Autism Parenting Magazine Issue 87 (Member's Dashboard) | Page 24

PERSONAL NARRATIVE Building Magical Connections Under the Sun By Rebecca VAUGHN T here she was, about 50 yards away from our camp, near her big blue umbrella in the warm sun. She was seated in her low-to-the- ground beach chair with her solitary green bucket nearby. She loved to watch the ocean birds, the seagulls, the packs of quick-foot- ed sandpeckers racing back and forth while poking at the wet sand on the shoreline. She was a local during the summer, showing up day after day at the same beach spot with an umbrella already firmly planted in the sand by the lifeguards. A simple white tag was attached to it that read: “April.” This was her re- served spot, and she had been there for many, many summers—decades, I would later find out. At 84 years old, she had been a witness to many grad- ual changes, and she had a deep appreciation for the 24 | Autism Parenting Magazine | Issue 87 inhabitants that depended on the ocean, especially its fine-feathered friends. A few summers ago, an eight-year-old autistic boy named Brady crossed over the row of flat large rocks that separated the public beach (where Brady’s fam- ily set up their camp) and the private side where lifeguards unloaded and set up dozens of identi- cal bright blue umbrellas promptly at 10 a.m. every morning, including Ms. April’s. Hers was the one on the end, closest to the rock divider. Red danger flags flew on both sides of these rocks that lead straight into the ocean to mark the ‘no-swim’ zone. The rock divider was a place of curiosity for Brady; he would wander over from his camp with his purple bucket in hand. There he would discover and gath- er shells of various colors and forms. Running out a