Jenna’s story of Hope
When Jenna was born, her parents were naturally overjoyed. Stacey and Steve marveled at their child’s tiny toes, her beautiful eyes and her precious little smile. Like all parents, they beamed with pride as their child took her first steps and spoke her first words.
But when Jenna was 14 months old, something happened. She suddenly stopped speaking and refused any eye contact. “Jenna didn’t respond at all when I cooed to her and held her,” her mother recalls sadly. “Now I know that was the autism.”
As Jenna got older, her frustration in communicating her needs affected her behavior. “We had to put special locks on the doors and windows to keep her from wandering,” Stacey explains. “As she
became increasingly aggressive, we couldn’t have friends over or have family activities outside the house. We couldn’t just put a sign on her that said ‘AUTISM’ so people would understand what was going on with our child.”
Can you imagine the anxiety and worry Stacey and Steve suffered as they thought about Jenna’s future? All they wanted was for their little girl to grow up happy, secure, and to live as independently as possible.
For years, Jenna’s family struggled to take care of her and keep her safe at home. But eventually, her parents realized that she needed a more structured environment. They realized they needed help, but they didn’t know where to turn…until they found The Hope Institute.
“Jenna is so much happier now, and we have a very good feeling about her being at Hope,” her mother is proud to report. “Hope has taught her how to be self-sufficient, and that is her greatest accomplishment. I can barely believe she’s learned to brush her teeth, wash her hair, make her bed and do her own laundry!” In fact, Jenna’s doing so well at Hope that she’s started vocational training – learning basic assembly tasks and helping at a local dental office twice a week. These are life experiences that, long ago, Jenna’s parents could only have dreamed for their child. Today, those dreams are becoming a reality.
The Hope Institute has been caring for special needs children like Jenna since 1957. Over the years, Hope has evolved into a unique educational, residential and medical facility that combines customized, one-on-one education and state-of-the-art technology, allowing each of its students to achieve their maximum potential.
–from The Hope Institute website