My oldest dd had some characteristics that family would tell me...isn't "normal." She has a speech delay, did have language delay, very shy, did not have eye contact, sensitive to noises (blender, vacuum, lawnmower...), night terrors, liked very small toys...NEEDED a mommy, daddy, and baby of all toys....lined them up...
I began early intervention with her at age 2...with speech class and a social visit. I enrolled her in tumbling and swimming so she would be around groups. I did what parents and doctors said she needed to come out of her shell.
But as you all know...mom really does know best. I opted to homeschool her. I went to the school and we sat in on the pre-school and she reacted poorly. There was too much stimulation. She wanted to play on the playground but then kids were running and screaming past her and she froze in her tracks.
It wasn't until last spring that I decided she had improved SO much and was actually having a social life with her ballet friends and church friends...that i enrolled her in a very small christian school.
She has made such strides that her current speech path. said we are dropping the language bit and going to hit the speech part only to focus on some of her sounds---r, l, j, sh....
Her tests have proven she has grown like a year in just months. She is now just under normal in some categories and above in 2 others.
In school she has made A's across the board and is a very sweet girl and all the kids are kind to one another.
But let me tell you....the current speech path. told me in Nov. 06' she was concerned with Zoe having a high level of autism because of the above mentioned things. We went to the children's hospital in Chicago for an eval.
It came back that she was fine...with some levels of anxiety....hyper sensitivity to noise...and they suggested she needed school and not to be homeschooled.
Well, how many times had i heard that before. too many to count.
They told me to get a book on the noise thing, they said she would grow out of her night terrors--said they were a hormone thing and scared me more than they did her, and told me not to be so anxious because i relayed a story of bad people taking kids the time she hid in a dept. store and i couldn't find her.
sigh.
I just kept on doing what we did and it gave me the opportunity to tell my family --especially those in the school system (teachers, or office workers) to back off.
Honestly,
Zoe was born premature, I had a hard pregnancy and was toxemic and on bedrest and hospitalized often. She was born healthy besides a few days treatment with the bili-blanket to get her to pass her bilirueben. She made each stride of life at HER pace. I was thrilled with her.
What I abhored was everyone comparing her to all the other kids her age.
I knew she'd get there but in HER time...and she did. Instead of being able to relax and enjoy my first child, I had nay sayers whispering in my ear...trying to steal me from that glory. I still do. I mean...I just heard my mom say my sister was still worried about her speech.
What the hay? She's been in therapy since she was 2 and now she is 7 and she's in school now. What MORE could I possibly do but what I do with her already?
I'm the one that plays the games to encourage her speech. I'm the one who is with her day and night and does all the things I am suggested to do by her speech path...saying words in front of the mirror with her and all the other tricks of the trade....
And she is being successful in school and in life....so why? why do people persist?
I even had my husband start to doubt her and me.
There was a book i wanted to mention...i had it and then gave it to my mom---because my 18 year old nephew had been diagnosed with Aspbergers at age 15....before they just termed him adhd. he graduated last summer from highschool, he works, and goes to community college. he has MANY awards in the music area...was in the boys choirs...and his asperation is to become a music teacher.
so there is life with aspergers.
anyway...the book was about a mom who's son had turned around much like yours did...pulled out of it completely. it was called...i think-----"Finding Isaiah."
when i read it at the time, some of the symptoms did remind me of my Zoe but not to that extreme.
I also have the faith that things like this can and do happen.
Thank you so much for sharing your stories every one and sorry i rambled.
me,
g
I began early intervention with her at age 2...with speech class and a social visit. I enrolled her in tumbling and swimming so she would be around groups. I did what parents and doctors said she needed to come out of her shell.
But as you all know...mom really does know best. I opted to homeschool her. I went to the school and we sat in on the pre-school and she reacted poorly. There was too much stimulation. She wanted to play on the playground but then kids were running and screaming past her and she froze in her tracks.
It wasn't until last spring that I decided she had improved SO much and was actually having a social life with her ballet friends and church friends...that i enrolled her in a very small christian school.
She has made such strides that her current speech path. said we are dropping the language bit and going to hit the speech part only to focus on some of her sounds---r, l, j, sh....
Her tests have proven she has grown like a year in just months. She is now just under normal in some categories and above in 2 others.
In school she has made A's across the board and is a very sweet girl and all the kids are kind to one another.
But let me tell you....the current speech path. told me in Nov. 06' she was concerned with Zoe having a high level of autism because of the above mentioned things. We went to the children's hospital in Chicago for an eval.
It came back that she was fine...with some levels of anxiety....hyper sensitivity to noise...and they suggested she needed school and not to be homeschooled.
Well, how many times had i heard that before. too many to count.
They told me to get a book on the noise thing, they said she would grow out of her night terrors--said they were a hormone thing and scared me more than they did her, and told me not to be so anxious because i relayed a story of bad people taking kids the time she hid in a dept. store and i couldn't find her.
sigh.
I just kept on doing what we did and it gave me the opportunity to tell my family --especially those in the school system (teachers, or office workers) to back off.
Honestly,
Zoe was born premature, I had a hard pregnancy and was toxemic and on bedrest and hospitalized often. She was born healthy besides a few days treatment with the bili-blanket to get her to pass her bilirueben. She made each stride of life at HER pace. I was thrilled with her.
What I abhored was everyone comparing her to all the other kids her age.
I knew she'd get there but in HER time...and she did. Instead of being able to relax and enjoy my first child, I had nay sayers whispering in my ear...trying to steal me from that glory. I still do. I mean...I just heard my mom say my sister was still worried about her speech.
What the hay? She's been in therapy since she was 2 and now she is 7 and she's in school now. What MORE could I possibly do but what I do with her already?
I'm the one that plays the games to encourage her speech. I'm the one who is with her day and night and does all the things I am suggested to do by her speech path...saying words in front of the mirror with her and all the other tricks of the trade....
And she is being successful in school and in life....so why? why do people persist?
I even had my husband start to doubt her and me.
There was a book i wanted to mention...i had it and then gave it to my mom---because my 18 year old nephew had been diagnosed with Aspbergers at age 15....before they just termed him adhd. he graduated last summer from highschool, he works, and goes to community college. he has MANY awards in the music area...was in the boys choirs...and his asperation is to become a music teacher.
so there is life with aspergers.
anyway...the book was about a mom who's son had turned around much like yours did...pulled out of it completely. it was called...i think-----"Finding Isaiah."
when i read it at the time, some of the symptoms did remind me of my Zoe but not to that extreme.
I also have the faith that things like this can and do happen.
Thank you so much for sharing your stories every one and sorry i rambled.
me,
g
