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Louise Cummins, author of A different kind of brilliant shares her journey from when her son got his autism diagnosis…from despair back to hope.

When I was pregnant I was so excited to think about my son’s future – I dreamt of him doing amazing things and taking the world by storm.

After 18 months, I could see Lachlan was different, he was just in his own world. He was happy, but found he was always running around and not interacting like other kids. As time went on his energy levels became worse and family and friends kept questioning my parenting.

The Dreaded News

After a series of assessments (including a childcare visit) I received a call from our developmental paediatrician with the news; ‘Yes, I’m afraid your son does have autism’. Some people feel relieved at the diagnosis but my heart just smashed. This particular paediatrician then painted a picture of the worst-case scenario; ‘It was unlikely he would live independently, have friends or have a job’. it was at that point, he took away the one thing parents need…hope.

We Did Everything!

Over the next 4 years, I threw myself and Lachlan, into early intervention to prove that specialist wrong. The trouble was there was no clear-cut path for early intervention with so many choices. We did everything – from lying in hammocks, behavioural therapy, music therapy, water therapy, speech therapy, and even alternative therapies. One thing was clear, our world now revolved around therapy and all experts kept telling me we were still not doing enough. After spending most of my savings we started seeing improvements but we were both exhausted.

After one particularly gruelling week, my little man was watching Trolls on his iPad and the ‘True Colors’ song started playing. He had never really sung before and he said ‘Mummy listen to this’ and he sang it. When he sang ‘your true colours are beautiful like a rainbow’ tears rolled down my cheeks. I realised at that moment the person I needed to change the most wasn’t him…it was me.

Journey Of Hope

I set out on a mission to find hope in our diagnosis. I researched success stories, deleted negative news feeds on my social media and focused on making my little man the best version of himself.  I started to embrace his quirkiness (like carrying around a sweet potato instead of a teddy bear). I even felt braver to respond to people’s negativity and regained confidence in my parenting.

For Lachlan’s Christmas present last year, I decided to write a book for him to understand his autism. A story featuring famous people in history who had autism, such as Einstein, Michelago, and Mozart, who all used their special autistic gifts to change the world. I wanted him to see his uniquely wired brain as a gift, not a curse.

Lachlan loved his book and I did extra copies to help our ‘village’ understand him. Their support was overwhelming and more orders from friends of friends started coming, so I decided to launch the book online. I was overwhelmed once the website went live with people sharing all over the world.

My goal for the book is to spread the word of acceptance of differences and make children on the spectrum feel more confident about their uniquely wired brains.

Lachlan is now thriving and I can see a mainstream school in our future. I don’t stress so much about the future now as I’ve regained the one thing all parents need…hope.

Louise’s book – A different kind of brilliant is available for purchase for AUD$24.95 via adifferentkindofbrilliant.com – 10% of all Australian direct sales from the website will be donated to Autism Spectrum Australia.

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  • Beautiful way of coping

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  • Nothing really prepares you for parenthood and wham you are being told by others you are doing things wrong. Your child is not progressing like they should, something you are doing is wrong. Because it is never something wrong with the child if you can not see it. Trying to get others to believe you that something is wrong. It is a happy day indeed to find out that you were right but then it sets in how do I get this child up to what will be a normal life. This woman is lucky that she found the answers and that she is able to let others know how it is.

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  • Good on her for putting a book together of her story.

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  • Thank you for this article, I really enjoyed reading it. Parenting is difficult enough, but having a child thats different must be tough. Plus the strength these parents show as they build their child and focus on ability rather than the negatives or disability associated with autism is inspirational.

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  • It really does remind us all to keep things in perspective.

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  • This was so sweet and beautiful to read. We are so hard on ourselves and our kids sometimes we forget to just live in the moment and embrace them

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  • It is great once you know how to tackle the issue, good luck to them all

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  • a beautiful story, so nice to see and i love that she has highlighted those who have passed who were truly amazing people who also had autism as inspiration for others. What a great and beautiful thing to do for her son and other children 🙂

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  • Such inspiration and love put into this awareness

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  • fabulous inspiring story

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  • Such a wonderful story of hope for her

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  • It all depends where they are on the spectrum, some kids get along just fine others who have more severe autism need a lot more support

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  • It’s fantastic to hear about stories like this.

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  • Once you know what’s wrong you can find the best ways to deal with it and help your child.

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  • What a great story of hope I would love to see and get to read the book

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