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High Point organization helping autistic children is now a Ceritifed Autism Center

High Point organization helping autistic children is now a Ceritifed Autism Center

Yahoo16-04-2025

HIGH POINT, N.C. (WGHP) — An organization that gives kids the tools they need to thrive and grow is now a Certified Autism Center.
The staff at D-UP completed a certification process by learning how to support and assist autistic and sensory-sensitive children.
D-UP also just received a $3 million commitment from the Earl and Kathryn Congdon Family Foundation, and along with the help of the High Point Community Foundation, the agency is teaching children vital life skills.
Inside the small building on Washington Street in High Point, you'll find big dreams and an even bigger goal. 'We're removing stigma, and our programs are absolutely free because of the funding we receive, and it's not only for the youth that attend our programs but also for their families,' says Jakki Davis, co-founder and executive director of D-UP. It offers 16 different programs that are all designed to get families moving, learning and preparing to cope with whatever the future may bring.
A grant from the Community Foundation of High Point helps fund one of the programs called 'Well Centered Me.' It promotes mental, social and emotional well-being, and it helps empower people who survive trauma.
Davis says, in a post-COVID world, that's more important than ever before. 'I think it's important that we not have that stigma that is mental illness,' she says. ''No, I don't want to talk about my mental health, I don't want to talk about mental wellness' because social media and, again, traumatic experiences, the violence that we have, racial discrimination, all of that plays into who we are, and we just need sometimes someplace to land, a safe place, and that's what we have here at D-UP.'
Children have a secure space to draw pictures, plant vegetables, do yoga, cook meals and even try dance. Princess Johnson with Royal Expressions Contemporary Ballet says, at first, the kids at D-UP feel like dance is a foreign language, but once they get moving, it weaves a story that will enrich their lives. 'I hope that through dance classes they will learn to be in tune with their bodies and know when there's something wrong and know whenever it's time for them to work on something physically or mentally or emotionally,' says Johnson. 'All of those things impact how our bodies feel and our health and wealth.'
D-UP also has a program that focuses on the mental and physical well-being of women. It's something Davis says is too often ignored. 'The Women's Wellness program is about finding that mental health, that self-care that most women you know neglect,' Davis says. 'We're going to kind of take care of everybody else, but when it comes to ourselves, we neglect to do that, so the women's wellness program gives us the opportunity to teach women how to take time for yourself, because if you're not healthy, it's hard for you to care for others. '
Participants such as Odaray Mora-Morejon say the program has taught the importance of self-care through a variety of activities. 'Every time you come, it's something new. It's something that you may not have had the opportunity to do if you didn't come participate, like the lotion making,' Mora-Morejon says. 'I know one was very special, the charcuterie board, something that you don't often think about that would put you in a better mood as you go about your life for the rest of the week.'
Davis says we may not realize it, but it's those little things that add up day after day to help us improve long-term mental wellness. That's why Children at D-UP have to do an emotional check-in every day they visit because Davis says, 'We want to know, 'How did your day go? What happened?' It's very hard for kids sometimes to tell you what's wrong, but they can definitely tell you what happened.'
Davis says the ultimate goal is to help everyone learn coping strategies regardless of what life brings. She says when children receive those tools at a young age, they're prepared to take control of their lives as they get older.
For more information about D-UP, visit https://www.itstime2dup.com
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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