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Amazon Prime Purchases I Recommend

  • Writer: How To TBI
    How To TBI
  • Jul 13, 2022
  • 20 min read

Updated: Oct 5, 2022



It's Amazon Prime Day (July 12th-13th), & I thought it might be helpful to try to put some of my favorite items in a list here in case you might find some of them to be helpful, too!


Feel free to check them out, & if you make a purchase through any of these links [or within 24 hours of clicking on it just before your intended Amazon purchase(s)], a small commission may be received which may help out supporting efforts made on this blog.


Thank you if you choose to browse through & select any of these items or any others that may pop up in your list of suggestions as part of your Amazon purchase browsing!


The way the Amazon Affiliates program works is that 3 separate referral commissions need to occur in a specified probationary time period through the referral links, and then Amazon reviews the How To TBI application to the Amazon Affiliates program to see whether or not How To TBI can be accepted long-term into the program.


If approved for the program (as opposed to just in the probationary period), I can then create an affiliate storefront which will allow me to categorize/group & add all the Amazon Prime products that I think are helpful, together, in one place, with updated & current pricing, to make it easier for others to come back & view recommended products for purchase, in one centralized, easier-to-navigate location.


This is something that I've been wanting to do for a very long time, especially because I've made a number of in-person/offline referrals that others have found helpful, but since I'm not currently fully approved for the program, so I have to keep re-researching the same types of items over & over again, which, as you can imagine, takes a lot of time each time I'm prompted to do that. I'm happy to do it because I know how helpful those referrals are, especially from the feedback I've gotten with helping folks, but it does take time away from doing other things to help move everything forward.


I would like to streamline this referral process so that I can have all my Amazon product recommendations together in one unified place, and also be able to more easily add new-to-me helpful items as I discover them. Doing so would allow me to spend more time devoted to learning about & sharing other types of resources that may help to enhance the quality of life of you & your loved one(s) as you're navigating this new normal.



Any help you're able to provide is much appreciated! Thank you!


And with that, please see some of my top recommendations with the updated referral link codes below:

Summary of Recommendations

TL; DR:


Writing Utensils


Electronics
  • iPad: 2021 iPad 256 GB, wifi-only, compatible only with 1st generation apple pencil https://amzn.to/3yYu1YG

  • 1st generation apple pencil: https://amzn.to/3O0JmMH

  • iPad 360-degree rotating case w/slot to hold apple pencil + apple pencil adapter: https://amzn.to/3uItxDu

  • series 7 apple watch w/gps + cellular, fall-detection & auto- emergency services contact calling notification, & haptic reminders when wayfinding/navigating via maps or gps-based location reminders: https://amzn.to/3NYI6tr (sizable roughly 23% discount on Amazon Prime Day)

  • apple AirTags: attach to things you don't want to lose. Less-expensive to buy in a package of 4. You can customize with an engraving (up to 4 emoji/alpha-numeric characters if you order from the official Apple website). Make sure it's compatible with your device since it may not work (or have full functionality) with older Apple devices: https://amzn.to/3PpXoZc

  • AirTag holder for dog or collar/harness (3DPrintedbyNick brand on Etsy): Amazing. Incredibly sturdy & able to be secured to other items, like a eyeglasses necklace and can only be removed with a tiny Philips-head screwdriver to take out the screws. Adds a layer of protection to be able to find expensive items that you may accidentally lose, such as expensive prescription glasses. Also is very secure on dog collars/harnesses.


Nausea

  • Psi Bands (accupressure): these are all plastic, ok to get them wet (shower, washing hands in sink, swimming) https://amzn.to/3INtIn7

  • Sea-Bands: these are fabric, can't get wet https://amzn.to/3yYxhTU

  • Ginger Coconut Hard Candy (Chun Guan brand): like a creamy coconut version of a Werther's Original hard lozenge candy with slight ginger flavor https://amzn.to/3uJPP7Q

  • 100% Natural Ginger Chews (Prince of Peace brand): very chewy, very spicy, very gingery https://amzn.to/3RwDsFW

  • Tazo Decaf Chai Tea Concentrate (the kind they use at Starbucks): mix with your favorite milk/non-dairy milk & ice for a cold drink, or heat up for a hot beverage to sip https://amzn.to/3O3QwQr

  • GTS Living Foods Kombucha: variety pack. pick flavors with ginger in them. https://amzn.to/3yEhbgK

  • Ginger Beer: non-alcoholic, can mix with frozen fruit &/or juice. https://amzn.to/3nUWOr1

  • Madras Curry Sauce: https://amzn.to/3yDsy8O (Trader Joe's also has a good yellow & red curry sauces in jars)

  • Jar of Already Minced Ginger Paste: add to your vegetable stir-fry & refrigerate jar contents after opening. Can also place in hot water in a sieve to steep for tea w/lemon slices & sweetener, if desired. https://amzn.to/3z0pXHn

  • Pyramid Triangle Stainless Steel Tea Infuser Sieve Steeper (by Tea Forte): super-fine holes that ginger slices & other larger herbs shouldn't fall out of https://amzn.to/3nXG7uR


Foods

  • Madras Lentils Yellow Microwavable Package (Tasty Bite brand): takes only 1 minute in the microwave. You can pour over tortilla chips & it is reminiscent of chili, without having to go through the long multi-hour process of making chili. Really nice to buy in bulk box to have on hand, also sold at Target & Costco. https://amzn.to/3PigxMK

  • Coconut Squash Dal Yellow Microwavable Package (Tasty Bite brand): also only takes 1 minute in the microwave. Also delicious. https://amzn.to/3z2yr0W

  • Quinoa, brown rice, red rice with flaxseed Microwavable Package (Seeds of Change brand): 90 seconds in the microwave. Great with frozen vegetables. Trader Joe's also sells frozen microwavable rice (takes 3 minutes in the microwave). Microwavable rice + microwaved frozen broccoli + small amount of olive oil + sprinkle of salt, pepper & sesame seeds = easiest nutritious, filling, Level 1 Cooking hot meal to make https://amzn.to/3aykY7r

  • Pre-Cut Fruit. an added expense, but it means you don't have to go through the sometimes difficult process of cutting it if you have mobility limitations or difficulty with knives post-brain injury. Cheaper than take out. https://amzn.to/3aBvtqG

  • Pre-Cut Vegetables. see reasoning above for pre-cut. When my OT first suggested this, I felt like it was such an expensive thing to consider since it's something I wouldn't have really purchased beforehand. Then I tried to cut brussels sprouts & mini potatoes I already had on hand prior to my brain injury & needed to eat --- it took me a few HOURS interspersed with a bunch of naps, combined with difficulty holding my head up and a lot of pain. I now see why this is useful & worth the expense during recovery, especially if you don't have anyone who can regularly prep your ingredients for cooking/baking/eating raw. https://amzn.to/3PoyhGs

  • Clear storage long containers (mdesign brand, but can also use others): @OrganizeWithTracy has WONDERFUL content regarding organizational design & often posts helpful tips as she & her team work with various clients in the Salt Lake city area. They often use mdesign bins. The concept is very much a speech therapy concept, of grouping like-items together. I've found this helpful for organizing the fridge, specifically, with grouping all items that you'll need to make a meal (or type of meal, like breakfast) together, and then you can just pull the entire drawer out of the fridge, make your meal, and put the rest back in. This concept of basketing is really helpful if you find that you'll be cooking in a kitchen other than in your own home (such as if you're collaboratively cooking/baking with others) since it's easy to otherwise forget things you'd need, like vegetable peelers or oven mits. https://amzn.to/3Iw5ZYm


  • food delivery from a restaurant. expensive, but worth it when you have no other options & aren't able to prepare food for yourself, especially right after brain injury.


  • private chef from Task Rabbit. also expensive, but depending on who you get, they can make the type of food that you're looking for. You're also supporting someone local in your community. I was really fortunate in that I was able to find a new Task Rabbit person who was a chef, by profession & training. They were able to come over and make food with what I had on hand, they cleaned up everything afterwards, & they threw out the trash into the dumpster after, no supervision was needed, & it was amazing. I gave them a couple recipes I wanted (really, I wanted the amazing lentil soup from Bertucci's, but it was too expensive to buy individually to eat on repeat, too difficult to figure out transportation to pick up & there weren't any delivery apps that offered this restaurant at the time near me right after the brain injury), and they figured it all out while I napped. If I had more disposable income, I would've had recurring groceries sent to their residence, had them cook & prepare it at their place, and then had them just deliver it with microwave instructions on how to re-heat. You do need to screen the potential Task Rabbits, since every person is different, and you do want to be mindful of who you let into your home (I strongly recommend reading reviews & doing all communication on the Task Rabbit platform so that they can track it if needed), but otherwise, this has the potential to be very helpful, especially right after brain injury when there's so much chaos & pain going on that trying to figure out how to eat is a monumental task.


Medication Organization:

  • Over-the-door clear translucent pocket shoe organizer: one of the best purchases I've ever made. Use each slot for a different type of medication (pill bottles, boxes, tubes of medication, drops, solutions, bandages, etc.) Incredibly powerful, especially if you're a visual learner. You can organize in alphabetical order, or my preferred method, is by reason type (ex: allergies, pain medications, etc.) These are also perfectly-sized that the CVS paper bag that your medications are in, along with their folded information packets, fit exactly perfectly inside each slot, so you can keep all relevant info together. Also solves the problem of looking for where your next refill medication bottle is when you've got multiple medications on different refill schedules. https://amzn.to/3nZ56y0

  • MedCenter Medication Organizer with Alarm: Each day has a 4-slot pill container (with day of the month written in the corner, and named breakfast, noon, evening, night), with a red & green day number located on either side of each pill box, to easily see which pill dates you've taken, & which ones you haven't. The talking alarm is LOUD. The timer seems to run a little bit fast slow, but that may be due to needing to put new batteries in, on my end. The alarm also has the day of the month to remind you to pull the correct day # of pills. A considered purchase, this would work well for people who have the same meds/vitamins/supplements on a daily basis, and wouldn't work as well for PRN meds (although you could probably add them in, if needed, depending on your medication spacing, such as for antibiotics). Wish it had more than 4 pill slots per day, but a really solid container organization system for those wishing to batch prep & group meds (especially differently-colored meds &/or differently shaped/sized meds) for a larger period of time than 1 week at a time. https://amzn.to/3c3cq8Z


Podiatry-Related:

  • Micro-Pedi 3D Power Callus Remover (Corded) (Emjoi brand): the best I've found so far. It's corded, which means it does NOT need batteries, and it does NOT have a rechargeable battery --- it MUST be plugged in in order to run. I've used the type that needs new batteries inserted every so often, & I've also mistakenly ordered the rechargeable version before which runs out of power after a bit and isn't nearly as effective. This specific model, because it's plugged in the entire time you run it, gives a consistent level of power output & makes removing calluses a lot easier, and a lot less-expensively than going to the podiatrist (although not a substitute) or to get a pedicure (which is uncertain with outcome results depending on the specific nail technician's skills). You can order roller refills, & if you keep them clean/rinse & dry the roller after usage, the level of grittiness will last longer. You want to use this product on dry skin. https://amzn.to/3P3WQst


  • 40% Urea Cream (PurOrganica brand): 40% is the strongest available urea concentration (prescription or OTC) and this version has the least added ingredients that I could find. I don't like the way it feels on the palm of my hands, so I will use a tissue or a q-tip or some other utensil to spoon out some of this cream and put it on the bottom edges of my heels, and let it dry to a white powder. You may be able to leave it on for some time, but I don't like the feeling, so I then carefully walk over & rinse my feet off in the shower after. Urea is both a humectant (meaning it pulls moisture from the surrounding environment, including the deeper levels of skin), and it is also a keratolytic (anything ending in the suffix, -lyse or variation means to split or break apart), so it breaks apart keratin, which is a component of skin that's especially prevalent in calluses. This is a chemical exfoliator which makes the calluses smoother & easier to debride them with later with a product such as the emjoi physical callus remover. You probably don't want to do both on the same day (emjoi + urea). https://amzn.to/3c9Qf0N


Time

  • Day/Date Clock with Time of Day Pictures & Categorization: Helpful if you're constantly wondering/asking what today is, or if you're confused about if it's early morning or late evening time upon waking up from a nap & everything looks & sounds similar. https://amzn.to/3c9RgG9

  • 60 minute visual countdown time (Secura brand): This is a different brand's version of the original time timer. I like that the numbers are in sequential order clock-wise, as opposed to the original Time Timer's version that is counter-clockwise, and can involve an extra mental calculation step to figure out how much more time is left until an activity (like how much time left until need to leave the house) https://amzn.to/3PqpZ0P

  • Amazon Echo Glow: You will need another Amazon device for this to work (like an Echo, or Echo Dot) since the Amazon Echo Glow has neither a microphone nor a speaker. I like this specifically because it has a rainbow timer function, where you can set it for a different period of time, and it will cycle through the colors of the rainbow, so you can visually see by the progression of colors how much time until your next event/activity. Some parents also use it to teach their kids about time (specifically, red light means time to stay in bed, and green light means it's ok to get up out of bed and wake your parents up). https://amzn.to/3P3N0Xw


PT Tools

  • Stainless Steel Gua Sha Scraping Tool (similar to those used with Graston Technique): Graston Technique involves the PT or other similarly-trained practitioner to manipulate the upper levels of the skin & the underlying musculature, tendons, etc. to help break apart/smooth down scar tissue adhesions that limit range of motion and to help smooth out bunched up bumpy, knotted, connective tissue in the webbed fascia. When done properly, there should be minimal, if no petichial hemorrhaging or bruising. There are a variety of tools and shapes depending on the area of the body targeted, but you can just start with one & build from there. In general, depending on the area of the body, it's likely best or only possibly to work on the soft tissue if another person is facilitating it due to angles that may be difficult/impossible to effectively reach on your own self, but for other areas, this can be a helpful adjunct in between your PT visits. Stainless steel means there's some warmth/heat transfer from the hand of the user to the body part that is worked on, and it also means that it's unlikely to break or shatter the way that a stone tool would, if dropped. When my knowledgeable PT uses tools for soft tissue manipulation prior to assisted stretches and movements, it hurts because there are multiple tighter/tender areas I personally have, but I almost always feel a little bit better afterwards and immediately notice better range of motion than prior to going to PT. I find the effect lasts for a couple of days for me, and is cumulative the more you do it. Prior to experiencing Graston Technique, I really didn't think much could possibly happen with gua sha, but now that I've actually had the opportunity to experience it, I know that's absolutely not the case & I've felt first-hand how much of a difference this can make in terms of physical therapy rehab. I really hope more practitioners become trained with this, because I think this modality has the potential to make a very meaningful quality of life difference for those with soft tissue mobilization injuries when done in the hands of a knowledgeable practitioner. IASTM stands for Instrument-Assisted Soft Tissue Mobilzation. This specific Amazon find is a fraction of the cost of official Graston Technique-branded tools. Because it is stainless steel, it does have some weight to it. If you have difficulty with weight, there are versions that are made of a thick plastic that's thinner than this thick stainless steel version, and those may better suit your needs. YMMV. https://amzn.to/3BNGYXc

  • Duo-Tone Massage Creme with Arnica and Ivy Extract: This has zero scent, is extremely thick and dense, and you only need a tiny bit to cover the surface area you're working on with the stainless steel Graston Technique-like gua sha tool recommended above. The amount of this creme that's the size of a fingernail is enough to cover the surface area of a shoulder & upper bicep. It is pricey, but seems to work well, especially if you're targeting deeper tissues for manipulation, and the reviews from others on very very high. If you like it, it also comes in larger jar sizes (128 & 640 oz. sizes); my PT practice purchases the larger sizes and then decants them into pint-sized resealable Tupperware containers and then take small fingernail-sized amounts to use on the various patients that come into the practice for PT. If you would prefer to try it out in a smaller size, there's a 2 oz. version available on the actual manufacturer website. This 14oz. size listed here is the smallest & least-expensive size available on Amazon Prime & will probably last you a while. In terms of star bonus ingredients, I was surprised to learn that it also includes Arnica, which is a homeopathic ingredient I had heard previously helps to minimize bruising, but had never personally tried previously. I have yet to experience bruising after my PT does Graston Technique manipulations & assisted range of motion stretches with me, even though the pain during the process is so intense it can make me tear up & stop me from talking immediately in the moment (to me, it feels like my PT is about to snap or break my arm, elbow and shoulder when they're working on it, particularly with the assisted range of motion movements & stretches), and aside from working with a very knowledgeable & experienced practitioner, this massage creme with Arnica in it is likely a factor in why those interventions are so effective. The website also lists that it contains Ivy plant extracts, but I am unfamiliar with why that's important. My PT often uses a towel to wipe the area off when they're done with the manipulations. If you are using electrical stim pads later from a TENS unit or similar device, you will want to use an alcohol wipe to cut through any residual amount of the Duo-Tone massage creme leftover so that your electrical stim pads can better adhere to your skin. Reviews on this product also say that it makes users' skin softer with continued use, but unsure since I had only used it on the area my PT was focused on at a given moment. I will, however, be trying it on the heels and soles of my feet (likely with socks or at the end of the night after already in bed to go to sleep and not when I'd be up and maneuvering around on my feet & might possibly otherwise slip) to see if that also helps with the extreme dryness & fissures I have there that have struggled to heal, despite usage of 40% urea keratolytic cream. https://amzn.to/3A3ci35





Writing Utensils

Amazon Prime Referral Link to Purchase: https://amzn.to/3P1Oly3











Erasable pens in a variety of colors are incredible & life-changing, especially once you start using a paper planner as part of speech therapy/occupational therapy (OT) to help with time blocking of activities & building up your executive functioning organizational & planning skills.


Pencils are great, in theory, but they smudge easily when you have to erase things (and speech therapy/OT will likely have you erase things as they review your plans).


Regular pens are more durable with their ink in that they don't tend to smudge, but when you make mistakes &/or your plans change (&/or speech therapy/OT has you change your plans), your physical planning book can *easily* become illegible & a mess and very very difficult to read, especially as you cross-out/scratch off old information & try to replace it with new information.


Using correction fluid is nice, in theory, but it still requires dry time, can peel away when trying to write on top depending on the regular pen type you're writing with, and may contrast in an eye-distracting/attention-diverting way if the paper it's written on does not exactly match the color of the liquid paper correction fluid.


As such, erasable pens in a variety of colors are highly recommended.

There is a larger rainbow of color choices you can select from, but I've found having a small variety, yet limited color palette helps to limit decision fatigue & trying to remember which colors stands for which.


Who this purchase is NOT RECOMMENDED for:

people who live in a VERY hot or a VERY cold climate.


The Pilot Frixion pens (and really, any erasable pens where you need to exert physical pressure to try to "remove the ink") are affected by ambient temperature.


In super hot temperatures, the ink will fade (just like it does when you apply local heat through rubbing/friction the eraser on top of the ink).


In super cold temperatures, the ink color will return back to be visible the way that it once was.


YMMV.


Pro Tips on How I Use the Limited Color Palette I'm recommending here:


  • green - for Dr.'s appointments. anything medical related.


  • teal aqua light blue - for transportation time blocking. The single biggest game-changer. We spend more time trying to get places, including public transportation transfers, than we realize or give ourselves credit for. Blocking this time out makes a big difference in making sure we don't accidentally overcommit to something that we can't realistically accomplish, like being in two different places at once. When you may be physically &/or cognitively moving slower, GPS estimates don't have a way to take into account how much longer it's going to take for you or your loved one to get out of the house or to their next appointment or destination. Blocking this out helps immensely.


  • red - for any type of emergencies or major info you need to keep top of mind. I use this color to block out emergency department visits/ambulance rides/hospital stays/surgical procedures. These key dates are often needed for reference later on down the line & being able to easily visually identify them with limited use of this differentiating color makes a big difference.


  • dark blue - I used this for phone calls I need to make/receive, faxes I need to send, emails I need to respond to, or basically any other communication task with another person. Dr.'s offices and other affiliated places like to call out-of-the-blue often, for random, often one-off reasons, and it can be difficult to keep track of all those phone calls/faxes that need to be sent, and when they were sent. Dark blue helps in this respect. I also keep a condensed dark-blue list at the bottom of each vertical calendar day so that those communication items are altogether and I can more easily see if they've been accomplished or if they're still outstanding.


  • black - I use this for miscellaneous tasks that I personally need to get done. Ex: pick up mail, go somewhere to make a photocopy of a document, go somewhere to print out specific forms, picking up mail, etc. Basically, things that I personally need to do (that don't necessarily involve talking to another person & communicating throughout the task with them) that tend to be one-off to dos that can also be easily pushed back/rescheduled if necessary. These items are important, but they're not high priority like a Dr.'s appointment that's written in green. Strategically, I use black as well since it tends to be less-contrasting with other ink that may be present on a planner page (which tends to be black ink, by default) and reserve the other colors for higher priority items that need to be finished in a more specific & rigid time period and for which there are greater consequences if they're not done when they've been scheduled.


  • pink - this I use for notable things, such as birthdays, holidays, time off (not just personal time off, which is rare, but other's time off which affects my scheduling of certain things, such as when a Dr.'s office may be closed or the provider is going on vacation for an extended period of time). This helps to visually see obstacles that I'll need to plan around to stay on task (and also possibly wish someone well, congratulations, or send a card or gift for a notable milestone in their lives), and the soft pink with the less-intense hue draws my eyes' attention & focus to note those specific occurrences, but places them secondarily behind those with bolder, more intense colors that are higher contrast from the overall background content & composition (like the green, light teal aqua blue, and red)


  • purple - I use this for things that are possibilities, since the letter "p" for purple also is the same letter "p" for possibilities. This is where I mark down things I would like to do, meetings or events I would like to go to, if it's possible, or if my other plans fall through/get cancelled. I need a place to mark down things I would like to do (ex: go to a carnival event or a weekend art fair), but may not be able to do if something else more important comes up (like a Dr.'s appointment timeslot opens up that takes me off a waitlist). When I started with rehab, my primary OT had me remove basically anything from my calendar that wasn't a Dr.'s appointment, because everything was just too much. It was completely understandable. At the same time, I was miserable, in part because prior to my brain injury, I had been someone who enjoyed and participated in lots of different types of activities. At a certain point, speech therapy said it was important to start adding in a limited number of things that I actually *liked* and looked forward to, and I got the opportunity to slowly add in a few things here and there. It wasn't much, but it made a difference. Everything in green is required stuff I have to do (like go to Dr.'s appointments), but everything in purple is stuff that I got to do that I wanted to (like going to a special event). As I moved further along in my rehab journey, I learned more about different types of activities that mattered just as much to my personal health & rehab care other than just going to Dr's appointments (ex: paint nites, cooking with my neighbors, going to restorative yoga and meditation) and those were added in as green appointments because I learned that those were the types of activities that were going to help move the needle in a sustainable way & help me to practice the skills I was learning/re-learning in speech therapy & OT.



Having this color-coded system helped me to streamline the decision making process, and helped to reduce visual clutter to easier contrast out & see the things that I had already cognitively decided (often, with help of my rehab team) the things that were most-important to recovery, as well as those that life-related things that just need to happen (paying rent, utilities, credit card bills, etc.) as a part of everyday life, the obligations & stipulations of those around me who were important in my life &/or in my direct provision of healthcare, blocking out important buffer times for transportation (& likely naps/rest/energy restoration periods that were likely going to be needed throughout the course of a day), and arguably most-importantly, blocking out and setting aside specific time to do some of the limited things that would bring me joy despite the chaos and difficulty of everything.


If you've never worked as a project/program manager before, having a brain injury is often like finding the need for and getting a real-life crash course in everything project/program management-related.

A lot of people's brains aren't built that way (or it's not their natural inclination, otherwise everyone would work only as program/project managers).


To do rehab, and to do it well, with so many simultaneous moving parts in various overlapping concurrent stages,
you've got to learn to become a good, and then,
a great
program/project manager.

People without a brain injury can wing it and get by just fine, but with a brain injury where cognition is affected, you *have* to rely on an underlying infrastructure & methodology just to make it through your day, or even just through to your next activity, be it a few hours from now, or a few seconds from now. It's a lot of macro & micro shifting, countlessly back & forth, throughout the day that is a high cognitive load and very physically (eye strain, tension headache, migraine, muscle spasms) & mentally exhausting.



Make your life easier.

Get these pens.

Know you've optimized for color choice & type because someone else who's not you has already thought this through a lot & figured it out.


If you find the need to expand your color selection choices in the future, you can when it's time to get ink refills. But this set-up will more than get you started off on the right food and help you build momentum. It's an easy win.


Highly highly highly recommend these limited color palette erasable pens.

NOTE: You will need to order ink refills as you use them.

I wish they had more ink to last longer. I use them so much, I just order the refills, as needed. Once you start using them, you can see if there are certain ink colors you tend to run out of faster (for me, it's green), and then just order just those colors if it makes more sense for you. YMMV.


Thank you so much to the member of my speech therapy team who suggested & brought up the concept of colored erasable pens. It's changed my world, & I'm grateful.


Amazon Prime Referral Link to Purchase: https://amzn.to/3P1Oly3



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