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Greetings to all,
I invite you to read my new book Becoming Remarkably Able: Walking
the Path to Talents, Interests, and Personal Growth. Readers will
find a practical way to frame their thinking about how to expand and
nourish the growth of youth with ASD and other disabilities. Identifying
new areas of living for our youth with ASD requires everyone to think
out of the box and help them explore what really moves them.
At the most basic level, I encourage readers to see that what is good
for people without a disability, is good for people with
disabilities. The book is about identifying talents and strengths, then
transferring them into tangible forms. It’s all about finding and
pursuing that hobby, that activity, that job, or that subject to study
which makes the heart sing.
My focus is experienced based, meaning I fully participated in these
activities, both with other families and with my son Trent who has
autism. The process involves a combination of examining and exploring
interests as well as taking a microscopic look at patterns of relating
and participating in all aspects of life--responses to people, places,
interests, and involvement. This constant interplay with the environment
is pursued in order to answer this question: What brings enjoyment,
interaction, growth, and peace? Supports are then identified,
negotiated, and implicated to help lift and link the individual to full
involvement and participation.
Today’s problems require new thinking and new actions in order for
people with ASD and other disabilities to have opportunities to develop
responsibility, growth, and to function at one’s highest capability
level. I would rather see individuals with disabilities as vibrant and
strong, producing and contributing in society, not lapsing into a glazed
acceptance of outdated negative images that isolate.
My book is about activism, an imperative to claim hope for an optimistic
life using methods I’ll share with you. My emphasis is on action and
technique, and it is passionately practical: improving life, health, and
relationships. If previous transition plans have failed your son or
student, despite diligence and the best of intentions, you may have
picked ones that were counter supportive to the individual’s needs. This
book can assist the reader who is acting as a guide to the young person
to find an outlet h/she is in harmony with regardless
of the severity of disability.
It is based on compassion and passion. Using one’s strengths “with
supports” provides the individual the opportunity to sense what feels
right. I assure you this isn’t just hard work or “another thing to do.”
Tapping into talents and strengths feels GREAT and can lead youth to
opportunities of growth and independence.
My deepest wish is that you join me in this practice and quest.
My best regards,
Jackie M. Marquette, Ph.D
Author, Consultant, Researcher
Founder of
The
Marquette
Group
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