Giaci Miceli reacts to his family on Family Feud Canada
The Miceli family played Family Feud Canada and gave a shoutout to their son, Giaci, who is watching at home.
How Twin Sisters In Windsor Helped Their Autistic Brother Become A TikTok Sensation
Carolina and Maria Miceli started a TikTok account back in April and posted a few videos of their brother, and now he’s gone viral. Giaci (pronounced JUDGE-EE or JAH-CHEE) is 24 years old and living with Autism. With over fifty videos posted, Giaci‘s sisters say they hope the videos can help people better understand autism.

How a Windsor family is using TikTok to normalize autism
Giaci Miceli has had to change a lot of his routines during the COVID-19 pandemic, but one thing his family was not expecting was for him to become an online sensation.
The 24-year-old Windsor man has autism and his twin sisters Carolina and Maria, who are very involved in his life and care, started creating videos with him early this spring.
They never could have predicted that more than eight-million people would like those videos, with nearly 500,000 people following them eager for more.

Raising my son, Giaci
Raising a child with Autism was not what I imagined for myself when I walked down the aisle over 27 years ago. The thought had never crossed my mind that the children of two well-educated people would be anything other than above average. And, at first, it seemed as though it would be that way. We were blessed to have had four children, all within three and a half years of age; my oldest daughter, Lauren, my son, Giaci and then twin daughters, Carolina and Maria Rosa. For the first year and a half of my son’s life, everything seemed fine. He met all his developmental marks on time or before, but by the time he was two, it became apparent that something had gone horribly wrong.

Raising a child with autism
Three Families – One Broad Spectrum: Autism Awareness, Acceptance, and Inclusion. When their son Jack was 18 months old and still not speaking, Pam and Ryan began worrying he might be autistic. Sixteen-year-old Christopher is in a transitional period in his life. His mother, Ann, worries about where he fits into the mix of autism programming. It never entered Rita’s mind that she would have to mourn the child she thought she had, especially since Giaci was still physically there. She has grieved every milestone missed, such as prom or not getting his license.