Description
With autism diagnoses rising, more and more parents find the challengesof caring for an autistic child added to the everyday strains andstresses—and joys—of family life. In a deeply personal, honest, humorousset of essays, Martha Johnson Bourlakas grapples with life—life as aperson of faith, life as a wife and mother, life as a clergy spouse (herhusband is bishop of Southwestern Virginia), life as the parent of adevelopmentally disabled young adult, life as one unable to maintainpretense. Reading these essays is like sitting down over coffee with agood friend to commiserate and laugh with someone who understands.
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With autism diagnoses rising, more and more parents find the challenges of caring for an autistic child added to the everyday strains and stresses—and joys—of family life. In a deeply personal, honest, humorous set of essays, Martha Johnson Bourlakas grapples with life—life as a person of faith, life as a wife and mother, life as a clergy spouse (her husband is bishop of Southwestern Virginia), life as the parent of a developmentally disabled young adult, life as one unable to maintain pretense. Reading these essays is like sitting down over coffee with a good friend to commiserate and laugh with someone who understands.
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