Black Pearl Rosé 2011 vintage, NOW ON SALE!!!!

MEG - OUR LITTLE PEARL NEEDS YOU HELP.
Meg is 4 years old and has spastic Quadreplegic Cerebal Palsy.
We are launching the second release of Meg's rosé wine called Black Pearl.
The idea for this fundraising effort came from winemaker & family friend Eleana Anderson of Mayford Wines (www.mayfordwines.com) who has lovingly donated her time and resources.
This wine is made from donated grapes grown in the Alpine Valleys by Mayford & Michelini wines, (www.micheliniwines.com.au) and bottled with assistance from Ringer Reef Wines (www.ringerreef.com.au) and picked, bottled, labeled and packed by volunteers.
A big, huge thank you to all those who gave their time and assistance.
The rosé was certainly made with love, you can taste it in every bottle!
The funds raised from the sale of this wine will be used for Megs future needs,
including this year the purchase of her first wheelchair.
For sale at Alpine Visitor Centres, in Bright, Mt Beauty & Myrtleford, & Food, Wine, Friends in Bright or print the order form below and we will deliver! Please help us to help Meg. For wine enquiries please email Kate - casleyke@bigpond.com. Enjoy!

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Meg's Very own RDA - Riding for the disabled!

Early this year we have been fortunate enough to find someone who has committed his time once a week to help us help Meg to get out of the house and spend some one on one time with horses. Adrian Webster who used to run the Freeburgh trail rides and is still in possession of some 50 horses, (once a horse owner always a horse owner) and luckily for us only lives about 2 mins drive away from our house agreed to see us on a Tuesday morning and spend a hour with Meg helping her get up close and personal with Cody the beautiful & quiet Palomino.
Meg adores this hour, and when I tell her we are going riding well she just beams with delight, nothing is too much trouble for her after that. One of her daily stretches is to have leg wraps on and sit in her corner chair meaning she stretches her hamstrings by sitting at 90 degs with straight legs. It is a hard stretch and she needs to do it for an hour each day to make sure her hamstrings don't permanently contract. You can imagine we have a bit of trouble getting her to do this happily and we have all sorts of carry on when we talk about it, but on a Tuesday morning - "not a problem" she happily has her leg wraps put on and no complaints for an entire hour. We tried to get involved with the official RDA in Myrtleford but the timing and distance made this impossible for us. Joan Meg's carer also comes along to assist as we need 3 people to enable us to do this safely with Meg, we also incorporate a heap of therapy & communication at each session and Meg get a great deal out of it. Adrian is a star for committing himself to this each week and we cant thank him enough, Meg gives him the biggest smiles every time she sees him. We are hoping to have a saddle specially made up to support Meg while riding, and we may even start Pony club in a couple of years.
Anyway here are the sequential pictures of Meg's own RDA (riding for the disabled) session. We hope you enjoy them.
Thanks again Adrian for your commitment and support this year!

To Donate to MegAid Bendigo BankMegAid TrustBSB 633000Acct 137281846








Monday, December 5, 2011

CPEC

Hi Friends, well it has been a long time since I have given an update on Meg's blog, 9 months and things have been hectic.
Meg and I continue to travel to Melbourne most weeks to attend CPEC - Cerebral Palsy Education Centre. An amazing centre which offers therapy specialising in preschool kids with CP.
Their therapy is based on the premise that any child no matter how severe the disability can learn to communicate in some form and can also become an active participant in some way in their lives. Many people with severe disabilities very easily fall into the trap of becoming a passive participant where everything is done for them and as a result their quality of life is low because they need so much assistance to do anything.
In Meg's case, with her disability being so severe, she could very easily fall into the trap of being a passive participant, If we allow this to happen, in the future when she is too heavy to pick up and carry she will require either a hoist, or 2 people to assist in transferring her, in and out of bed, in and out of a wheelchair and on or off the toilet or into the car etc. Because of the time and effort involved in this it will mean she will be able to do less in her daily life and will probably spend more time just plonked in her chair in front of the telly.
It is why we work so hard now, while she is young to instill into our everyday lives Meg being as active in - transfers IE pushing through her legs to help stand up, getting in and out of her pusher, on and off the toilet, in and out of her feeding chair, in and out of bed etc. - sitting up IE using her hands, arms and body to assist her aid (me) to push up to sitting, There are many different ways in which Meg can help us to help her move around. Not only does it make the task easier for her carers but it is really good for her body and her brain to be learning these movement patterns and will as she gets older become instinctive. CPEC's philosophy is to instill this "therapy" into our daily lives, it means that tasks take a bit (or a lot) longer but it will mean the world to Meg when she is older. So apart for attending CPEC there is not "therapy time" for Meg our therapy is done every time she gets out of bed, every meal time when she had to lift up her hands to put the tray on her chair, every time she gets on or off the toilet etc.

The other side to CPEC is the extremely important communication angle. Right from when Meg began at CPEC when she was only 12 months old she has had a communication book, we have been encouraged, cajoled many times berated into instilling this into our every day lives.

CPEC does not believe in allowing their kids to sit in a corner and only get to communicate with their immediate family or by some one asking them questions, they very strongly believe in this and as a CPEC parent I also am expected to believe in this. It has not been easy, using the communication book is slow, it takes a long time to learn how and it is cumbersome to carry around. But like everything in Meg's life it is important, very important. Meg does not appear to have any cognitive issues, her disability seems only to effect her body. So her ability to communicate will be the way she will stop herself from going stark raving mad! Could you imagine the frustration of having all the time in the world to think about things or at her age now, going on for 4 years old and all those questions she wants to ask," but why mummy why". Without her communication book and as of last week her dynavox, (her communication book now on computer with voice output) she will be totally trapped in her body and her mind. So CPEC offer us that, they push and pull us parents kicking and screaming into the understanding that communication is the key, if our kids can communicate then they can be active participants not only in their home, but in the world around them and in their community.

So this year at CPEC has seen a massive change in Meg. For the first 2 years of heading off down the Hume with a 4 hours drive in front of us or a long train journey with delays or cancellations, packing up the house, making sure the bins were out before we left (you get the drift it was HARD work!) We would arrive at 9am at CPEC, pull into the parking lot and before we had even pulled into a parking space Meg would see where we were and start crying, the crying would turn into screaming as we entered the building, and usually when the first therapist would say Hi a full blown tantrum would take place. This happened week in and week out for nearly 2 years, she would generally start to smile when after 3 hours we got to eat lunch or definitely when we were singing the goodbye song!
Happily or possibly luckily, I did not have a nervous breakdown in these 2 years and things have improved significantly in Meg's 3rd year at CPEC. The therapists at CPEC were fantastic, calm, understanding and patient. They got Meg's communication book out consistently and asked her what was wrong again and again and again. Until finally Meg got it, these people were here to help, they wanted to hear her and they were interested in what she had to say.
It has been a miraculous change in her this year. Now when I tell her we are off to CPEC she smiles, she laughs when she gets there and enjoys the sessions, now she can even get through an entire session without crying.
So this Post goes out to CPEC to say a big thank you for all your help, we most certainly would not be where we are today down this long Rd if we had not stuck it out.
www.cpec.org.au for more information or to donate!

To Donate to MegAid Bendigo BankMegAid TrustBSB 633000Acct 137281846