Lisa Lieberman, ., ., is a psychotherapist with Parkinson’s Resources of Oregon. When it comes to communicating with children about Parkinson’s — or any disease — she believes that knowledge is power. “Lack of knowledge creates more anxiety,” she says. “Kids are intuitive. They know what’s going on. If they aren’t given a way to make sense of it, it just makes it worse for them.” Even the most difficult news, once out in the open, relieves the anxiety that uncertainty creates. The good news is that people living with Parkinson’s today have more room for optimism than ever before, so the con- versations, while understandably difficult, need not be without hope. “And.