Robins
family learns life lessons through autistic son
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Rich
and Nubia Quick have put their autistic 8-year-old
son, Matthew, through therapy to help him open up
and relate more to others. The Quicks maintain a structured
environment so Matthew can better adjust to the world
around him. Mr. Quick is a logistics analyst for the
542nd Combat Sustainment Wing here. (U.S. Air Force
photo by Sue Sapp)
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By
Holly L. Birchfield
78th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
ROBINS
AIR FORCE BASE, Ga. -- Having a child is what some
would refer to as a life-changing experience, but for a couple
here it was more of a change than they expected.
Seven years ago, Rich Quick,
a logistics analyst for the 542nd Combat Sustainment Wing,
and his wife, Nubia, learned that their 1-year-old son Matthew
was autistic.
Quick said news of his son’s
condition left him in shock.
“Any dream that we had about
what our child would be in our lives was basically smashed,”
he said. “Until you learn more, all you’ve ever heard is that
these children have no hope … that there’s no help for them.”
Like most parents, faced with
such news, the Quicks began looking into ways to understand
and cope with the disorder that would ultimately change not
only their now 8-year-old son’s life, but have a big effect
on theirs as well.
“The first thing you do is read
everything you can get your hands on about the condition,
and you try any treatment you can find, trying to find something
that works,” Quick said.
The couple said in recent years,
speech and occupational therapies, as well as therapy involving
interaction with horses, have helped their young son open
up and relate more to others -- a behavior that Mr. Quick
said does not come easy for autistic children.
“At first, he wouldn’t go near
the horse,” he said. “But by the end of the first session,
he was finger painting on the horse and was no longer afraid
of animals.”
While therapies have made great
improvements with their son’s condition, the Quicks said each
day is a challenge, maintaining a structured environment so
their son can better adjust to the world around him.
“He’ll wake up in the middle
of the night, and you have to walk around with him for a bit
until he is ready to take his medicine and go back to sleep,”
Quick said. “We get up with him and get him ready for school.
We have to tell him what he is going to do each day, so he
knows what to expect, so he can feel comfortable in his environment.
If something happens that he wasn’t expecting, he gets upset
and could have a meltdown.”
Taking care of a child with autism
leaves the couple very little time for themselves or each
other, Quick said.
“There’s no time for yourself,”
she said. “You have to ignore yourself and focus on him. I’m
no longer worried about my life. I’m worried about my child’s
life.”
But she said even though the
task of caring for her son is time-consuming, he has taught
her so much in his young life.
“I have learned to be patient
and strong,” she said. “You have to learn to teach him whatever
you can in that moment while you can. I wasn’t prepared for
this, but it has taught me (in our everyday struggles) to
be a stronger person.”
Her husband agreed.
“I’ve never considered myself
to be a patient person,” he said. “But now, people look at
me and say, ‘Wow, you’re so patient.’ You have to learn patience
and accept how things are or you’ll go crazy.”
While the developmental disorder
remains a mystery to the medical community in many ways, parents
can help their autistic child by using available resources,
said Dr. Amanda Draper, a staff physician with the 78th Medical
Group’s pediatric clinic here.
“Most of these children need
some type of intervention to help them develop to the utmost
potential,” she said. “What is needed will depend upon the
child. Many need speech therapy, occupational or physical
therapy -- most of which is the responsibility of the state
via the school system. … Parents need to make themselves aware
of the resources available to them in their area.”
With proper therapy and intervention,
30 to 40 percent of children diagnosed with a more severe
case of autism may grow up to live independent lives, said
Dr. Draper, who has been a general pediatrician at the clinic
for nearly three years.
Matthew’s parents said while
their son may not be what some consider “normal,” they hope,
with time, they can help him be the best person he can be.
For more information visit the
American Academy of Pediatrics online at www.aap.org.
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