![]() ![]() A good example is the peep hole in a front door. He’s the one who dubbed me “Fisheye.” A fisheye lens projects a wide-angle view. My dad was a television director and therefore familiar with camera lens terminology. Tell us why?īecause I lived inside my head so much while “growing up” and rarely relied on my parents for support or advice, I learned at a young age to look at “the big picture,” also known as a bird’s eye view. ![]() I was also constantly trying to figure out what I was doing wrong. I was constantly trying to figure out how to get my parents’ attention without upstaging my special-needs brother. Please tell us about your childhood and how being the sibling of an undiagnosed brother with Asperger’s was like. Lorna: Welcome to our interview series! In your guest post I read you grew up in the 60’s and 70’s and had an older brother (by two years) who had undiagnosed Asperger’s syndrome. Thorpe for her guest post introducing her handbook that provides parents/caregivers with viable strategies for supporting autism siblings (the often-overlooked piece in the Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) support puzzle). This book’s title was changed to Autism Spectrum Disorder SIBLING SUPPORT: 15 Practical Tips for Parents and Caregivers Updated 2016įolks at Special Needs Book Review thank Ms. Why? We might find out in this interview with Trish Thorpe, author of two books: Fisheye: A Memoir and Asperger’s Sibling Support: 15 Practical Tips for Parents/Caregivers. ![]()
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