top of page
Updated AIM Logo.png

New to AIM? Get your weekly AIM email FREE!

By signing up, you agree to receive emails from ThriveGuide.


Your AIM This Week:

Love is a Verb

Listen on the player below

One of our 4 Essentials at ThriveGuide is entitled “Attitude Impacts Behavior”. As a parent, you already know that what you think and how you feel can influence how you behave. Your actions go through the filter of your attitude. Therefore, it’s a good idea to pay close attention to how you feel during your interactions with your child.


At ThriveGuide, we also highlight the importance of rapport. When you have rapport with your child, they are more receptive to you, and are better able to comply and engage in learning. At the heart of rapport is Love.


Love is a feeling, but it is also an action. In order for the love you have for your child to be useful in building rapport, it must be visible. 


Your love needs to be a verb!

Here’s a question for you to think on: in what ways do you show your love through actions with your child? And how can you express your love even more noticeably?


In his 2010 book “Love is a Verb”, Gary Chapman describes how each of us has our own ways of showing love and our own ways that we need to be shown love. 


The book is focused on self-help relationships, and not on autism, but the main concept applies to building rapport. 


Figure out what elements of your interactions and affections your child enjoys most, and then find ways to amplify those elements into action.


For example, if your child smiles when you sing, give them an encore and sing for them often. Add a costume, try a new character voice, add a percussion instrument to tap out the beat, write out the main sentence in the chorus for your child to read, draw a picture of the main image in the song… and so on. 


Make your love actionable by expanding on the things that make your child smile.


And to start your week with this AIM in mind, here is John Mayer’s 2012 jingle “Love is a Verb”.


Have a stellar, love-filled week!

JA Signature.png

Jonathan Alderson

Autism Expert
Founder, ThriveGuide
Author, Challenging the Myths of Autism

What do you think of this week's AIM?

Share Your ThoughtsBe the first to write a comment.

New to AIM? Get your weekly AIM email free!

By signing up, you agree to receive emails from ThriveGuide.

Explore All AIMs

Live Q&A: Real Meltdowns, Real Solutions

In this week's AIM, we listen in to highlights from a recent YouTube livestream Q&A I

hosted along with an autism parent. Together we discuss tips learnings from our 60+ years experience.

Be Curious

Children and adults with autism experience their environment and social interactions differently. We have been afforded insights into these differences, often sensory-related but also cognitive, emotional, and physiologically-based, from first-hand reports. There are now dozens of books written by autistic individuals, including children. They are insightful and essential to learn from for parents and professionals alike...

Playfulness

There has been a great divide between behavior therapies and play therapies, historically in the field of autism therapy. But this is changing quickly, as behaviorists realize the power of playfulness to motivate children...

Where The Wild Things Are

In this A.I.M. we remind ourselves about the importance of play. We’ll look at research that has uncovered the benefits of play for autistic children. And we’ll learn what the two secrets to being playful are....

Autistic Voices, In Their Words

On this week’s A.I.M., we look at voices of children and adults with autism to understand and to gain insight from their personal lived-experience. And we explore the tension between prioritizing learning from autistic lived-experience and recognizing the broad diversity within it. If we are all unique and different, then how relevant is one personal experience?

Wordplay

This week, your focus is to strike the balance between expecting more language and longer phrases from your child, while keeping communication with them light and effortless. Find new ways to turn saying words and speaking into play. Give yourself permission to be a little more silly with communication to entice your child to want to share more of it with you!

Created by Autism Specialist.

Jonathan Alderson, Ed. M., draws on 25+ years of supporting autistic children.

Completely free resource.

No strings attached. Just a way for us to support as many families as possible.  

Completely free resource.

No strings attached. Just a way for us to support as many families as possible.  

Created by Autism Specialist.

Jonathan Alderson, Ed. M., draws on 25+ years of supporting autistic children.

Get a Free & Personalized Autism Parenting Course

Answer a few questions to help us select the right course for you!

bottom of page