Welcome!
Welcome to the Companion Resources Home Page!
Our goal is to help ordinary people to meet the extraordinary challenges
of living with a disability or relating to persons with disabilities.
Companion Resources is built on three key concepts:

Companionship
Persons with special needs experience most relationships as a client
or patient with a professional person relating to them. Relationships
of companionship, on the other hand, focus on mutuality.
By learning to know each other as friends, we are able to learn from each
other and help each other. The person with special needs feels safe and
valued in the relationship and the person with more abilities is also
able to learn and grow through the relationship by calling forth and naming
the unique gifts in the other person.
Companionship is particularly important in dealing with
persons with developmental disabilities
and with mental illness. In addition,
under the larger disabilities umbrella, Companion Resources offers more
specialized information on autism and
fragile X syndrome. Other specific issues
may be added in the future.
In relating to anyone with special needs, we have found
that the model of Gentle Teaching offers
a more consistent and humane approach than the standard behavioral modification
models.

Community
More people today are making an effort to include persons with special
needs into the larger community. However, "community inclusion"
is more than just putting persons in need into settings that are more
"normal." Community happens when companions build bridges from
persons with special needs to other persons. Communities can be large
or small, but true community means that all persons feel included
and valued for whatever contribution or role they play in the life
of the group.
Companions can learn much from community
development models that start with the people instead of structures
and institutions. The asset-based approach is particularly helpful because
it consciously works at including persons who might not naturally be included
in community life.
There are an increasing number of models
of community life that start with building community around persons with
disabilities and mental illness and then extend that community life toward
the larger geographical community surrounding them.


Resources
Families and companions build bridges from persons with special needs
to the communities to which they belong. Often this effort requires specialized
resources. Information is important so that companions can understand
the special needs and communicate them clearly to others who relate to
the person. Resources of support and encouragement are also
helpful from persons who understand firsthand the challenges of a particular
special need. Today's technology puts a wealth of information at our fingertips.
The telephone and computer also enable us to build new kinds of communities
(sometimes called "virtual communities") of specialized support to supplement
our face-to-face communities.
Specific annotated links are offered on the following
topics (more may be added in the future):
The Internet is a wealth of information on many
more topics. For general health concerns
and links to other specific health conditions, Companion
Resources sorts out some of the best of the multitude of resources
for healthy living. In addition, we offer
general helps for using the Internet that
have been particularly useful to locate even more information.


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