World Cerebral Palsy Day: Awareness in Action

On October 6, 2025, communities around the world recognized World Cerebral Palsy Day—honoring more than 50 million people living with CP. Here in Los Angeles, the day also marked one year since the Los Angeles Unified School District adopted the World Cerebral Palsy Day resolution, a partnership between Board Member Scott Schmerelson’s office and Inclusive Sol, the nonprofit I founded.
The resolution transforms awareness into action through educator training, inclusive recess, and classroom practices that help students with disabilities participate, belong, and thrive. This year, that vision came to life at my son Elijah Sol’s school: the principal wore green, students received green bracelets, and morning announcements focused on kindness and inclusion. I had the joy of reading I’ll Walk With You by Carol Lynn Pearson—a gentle reminder that acceptance grows through everyday acts of love and awareness.
Watching a sea of green bracelets at dismissal was a powerful image of what inclusion can look like when it becomes part of a school’s culture, not just its curriculum.
As we carry this spirit forward, may we continue to create learning environments—and communities—where every child is seen, supported, and celebrated.
Interested in bringing this kind of inclusion-focused programming to your district or organization? Let’s connect and build systems where every learner belongs.



When discussing inclusion, we often focus on services, timelines, and transitions, but it’s a community that sustains families. On May 6, 2025, I represented Inclusive Sol at the Early Start to Early Childhood Transition Resource Fair hosted by Frank D. Lanterman Regional Center. The event paired with celebration, with playful glasses, warm hugs, and meaningful conversations. It served as a reminder that while we can keep the tone light, the work lives within a larger, shifting system.