Friday, 8 November 2013

The Artist Strikes Again

The little artist has been at it again. This time my wall that descends with the staircase has been used as a canvas.
J has scraped a pattern into the paint, and has revealed the old colour paint underneath.
Not quite sure what he was attempting to draw, or what inspired this, but it is of such a large scale it made me gasp as I opened my bedroom door!
I can only think of a city skyline is something he may have seen at school. I'll never know!


Sunday, 3 November 2013

Being a 'Special' Parent

A lady cashier that served me yesterday, asked me how my children were doing. I usually have at least one of them with me when I go to this shop, and she has seen them all at one time or another, and we have little chats as she serves me.
I didn't have any with me on this visit yesterday (thanks Mum for staying at home with them!), and so I mentioned J had been a little hyper due to the half term holiday from school. He needs his routine and the challenge of work to keep his brain calm.
She told me that she doesn't know how mum's like me keep so calm and happy, as she wouldn't be able to cope with a special needs child. She said she has so much admiration for us.
I have heard this before from people. And I've heard other special mum's tell the same story.
We always refute it and say it is just what we were dealt, and we learn to adapt to our new life.
 
What is true is this ;
 
I wouldn't be the strong person I am today, the advocator, the challenger, the supporter, and the voice of my son, if I hadn't been given J and his special needs. I would just be another mum that looked at special mums and told them I didn't know how they coped and stayed so strong.
When you are given a special child your world changes. You do what you have to do, for the rights of your child. When your child cannot communicate with words, you become their voice. It is just another facet of being a parent. It is what being a parent is about. We all have our challenges in life, and this is mine.
 
 

 
 

 
 
 

 

Saturday, 2 November 2013

Justin Fletcher (Mr Tumble) The Hero of Children's Television

There is a children's entertainer in the UK that I have to write about.
He has provided the voices of many characters, both animated and costumed.
His name is Justin Fletcher.

                                           Justin in his day to day clothes.

Over the last 15 years or so, he has either acted as himself, as various acts, or provided voice overs for costumed actors and animated shows.
He began working on the CITV show, Fun Song Factory, with Dave Benson Philips, and in my opinion this was the hey day for FSF, as it wasn't as cheesy as it's successor was, which had stage school youngsters whaling through 'pop' songs. Dave Benson Philips was a great presenter and actor too.

       A very young looking Justin in the Fun Song Factory.


The BBC1 show, The Tweenies, had Justin voicing the characters of Jake and Doodles.
His most recent voice over he has done is for an animation series called Olly the Little White Van, and I can detect tones of his voice he used for Jake.

Tikkabilla and the spin off, Higgeldy House, were fantastic. He and Sarah Jane were a great duo, and even now, 10 years on, it is still a very much loved programme in our house, loved by J, and now by W, my youngest son aged three. J is quite calm when I put one of these on for him to watch.


                                              The Tikkabilla Presenters



He then became 'Mr Tumble'. Oh Mr Tumble, what a fabulous creation. Loved by children, and parents too.

                                                                   Mr Tumble

Such a basic premise, but one that enthrals and educates young children, with no patronising.
Mr Tumble has brought a whole new world of special needs to the fore.
Justin learnt Makaton - sign language - and uses it throughout his show, Something Special.
As the show progressed, and the audience of fans increased, Justin introduced more characters, all played by himself, and all related in some way to Mr Tumble. Granddad Tumble, Fisherman Tumble, Aunt Polly, Baby Tumble, Lord Tumble, and my favourite, Cliff Tumble, which is based on Cliff Richard, the legendary music man for over 50 years - Justin really plays him up, much to my amusement.
Bright colours and Justin's natural warmth make it a winner. The children that appear alongside him all have a disability, and it educates the children watching the show, that our world is diverse, and that we can all learn together.

Gigglebiz and Justin's House followed. He got to show his talents of acting many different characters, male and female in Gigglebiz, and it was aimed at slightly older children, as it had lots of silly humour.
Justin's House had a live audience of youngsters, and was very slapstick/pantomime based, which children love - adults too!


                                                                        Gigglebiz



Animated series' he has voiced recently are Timmy Time (BBC) and as mentioned before, Olly the Little White Van, and Shaun the Sheep (BBC).

If you have a child with learning disabilities I highly recommend the series Something Special (Mr Tumble) and you can watch episodes on YouTube, as well as buy DVD's from Amazon, eBay, and the BBC online shop, to name a few.
This is a link to the programme Something Special on YouTube.

As for the marvellous Justin Fletcher, he was awarded an MBE from the Queen for services to Children's Broadcasting and the Voluntary Sector, in 2008, after a petition was started online. The then Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, had an online petition page where people could choose a subject of their own, and if it gathered over a certain amount of signatories, it would be motioned. So people power worked. Justin deserves his MBE. Even if you do not find you like his programmes, you cannot deny he has a flare and talent for communicating with special children.


                       Receiving an MBE from the Queen in 2008


Justin Fletcher, you are a hero to so many mums like me. You treat our special children with kindness and respect. Your characters and shows are wonderful to watch, and unlike a lot of shows aimed at children, you don't rely on recorded laughter tracks, screeching stage school teenagers over acting, or cheesy, schmaltzy,  moral stories.


                                          Thank You, from myself and my children!