The Palm Beach Post

Sister with autism inspires 10-year-old to invent game

- By Hannah Covington Minneapoli­s Star Tribune

BROOKLYN PARK, MINN. — Ten-year-old Kusa Xiong has looked out for his big sister for as long as he can remember.

At school, he helps her unpack her things at her locker. At home, the siblings read together, make up games and practice counting.

Kusa said 12-year-old Pahnuly, who has autism, inspires him to think differentl­y. It was because of her, after all, that inspiratio­n struck the kid inventor one day at home in Brooklyn Park while the family played pingpong — a sport Pahnuly struggled with. Kusa wanted to find a way to make pingpong more suited to his sister’s needs.

Before long, the fifthgrade­r had dreamed up a winning idea that’s attracting national attention and is now being manufactur­ed for sale by a toy company.

The new game hangs a pingpong ball from a vertical frame, with players volleying the ball back and forth. It’s modified table tennis without the fuss of errant ball chasing.

The family said Kusa’s creation — dubbed “Aeropong” because the ball seems to float on air — has bolstered Pahnuly’s hand-eye coordinati­on and given the pair a new activity to bond over. Kusa said the game is meant to make people smile, especially his big sister.

“When she scores,” he said, “she dances.”

Play can be an especially powerful tool for kids with autism and their siblings, said Jennifer Reinke, a therapist at the Autism Society of Minnesota.

It provides a natural setting, Reinke said, for building skills like cooperatio­n, turntaking and empathy: “The social interactio­ns make play very important.”

Families of children with autism often get creative, modifying existing games or toys so they can be used in a way that works best, Reinke said. That may be as simple as adding a timer to a game to help with turn-taking or simplifyin­g a toy by ditching the batteries if features like sounds become too distractin­g.

About one in 68 children has been identified with autism spectrum disorder, according to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For Kusa, an unassuming plan to give Pahnuly a chance to enjoy pingpong has led to unexpected accolades. Kusa’s idea recently won a national toy contest, complete with a $2,500 scholarshi­p, future royalties on every unit sold and a trip to New York City this month to see his game promoted at a big-league toy fair.

“We never planned for this,” said Long Xiong, Kusa’s dad. “My son just wants my daughter to have fun, too.”

‘Simple genius’

The idea came to Kusa in the summer of 2016 as he took stock of Pahnuly’s frustratio­ns with pingpong.

He wanted to help her practice hitting. So Kusa asked his dad to help him hang a pingpong ball from a door frame in the house.

At first, Pahnuly didn’t show much interest. But soon, Kusa heard a sound coming from the front room. Clack. Clack. Clack. Pahnuly had picked up a paddle and was tapping the suspended ball. Then, she started hitting it back and forth with Kusa and their dad.

Eventually, the family took a trip to Menards to buy some PVC pipe and fashioned a portable, vertical frame for the ball to hang from. They devised rules and ways to score points. If a player fails to return the ball through the vertical bars, the other person scores.

Word soon spread at school about Kusa’s creation during a science unit last school year on inventors and inventions. Kristin Stasica, who has taught Kusa for two years at Champlin-Brooklyn Park Academy for Math and Environmen­tal Sciences, asked him to share about Aeropong.

The topic helped quiet Kusa find his voice, Stasica said. He can rattle off the game’s rules and perks by heart.

“He lit up because it’s completely his passion and his family’s passion,” she said. “It was probably the most he had talked consecutiv­ely.”

Kusa’s concept has what Mark Carson, co-founder of Fat Brain Toys, calls “simple genius.”

Carson’s Nebraska-based educationa­l toy and game company put on the contest that Kusa entered. His winning idea was chosen from among 160 entries.

“It’s very easy for us to get, and we think kids could very easily understand why that would be fun,” Carson said.

 ?? LEILA NAVIDI/MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE/TNS ?? Pahnuly Xiong plays a card game with her brother Kusa that he invented at their home on Jan. 9 in Brooklyn Park, Minn.
LEILA NAVIDI/MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE/TNS Pahnuly Xiong plays a card game with her brother Kusa that he invented at their home on Jan. 9 in Brooklyn Park, Minn.

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