Pubdate: Fri, 23 Oct 2015 Source: Daily Chronicle (DeKalb, IL) Copyright: 2015 Daily Chronicle Contact: http://www.daily-chronicle.com/forms/letters/ Website: http://www.daily-chronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3685 Author: Patricia Ihm ALLOW MEDICAL MARIJUANA FOR AUTISM TREATMENT To the Editor: My son, Ethan, has autism. I am learning more on this parenting journey than I ever expected to learn. Honestly, I really don't want to learn about the side effects of Risperdal or Zyprexa. I don't want to have a reason to know them. I don't want others to treat my sweet boy with any less dignity than he deserves. The grip of autism is not selective. This child is only trying to make sense of his world and his emotional kaleidoscope. I want him to be able to cross the train tracks without being gripped by fear and to enjoy the Christmas lights with the rest of us. I want him to know that he is a treasure, every single day. People with autism are often in a state of sensory overload. Experiences are more intense: louder, scarier, more painful..., often intolerable. I have seen anecdotal studies of children close in age to my son, with similar behaviors, who seemed to get better almost overnight when allowed the chance to have medical marijuana. For Ethan, there are extraordinary swings of angst, fear, and aggression. There are flashes of brilliance and charm; those are the moments we relish, the ones that bring us through the challenges. Ethan has been through two psychiatric hospitalizations. He had more physical restraints during the last calendar year than anyone else at his therapeutic day school. I'm sorry for railroad tracks, thunder, bees, wind, and for all of the other things that invade his head and stir his fears. We don't want him to go back to where he is not understood, where nobody sits with him as he falls asleep, where he is presented with trays of brown things with gravy, and where the outcome will be no different than before. My little boy, at 7, has been on at least 15 medications, many with negative side effects. Many children in states with more sensible laws have recovered the ability to function in everyday life by using edible marijuana. I feel that it is our ethical responsibility to offer this same opportunity to children in Illinois: the chance at a calm and joyful childhood. On behalf of my son and others who may not have words to express, please call the Illinois Department of Public Health office at 312-814-8482 to leave your message in favor of approving medical marijuana as a treatment for autism. Patricia Ihm DeKalb - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom