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Lisa Landman

Special Needs Blog

Gift Guide for Special Need Children

Gift Guide for Special Need Children

Buying gifts for anyone can be a challenge, but it can be even more difficult if you are buying for special needs child. This guide offers ideas on what you can buy for your special needs family!

 

Arts and Crafts

Gifts that involved arts and crafts are always great ideas for children with special needs. Especially for children with ADD or ADHD, arts and crafts are excellent “fidget” gifts that keep them busy while engaging their brain. Playdough, chalk paint, silly putty, and easy-to-hold crayons are all perfect to help child engagement.

Personalized Gifts

Everyone loves customized presents, especially children with special needs. Personalizing a jersey, specializing a painting or creating a photo book are all great presents that children will enjoy. Personalized presents will make special needs children feel loved and provide a gift that will last forever.

Interactive

Gifts that are interactive can both be fun and beneficial. For children with sensory processing disorders, interactive toys can help children calm down and focus their attention. Light up toys, sand tables, finger paint and mini trampolines all are options.

Technology

Technology is continuously advancing, and there are excellent tech gifts that will help your special needs child be engaged. However, before buying a technology present, be sure to consider if your child can easily use the gadget. Gifts that are hard to use may cause frustration, which is the opposite of what you want. A remote control car or airplane are two gift ideas that may engage your child with ease.

Experiences

What’s a better gift than getting out of the house and having some fun? Special needs children love being able to explore and try new things. Presents that allow your child and family to experience new things will not only let them try new things, but it will also strengthen your family bond. Movie tickets, going to a museum, aquarium or zoo are all fantastic ideas.

Other Ideas

Other holiday gift ideas include a gardening kit, grip ball or a bowling set. A gardening kit is an excellent gift because it allows your child to gain responsibility for growing plants. A bowling set or grip ball are other great presents because they can provoke competition while enhancing motor skills.

 

Selecting a toy for a special needs child can be overwhelming. However this guide is made to help! Each child is different, so be sure to keep your child in mind when picking their holiday presents.

 

Lisa Landman has a passion for helping others and has worked with special need adults throughout her career. Learn more about her professional work or check out her Twitter!

 

6 Holiday Tips for Special Need Families

6 Holiday Tips for Special Need Families

The holidays a great time of year to spend time with loved ones, give thanks and exchange gifts. However, special needs families can have a challenging holiday season due to the lack of routine and school programs, and the increase of visitors, food, and noise. The following is a list of six tips that can help reduce stress during the holiday season for special need families.

 

Build Routine

Although this will be difficult, the most helpful tip to reduce stress is to build some holiday routine. Maintaining a consistent wake-up and bedtime over holiday breaks can help keep your regular schedule. Be sure to maintain a steady eating schedule and menu as well. Sure there is nothing wrong with eating a holiday dinner, however extra food, such as dessert, will break a routine.

Do Not Over Schedule

The holiday season is known for stressful family visits. Be sure to not-over schedule visits because attending too many events and involving too many activities will cause stress for your special needs family. If there is one important event that needs the best behavior from your family, make sure you allow plenty of non-stressful time prior to the event.

Avoid Crowds

The end of the year is notorious for crowds. Avoiding activities where there are huge crowds will prevent unwanted stress on your family. Try to online shop, or visit the mall at an unpopular time if you can.

It’s Ok to Say No

Doing what’s best for your special needs family should be your number one priority, which may mean you have to say no. Declining a holiday invitation, refusing extra food, or simply sticking to a bedtime is all ok. Figuring out what is best for your family and holding to it will create the best holiday season.

Keep Calm

The most important tip to improve your holiday season is to keep calm. While it may be instinct to overreact and stress about a situation, this never helps. Holidays are stressful enough for those with special needs that it is even more important for their support system to maintain their cool.

Count Your Blessings

Special needs families are hard work, but the holiday season is a significant time to remember how blessed you are. The holiday season is not just about giving gifts and eating great food; the more important lesson is to be thankful for all you have.

 

The holiday season is one of the best times of the year. However, it can also be one of the most stressful for special need families. By following these six steps, you can help bring joy to the holidays and keep your special needs family merry and bright!

Lisa Landman has a passion for helping others and has worked with special need adults throughout her career. Learn more about her professional work or check out her Twitter!

 

How to Get Involved with Special Olympics

How to Get Involved with Special Olympics

Special Olympics is the world’s largest sports program for those with disabilities. This program relies on volunteers to keep their program running at little to no cost.

About

Special Olympics is a global sports organization for children and adults with intellectual disabilities. Their mission is to provide the 4.9 million athletes with disabilities an opportunity to “develop physical fitness, demonstrate courage, experience joy and participate in a sharing of gifts, skills, and friendship.”

Anyone with an intellectual disability can become a Special Olympics athlete. Intellectual disabilities, as defined by the organization, are “used to describe a person with certain limitations in cognitive functioning and other skills, including communication and self-care.” Intellectual disability is the most common developmental disability and can cause a child to develop and learn more slowly or differently. Fragile X, Autism and Down Syndrome are among the most common.

Eunice Kennedy Shriver founded the organization in 1968. Her goal was to improve the lives of those with special needs after she saw how unfairly they were being treated. Held in Chicago, the first International Special Olympic Summer Game hosted about 1,000 athletes. Throughout the years, the Special Olympics movement continued to grow and gain respect. The organization has successfully expanded to offer over 30 sports for their five million athletes today! Additionally, Special Olympics has held over 108,000 events which took place in nearly 170 countries.

How to Volunteer

There are many ways to get involved with Special Olympics, and the organization would not survive without the great volunteers and help they receive.

Become an Official or Coach: With their constant growth, Special Olympics is always looking for more coaches and officials.

Healthcare: If you are a healthcare professional, you can offer your expertise to provide examinations for the athletes.

Youth Programs: If you are a student looking for a volunteer opportunity, Special Olympics is an excellent choice. Many schools already have programs in place that make it very easy to volunteer.

Unified Sports: With more than one million participants, Special Olympics Unified Sports Teams brings together those with and without intellectual disabilities to create a team.

Each Special Olympics office offers various ways to get involved. If you are interested in volunteering, contact your local office today! Special Olympics would not exist today without the time, commitment, energy, and enthusiasm from its volunteers. Volunteering is very rewarding and a great way to help others and the community.

Lisa Landman has a passion for helping others and has worked with special need adults throughout her career. Learn more about her professional work or check out her Twitter!

About Lisa Landman

Lisa Landman earned her doctorate in psychology from Fordham University in 2005. One of the reasons why Lisa pursued psychology is due to her interest in helping others. Throughout her life, Lisa has spent time helping the most vulnerable populations of society which includes animals. She and her husband have rescued six different dogs over the years, and Lisa volunteers with the Special Olympics. Lisa particularly cares about adults with disabilities since they’re a population that tends to face increased vulnerability as they age.

Previously in her career, Lisa Landman worked as a Residential Coordinator at Bishop Grady Villas which describes itself as a “place where adults with disabilities are able to thrive and achieve their dreams” (Bishop Grady Villas Homepage). The best part of working at Bishop Grady was getting to know the residents. Lisa found each resident to be an amazing person with a huge heart, a caring attitude, and a wonderful personality. She particularly admired the residents’ attitudes toward life. Even with their daily struggles, they approached each day with optimism.

The most difficult aspect of working at Bishop Grady Villas was the lack of funding. A large amount of the residents are on the waitlist to receive benefits from the government which Lisa Landman finds unacceptable. If the residents can’t get government assistance, then their families must pay for them to live there. Sadly, there are many adults like the residents of Bishop Grady Villas who don’t have families to help them receive the sort of attention and care they need. This unfortunate reality is one of the reasons why Lisa is motivated to assist adults with disabilities as much as possible.

Lisa Landman served as an assistant basketball coach in early 2017. Helping the Bishop Grady residents during their weekly practices was a lot of fun. Seeing how much fun the residents have during games never failed to make Lisa smile. Lisa plans to assist with more Special Olympics events in the future. Since the Special Olympics is a nationwide organization, anyone can get involved. Helping adults with disabilities is a great way to spend one’s time, and Lisa encourages everyone she knows to get involved in some manner.

Professional Overview

Over the years Lisa Landman has worked in a variety of areas such as human resources and teaching. For eleven years she owned a fitness center where she was involved in nearly every aspect of the business. Presently, she’s working with Costech Lab as the Director of Operations. Lisa’s diverse work experience means that she can thrive in nearly any work situation. She looks forward to continuing to pursue entrepreneurial projects while helping others at the same time.