring you closer to your ultimate destination, think how much you would have accomplished by next summer, and what a sense of accomplishment it would give!
Don't give up on those dreams you have. I have dreams that involve my profession, accomplishments that might seem outlandish and impossible, but I KNOW that they are possible because I have stopped letting the big formidable project scare me. Instead, I am looking at the little pieces and saying "I can do that!"
It is also interesting to note that as I have intentionally put focus on the goal as finished and affirming that it is a done deal - and being grateful for that fact, I have seen events, people and circumstances join to bring the vision closer to reality. The encouragement I receive helps to spur me on. So...
What do you want to do? What would you like to accomplish? I see children every day that have big goals ahead of them - to walk, to communicate, to get what is inside them out to others around them. I get overwhelmed sometimes in the task of trying to help them accomplish these goals, but if I break them down into little pieces I believe that they will become reality.
Well, I say to you, "You can do it too!" Don't give up. Keep dreaming, and focus on the little pieces and before you know it you will have accomplished great things!

Drawing on the Wall


Today I expanded on several weekly visits where I have been modifying the curriculum and working with 2 challenged students. One is Downs Syndrome and the other CVI. We connected Intellitools Classroom Suite to a Promethean Board. The Promethean Board is like a Smart Board but caters more specifically to education and the classroom with templates and all kinds of activities.
I worked with the SLP and special education specialist to design some writing, reading and dictating activities where the students could design a story and hear it read and watch it animated back to them. The CVI student enjoyed seeing things big where he could manipulate them. He used the wand that was callibrated to the board so he could draw, write letters and drag and drop manipulatives for math.
We had a good time playing with technology today and so did our kids!
Check out the Promethean Board. Check out the latest version of Classroom Suite by Intellitools. The two work great hand in hand!