Tuesday, August 26, 2008

A little this...a little that

Catching up from the weekend....
Katie has developed into a wonderful swimmer over the last 4 days! Once she felt in control under the water, she has excelled rapidly. She glides both on her stomach and her back across the pool. She swims underwater and comes up for breaths. She is learning how to use her arms to stroke. She jumps in without someone catching her and actually loves it now.

John's last day of Early Start is tomorrow! He will move into the START program next week.

On Friday, John has an evaluation with Foothill Presbyterian Hospital for Occupational Therapy/Sensory Integration (finally!!!)

Now for today...

John had speech today, but instead, they began his START evaluation. Step One is to evaluate his play to see at what level he is "playing' at. The idea here is that autistic children tend to take everyday objects and use them in different ways, instead of the intended use.

So, Tonyia gave John a baby doll, hair brush, bar of soap, bottle, and toothbrush. He started by brushing her teeth. Although, at first, he picked up the bottle and the toothbrush, which looked odd, but then he used the bottle as the toothpaste and then proceeded to brush her teeth. He then grabbed the brush and brushed her hair. Tonyia asked John to give her a bath and he used the soap on her legs. She then took off the babies clothes and put foam soap on the baby's tummy and John grabbed a tissue and cleaned the baby. Tonyia then assisted John in dressing the baby and John brushed her hair again, pretty hard. Tonyia told John the baby was crying and gave him the tissue to wipe her eyes. John wiped away the tears and picked up a cup out of Tonyia's bin. He grabbed the bottle and "poured" something in the cup and took a drink himself and then gave some to the baby.

Tonyia set up a house with a bed, sofa, TV with DVD player, table, chairs, and a slide with a ladder. She then gave John a boy, girl, and later, a mom. He laid the mom on the ground. He had the girl sit on the couch. He then took the TV into his hands and played with it for a long time... there was a "pretend" DVD that went in and out of a hole in the TV and he kept putting it in. Tonyia eventually took it away from him. He then took the boy and had him climb the stairs and slide down the slide. Then he asked for bubbles.

He played with cars, play dough, and bubbles and it was time to go home.

John had another session of Neurofeedback today. We are on session number 20. The first 20 minutes is spent on the part of the brain that controls sleep and impulse control. John was so quiet and calm. The next 20 minutes made John a little agitated, as it has the last few sessions. They added an element that helps with motivation. Today, we decided that it may be too much for John. We are going to eliminate that protocol from the training and add 10 minutes to each of the other protocols. The last protocol is training the part of the brain that deals with social/emotional responses.

Things I've noticed since beginning Neurofeedback:
  • biting of skin stopped
  • chewing of shirt stopped
  • doesn't drag his toes anymore while walking
  • Achieving goals rapidly at Casa Colina
  • Speech improving
  • Falls asleep easier
Now, I'm not saying Neurofeedback alone has contributed to these things. John is working hard and there are a lot of PEOPLE helping John, but I am beginning to believe that Neurofeedback is enabling him to be present for learning and helping with behavior. The goal of Neurofeedback is to calm the brain down enough to teach it how to self-regulate itself. Through brain self regulation, the nervous system no longer feels under threat. The body is able to think beyond itself and begin to "take the blinders off", seeing the world around them. When we feel under threat, we naturally get "tunnel vision". When our brains cannot self regulate, we will operate as if we are "under attack", manifesting itself in ADD, ADHD, migraine headaches, some Autistic behavior, sensory issues, pain in the body, etc. Through self-regulation, the brain is able to calm itself and the outward symptoms disappear.






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