Join the List

Stay up to date & receive the latest posts in your inbox.

One Comment

  1. In an attempt to keep my (earlier) life (having had 5 kids in 3 years) under control, I *may have* gone a little overboard, but it worked for us for a while, while they were in Elementary School, and I was newly diagnosed with a life-changing condition.
    In the family room on a big, empty wall above my desk, I installed a large (maybe 2′ x 3′) corkboard, on which I attached an undated dry-erase calendar page. I had four small plastic containers (desk trash cans with swinging lids), which I affixed Velcro patches to, with coordinating Velcro patches on the walls to the right and left of the corkboard. Next, I got an eight-pocket hanging organizer in black. I had four living children, and they all got to choose a “favorite” color that they would like to be identified with – in order from oldest to youngest, they were: blue, green, yellow, and red, very convenient for me!! I was purple. Their father was brown. (Yes! For THAT reason!) I bought dry-erase markers, folders, labels, and ball-point pens in (those) multicolors, placing the folders (2 per child) into the 8-pocket hanging file organizer, one for papers to be signed and sent back to school, and the other for tests and artwork; writing all important events on the dry-erase board, using the colors for which person the event was for/about (doctors’ appts, Choral Concerts, Day 3 Band Schedule, etc); and using the plastic containers, labeled with colored ball-point pen labels, as a catch-all for whatever did not fit into a folder. Using a sort of Celtic font, I made a sign “Welcome to the Communication Station!” in green ink and laminated it, hanging it just above the cork board.
    In the living room, my ex had made a large (3′ x 4′) paperboard sign that elaborated the important (his) Rules of the House. I also created a spreadsheet that could be updated each week, alternating child names on a Child Chore Chart, which I then printed and posted in the dining room each Sunday evening. This was posted next to some autism coping charts, such as a row of faces with different expressions so that the children could post which expression they were feeling that day. (Don’t laugh, but I also first categorized, then alphabetized my canned, dry, bagged food goods. I also did this with my closet and drawers: first categorized the clothing into types, and then placed them in ROY G. BIV order, haha. I REALLY wish that I could attach my photo of it to show you!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *