Special Needs Living Jan 2022 Issue

Page 30

HOPE Source The

Celebrates its 15th Anniversary

Hope Tube talent show

By: Julie Gordon, LCSW - President/Owner

As The Hope Source celebrates its 15th anniversary, I am honored to be featured in this issue to highlight our success, spotlight our services, and tell our story. As I reflect on all these years, deciding what I want to say, I find myself overwhelmed not knowing where to begin. However, there is one glaring feeling in every memory – gratitude. The Hope Source has enriched the lives of so many people, but most significantly, my own. With that, I write this open letter to all of those who have been a part of the last 15 years: While in college, 20 years ago, my roommate was graduating and asked me to take over her job helping a little boy with autism. I had never met anyone with autism, so I accepted reluctantly. I did not know it then, but that little boy would change the trajectory of my life. I am grateful for this angel who patiently introduced me to what it meant to have special needs. A few years later, a little girl who was struggling with progress in her ABA programs was placed in my path. This family sought alternative interventions that opened my eyes to a more holistic approach that not only better fit my values and temperament but gave me the opportunity to witness this little girl take leaps and begin smiling. I am grateful for this family who trusted me to go on a new journey with them and ignited a passion I did not know I had.

30 Special Needs Living • January 2022

After graduate school, I tried to follow my original career path as a school social worker. However, I was not allowed to counsel students with autism because they were in the hands of special education. I am grateful for the opportunity to work in schools, but also for them telling me “no.” Without that “no,” The Hope Source may never have come to be. The Hope Source opened in January 2007 as a private consulting practice focused on a more developmental, parent-based intervention. If I had learned anything over the last six years, working with families of children with autism and getting involved in the autism community, it was that the whole family needed support. Marriages were strained, siblings struggled to find their place, grandparents were heartbroken not knowing how to interact with their grandchildren. I am grateful for the first two families who put their trust in me to lead them on a very difficult and rewarding journey of parent-based intervention. I was not yet a parent and looked like I was twelve, but they trusted me when I assured them that I was not going to teach them how to parent - they already were experts at that. My job was to help them empower themselves to be parents again. They needed someone to listen, encourage and bring out the strengths in their parent-child relationship and family unit.

Julie Gordon speaking at High School Graduation

second-hand furniture. It may not have been a state-of-the-art clinic, but our therapy model was the best and our clients were thriving. I am grateful for all the memories of spirit weeks, field trips, talent and Christmas shows, staff development days, Best Buddies, parent workshops, benefits, and high school graduations.

I am grateful for each and every family across three states that videotaped themselves in their pajamas to implement the homework I asked them to do. They let me have a window to their world, vulnerable and open to change and challenge. I remember each and every client and family that walked through our doors. I am grateful for everything that I learned from them and that I now can teach to others.

In 2013, after years of amazing outcomes, The Hope Source developed its hybrid model of therapy and education. Partnering with a charter school, our clients could have IEPs and the education that they are entitled to. I am grateful for the charter schools who believed in our clients and that a hybrid model could work. I am grateful for those who helped me navigate the charter school world for the founding of Dynamic Minds Academy, which aims to capture the successful model that The Hope Source created over six years.

In 2009, because of grassroots demand from families, I started our in-clinic services program and hired my first five employees. I didn’t intend to have a center and I was learning to run a business as I went. I am grateful for those humble beginnings of

we moved to our current location on Craig Street, I could finally do everything that I had envisioned for years. One dream was the Hope Source Café. It is not only a place, but a vocational


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.