Articles Tagged Sensory Processing Disorder

Staring down the path; our journey before the diagnosis

May 21, 2013 by in Parenting, Seekers, SPD with 0 Comments

I’m new here.  Though technically, I should have found this place long ago.  I’m M, but I go by Coastinganon on the “internets”.  I’m married to my husband, D, who has yet to receive an internet alias and we live in Boston with our a-neuro-typical son, Little G, who will be 4 in early July and our daughter, Ladybug, who is 18 months and yet to show any major signs of anything other than 18 month-ed-ness.

Motherhood was supposed to be my dream job.  When Little G arrived, all 10lbs-5oz of him, by natural birth on 07-08-09, he was perfection.  I was in a mental state of bliss over having birthed him.  He latched on in the hospital, something I had been particularly nervous about due to surgery in my history, and we went from there.

The first few days home were typical for any new parent; little sleep, concerns over latching properly, total bliss, grandparents, laundry, excitement, tears, etc.  What sticks out to me the most from that time was an almost primal need to guard my child.  I felt like everything in our home was different, which may have been a product of nursing in a rocking chair in the dining room which is a room that until that moment I had only sat in for meals.  I can remember having Ally-McBeal-like visions of me swiping at people who were holding our son while he cried.  Looking back, it is awe inspiring to me that the hormones racing through my body at the time could have been so powerful.

A couple of short weeks later, I was on my own.  Little G hadn’t been latching well.  I had a very slow flow and he was desperate for food.  I developed mastitis and an infection on my nipple.  He would nurse for over an hour at a time and still be raging mad when he ‘finished’.  The hormones were still raging in my body and one day while he was sitting in his bouncy wailing away, I lost my temper and yelled at him; a three-week-old baby. I know now I was neither the first nor the last over-tired, short-fused, new mom to do so, but that still didn’t make it any better.  I would love to say I got help at that point, but it took much longer for me to realize I needed help.

As Little G grew, things got easier.  My PPD (though really, it should be labeled PPA/R/C [anxiety/reactiveness/catastrophising]), diminished each day as he got older, but there were still days that pulled the feet out from underneath me.  From as early as 10 months old, Little G would have temper tantrums that consisted of him instantly not liking something and then hurling himself backwards from a seated position to slam his head full-force on the floor.  It was so discouraging to see him hurt himself in that way.  Then came the biting and the pinching.  If I wanted to hold him and comfort him he would get angrier and bite my shoulder, hard, until I let him go.  It was certainly not the amazing mom experience I thought I would have prior to having him.  I didn’t know much about children, but the only thing I DID know was that mom’s comfort their babies.  And now I had a baby that didn’t want me to comfort him.  I was devastated every time he lashed out at me. …continue reading

A Very Touchy Day

May 13, 2013 by in Seekers, SPD with 0 Comments

 

“And the rain, rain, rain came down, down, down/In rushing, rising riv’lets…” – from Winnie the Pooh.
Yes that was most of the night before last and yesterday morning. For the most part it was nice, we got to have Daddy home till noon since he can’t work in the rain. And once the front moved out everything was extra bright and crisp looking outside.
After Vic was finally able to head out for the day, our afternoon here got very busy, but not in the ways I had hoped.
Kit was having very clingy day. And a wanting-to-be-naked day. And a let’s-get-into-everything-and-make-lots-of-messes day. It was evident very early that any attempts to get housework done were going to be undone, helped with. So I gave in and decided I’d simply dedicate the rest of the day to the kids.
In doing so I gave them permission to make plenty of (controlled) messes. And freed myself from all of the frustration, turning into anger, when they are busy making messes while I am trying to clean up the ones we already have. That can become a vicious cycle that just ends up making all of us unhappy. …continue reading

10 Ways we are Breaking all of the Rules, and Loving it!

How many times were we told as children: “Clean your plate”, “Don’t talk with your mouth full”, “Don’t play with your food”?  I’m not saying that our mothers, and those generations of mothers before us,

Through JC’s Eyes: a Day in the Life of a Child with SPD

My job as the mother of a child with extra-special needs (one of which is a difficulty with speech), is to be a mind reader.  I have to know that “pla-pl” is pretzle, but it may also

How I Feel the World

February 15, 2013 in Anxiety, Behavior, Diagnosis, SPD with 5 Comments

When I was a child, before anyone knew anything about sensory processing, I was simply a miracle.  A premature baby that managed to make it against all odds.  And when I started demonstrating odd quirks,

All Things are Possible

September 18, 2012 in Behavior, SPD with 8 Comments

Just a little while ago I heard Adrian talking to Derek in the living room and he said, ” I heard Mommy say ‘impossible’. That’s not even a real word and shouldn’t even exist. I

Proprioception and Calming Techniques

I don’t know what percentage of our day is concerned with managing our J-Man’s sensory challenges, but I’m sure it’s a lot. Just about every autistic child I know struggles with one or more of

Mental Preparation

August 18, 2012 in Parenting, School, SPD with 1 Comment

Last week B attended Vacation Bible School (VBS) at a local church for five full days. Of course I was nervous that she’d be gone from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. every day that week,

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