Living in a Cat World

15 March 2010: More on this topic is in the blog entry “Transitions for Young Adults with Neurocognitive Deficits”

Yesterday, my daughter Jessica published a wonderful blog post called Some things that work about a superb teacher, Linda Herreshoff. Linda was my son’s teacher for three years at Jordan Middle School in the Palo Alto Unified School District. Linda’s class is full of kids like Paul, who have social-cognitive challenges often diagnosed with an Autism Spectrum label, like: Asperger’s syndrome, high functioning Autism, Non-Verbal Learning Disorder, or Pervasive Developmental Disorder – Not Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS). Almost all of Linda’s kids are boys who are smart or very smart and have parents who will not give up. Paul matured and learned and thrived in Linda’s class as never before. Her love, wisdom, teaching skill, and patience are awesome.

Part of Jessica’s blog post was a reference to the Liller Family Blog Entry on Asperger’s Syndrome, which starts off with this excellent summary:

Most children live in a dog world: A dog loves to be around people and socially interact with them. They willingly show affection, and follow their master’s commands. They also love to play and hang around other dogs no matter what activity their engaged in.

Asperger’s children live in a cat world: A cat is generally a loner. They prefer doing things their own way and like/need their solitude. Cats come to people on their own terms in their own time and they aren’t very social unless they choose to be. They have a routine and like to stick to it. They have one interest at a time (usually that silly piece of string they love to paw at). And when backed into a corner, a cat will lash out.

Paul is almost six feet tall now and just about done with his Sophomore year in High School. We were thrilled today to hear that he has just passed the California High School Exit Exam (CAHSEE). (Paul will be in High School for two more years. He took the CAHSEE this year just in case he needed several tries to pass it.) During our family dinner tonight celebrating Paul’s passing the CAHSEE, John and Jessica and Paul and I made a list of benefits and disadvantages of Paul’s social-cognitive challenges. As you will see, the two are almost mirror images of each other:

  • Benefits
    • Completely unaware of peer pressure
    • Amazing ability to concentrate
    • Generous, loving, and much given to small acts of meaningful kindness
    • Believes in long-term commitment, dedicated and loyal
    • Fastidious
    • Doesn’t lie well
    • Good sense of direction, sequencing, and paths
    • Loves ritual
    • Good at card and board games because he remembers all of the rules and the details of play
  • Disadvantages
    • Perseverant, stubborn, hard to influence
    • Gets stuck emotionally – sometimes needs help to move on
    • Can’t organize things – homework or papers or his room
    • Finds change difficult
    • Slow to mature
    • Extremely literal
    • Holds grudges with a very long memory
    • Does not take tests well
    • Follows all of the rules and expects everyone else to also

Of course, some of these behaviors sound like any teenage boy… (Also, Jessica says she treats all of her Engineering friends like they have Asperger’s and this works very well.)

Paul has been enjoying taking Art this year. Here he is with his new self-portrait.
2 July 2020 update: see Paul’s art portfolio on Paulselement
Paul's portrait and planning sheet photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Paul and his portrait photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

29 Dec 2016 – Links Updated

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Fixing Old Clocks

I gave my husband, John Plocher, a 1915 Gilbert Observatory Regulator Western
Pacific Railroad advertising wall clock for his birthday last month; it has
inspired him to fix two of our other clocks. The first is a family clock
which John’s parents gave us for our wedding. It was made by Junghans and
was bought in Holzhauzen, Germany, originally a wedding gift on 16 July 1930
from his Great-Grandparents Johannes and Anna Plocher to their son Karl and his
new wife Adelia Martin Plocher (John’s Grandparents). The second clock has an arts
and crafts style cabinet that John’s youngest brother Marty made then gave us
for Christmas some years ago.

The Western Pacific advertiser clock is working well so long as it is wound
weekly. The regulator stops occasionally but keeps good time. The German
clock has a pleasant chime but refuses to keep time or
sound when it should. John is still tinkering with it. Marty’s clock keeps
good time but the regulator sometimes stops. (Since it uses a battery,
the regulator is just for show.) We think John has it fixed now.

John’s new clock

1915 Gilbert Observatory Regulator Western Pacific wall clock
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
1930 German Clock

1930 Junghans Holzhauzen, Germany Plocher Clock
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Inside German Clock

1930 Junghans Holzhauzen, Germany Plocher Clock
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Marty’s Clock

Marty's Clock
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

John at work

John at work on 1930 Junghans Holzhauzen, Germany Plocher Clock
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

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Caboose Flooring Done

Today, I worked from home to keep an eye on the crew who were installing
the new flooring in WP668, our backyard caboose. Wei, the craftsman
from
Armstrong Carpet & Linoleum
, did an admirable job. I am so entirely
glad I did not listen to the people who said that

linoleum
is easy to install yourself. I do not have the experience,
skill, or patience Wei does. For nine hours, he used very precise simple
and specialized tools, made templates, and took great trouble to get the
measurements on 390 square feet of floor correct to within 1/8″ inch. Our
new floor is alligned, flat, and perfectly fitted.

See

yesterday’s blog
for WP668 history and photos of the subfloor going in.
Here are pictures from today:

WP668 – May 2008

WP668 May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Caboose Cactus

WWP668 Cabooseside Cactus Garden May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Building Permit

WWP668 San Jose City Building Permit May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
1st Linoleum Roll

WWP668 1st Linoleum Roll May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Starting Linoleum Installation

WP668 Starting Linoleum Installation May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Linoleum Installation

WWP668 Linoleum Installation May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
100# Floor Roller

WWP668 Linoleum Floor Roller May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Rolling Linoleum

WP668 Rolling Linoleum May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Linoleum Installation

WWP668 Linoleum Installation May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Putting Down Glue

WWP668 Putting Down Linoleum Glue May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Linoleum Fitted to Doorway

WP668 Linoleum Fitted to Doorway May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Middle and Side Done

WWP668 Linoleum Middle and Side Done May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Putting Down Glue

WWP668 Putting Down Linoleum Glue May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Linoleum Mostly Done

WP668 Linoleum Mostly Done May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Replacing Doors

WWP668 Replacing Doors May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Linoleum All Done!

WWP668 Linoleum All Done Jessica Paul May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Wei’s Tools

WP668 Wei's Tools Linoleum May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Wei’s Tools

Wei’s Tools

WP668 Wei's Tools Linoleum May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Wei’s Tools

WP668 Wei's Tools Linoleum May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Wei’s Tools

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

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23 PreSEED Mentor Matches Confirmed

We are in the mentor matching cycle for the 52 PreSEED participants.
I sent out the first mentor request emails on 5 May and I have 23
match confirmations so far this morning (44% done in the first 8 days).
Last week was the 2nd

OpenSolaris Developer Summit
on the University of California at Santa
Cruz campus, plus the
CommunityOne
event and
JavaOne
at The Moscone Center in San Francisco, so many potential mentors
were too busy to reply. However, there has been a good response since then.

When the SEED program first started in 2001, it was limited to Sun Engineering
staff working in the USA. Since then, the scope of the mentoring program has
broadened. The current group of PreSEED mentors includes senior staff from: Bangalore, India; Dublin, Ireland; Grenoble, France; and Prague, Czech Republic;
as well as those based in the USA.

More information on the SEED worldwide Engineering mentoring program is
available at
http://research.sun.com/SEED/

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Caboose Roof Done, Floor Done Tomorrow

Today has been a busy day for WP668, our backyard caboose. After much preparation,
the metal roof was installed (by
Wildcat Metals
) and the subfloor went in (by

Armstrong Carpet & Linoleum
).

Tomorrow
, the linoleum floor covering goes down. This is also a school day
Paul, plus Jessica’s first in-person work day at Stanford University Library
(she has been programming for them part-time from Carnegie Mellon in Pittsburgh,
PA). So, I drove the kids and worked in Menlo Park and John stayed home to work
in San Jose and keep and eye on the two work crews in the backyard. The
photos below show the progression of roof and floor development since
January 2006 when we bought WP668.

Original Roof-January 2006

San Francisco-Golden Gate Railroad Museum

WP668 Caboose Original Roof Golden Gate Railroad Museum January 2006
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Original Roof-January 2006

San Francisco-Golden Gate Railroad Museum

WP668 Caboose Original Roof Golden Gate Railroad Museum January 2006
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Original Floor-January 2006

San Francisco

WP668 Caboose Floor, January 2006
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Floor-Jan 2006

San Francisco

WP668 Caboose Floor, January 2006
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Roof Rebuild-September 2006

San Jose

WP668 Caboose Roof Rebuild, September 2006
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson
Roof-Sept 2006

San Jose

WP668 Caboose Roof, September 2006
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson
Roof-September 2006

San Jose

WP668 Caboose Roof, September 2006
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson
Roof-Sept 2006

San Jose

WP668 Caboose Roof, September 2006
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson
Floor Rebuild-January 2008

WP668 Caboose Floor Rebuild, January 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Floor-January 2008

WP668 Caboose Floor Rebuild, January 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Floor-Jan 2008

WP668 Caboose Floor Rebuild, January 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Floor-Jan 2008

WP668 Caboose Floor Rebuild, January 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Metal Roof Install-May 2008

WP668 Caboose Metal Roof Install-May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher
Metal Roof Install-May 2008

WP668 Caboose Metal Roof Install-May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher
Metal Roof Install-May 2008

WP668 Caboose Metal Roof Install-May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher
Cactus Garden from WP668 Roof

Cactus Garden from WP668 Roof-May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher
Metal Roof Install-May 2008

WP668 Caboose Metal Roof Install-May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher
Metal Roof Done-May 2008

WP668 Caboose Metal Roof Install-May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher
Subfloor Install-May 2008

WP668 Subfloor Install-May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher
Subfloor Install-May 2008

WWP668 Subfloor Install-May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher
Subfloor Install

WWP668 Subfloor Install-May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher
Subfloor Done

WWP668 Subfloor Done-May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2006-2008 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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15 PreSEED Mentoring Participants Matched, So Far

We are in the mentor matching cycle for the 52 PreSEED participants.
I sent out the first mentor request emails on 5 May and I have 15
match confirmations so far. I just sent out the “Last Chance” emails
to those who have not yet responded to my first email. I also have
about ten potential mentors who are actively in the process of deciding
whether to accept the participant who requested them.

In addition to matching the PreSEED-2 term with mentors, Tanya Jankot and
I have been redesigning SEED in preparation of the 2008-2009 terms which
will open for applications on 21 May. Since the two PreSEED pilots have been
successful so far, we integrated PreSEED as the third of now three mentoring
groups offered by our program:

    • Recent Hires (including newly acquired staff and recent college hires)

      This group provides promising recent Engineering hires and newly acquired
      staff with enriching and broadening experiences for their early years as Sun
      employees that make them more valuable to Sun and more satisfied with their careers
      at Sun.
    • Established Staff

      This group provides Mentors to help develop, enrich, and broaden the experience
      and understanding of Sun Engineering staff who have been with the company for
      some time.
    • PreSEED

      PreSEED is a new mentoring group aimed at helping Sun Engineering staff who
      have been getting almost all “Sun Standard” annual performance ratings onto a
      path which may lead them to higher engagement. One way to think of PreSEED
      is as a preliminary to the SEED Engineering mentoring program
      .

I sent email yesterday to the many thousands of Sun Engineering staff around the
world telling them that the 2008-2009 Recent Hire and Established Staff terms
are coming up. I also asked them to talk with their managers to see if
SEED is a good opportunity for them.

More information on the SEED worldwide Engineering mentoring program is available at

http://research.sun.com/SEED/

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She’s Home!

My daughter
Jessica
came home safe after finishing her Freshman year
final exams at Carnegie Mellon. Hooray! We are all very happy
to have her home. Of course, we have to share our talented and
energetic girl. Her summer plans include:

OK, so we will see her sometimes. But she has devoted this entire weekend
to hanging out at home and we are very happy to have our wonderful girl back.
When he heard Jessi happily singing German opera in the shower this morning, John
got a big grin on his face and said: “She’s home!”.

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