Recently, I wrote about tethering kids to dogs.  A mom named Karlye took the time to email me to tell me about her two-year-old son who is autistic and his service dog MaddySue.  I asked Karlye if I could post her email her so other readers could learn more about this issue, and she generously said yes.  I broke the message into paragraphs to make it easier to read, but otherwise haven't changed anything.
My son and I are part of a three unit tethering team. He is an autistic 
two year old that has had difficulty in the past with wandering and 
bolting as well as anxiety and lack of communication. MaddySue, our 6 
year old boxer has allowed he and I to have a new lease on life. The 
security of knowing my son will no longer run toward traffic with me 
frantically running behind and screaming his name praying he won't get 
hit is like a fresh breath of air. When the two of them are in a 
confined place such as our back yard, they are tethered to each other 
because of my sons climbing skills, he can easily climb trees or over 
fences, but with the privacy fence I know that if MaddySue took off 
chasing whatever she couldn't go far. That being said,  when we are in 
public we function as a three unit team. MaddySue and kip are tethered 
together while there is a lengthy lead from me to MaddySue. We can now 
all enjoy outings to the mall or whatnot knowing that she can keep him 
close and in the event she looses her focus, I'm there to control her.I 
too could never immagine leaving MaddySue and kip tethered together in 
public without me for fear if all the dangers that lurk, so in that 
regard I agree with you. 
Our life has changed so much because of this. 
Not only is MaddySue a tether dog, she has also been trained for sensory
 stimulation. In the event that kip is having severe anxiety or is upset
 MaddySue uses her body to put pressure on him to allow him to relax and
 gain control of the situation instead of running away. She has also 
helped with communication, before we had her he spoke with only three 
words from ASL, none vocalized. He now plays with her by saying "fetch 
or come" and has even started verbalizing to his father and myself by 
hiding behind MaddySue and then talking to us indirectly using only a 
few words but no sign language! Miss MaddySue is a blessing to our 
family.... 
 
Thank you for taking the time to read this and maybe this
 can help you to understand better the other options for tether 
training.
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