Soothing the Sensory
Soul~ is your child horrible or horribly upset?
Chad has been
known to be since he was a toddler and his older sister would come to OT and he
would wait in the Clinic area with his mom.
Having had the opportunity to observe him casually over time, it was not
a surprise to me that he was also now participating in an OT program.
What did surprise me was the report from school that he was
the “meanest” and the “worst” child they have ever had in their (public)
school.
Sensory sensitive to movement with poor figure-ground
discrimination, Chad is easily confused in large classrooms. The noise the movement, the rapid changes
from one task to another are very unsettling for him to the point of
frustration.
Dr. David Burns, a noted psychiatrist and author of the book
“Feeling Good” (Avon Books 2000) clearly delineates the path to anger. First comes frustration, then the inability
to understand what is causing the frustration, the fear (of the unknown),
rigidity of thought, decreased reasoning and then anger.
This is easy
to see when the road map to acting out is given the “AAA” treatment. Unfortunately, children do not have the life
experiences to “re-route” themselves, so it is up to the adults around them to
model these pathways.
Too many
classrooms today run on “because I said so” mentality. This is counterproductive for children with
sensory issues that already do not process or organize information in typical
patterns. Getting reasonable
explanations of what, when, why and how to do assigned tasks helps considerably
with these children in helping them complete with accuracy required
assignments.
It is also
beneficial for the teacher (parent, OT, etc.) to let the child know in a gentle
manner that this is one of those “new route” times.
This
happened recently with Chad. In a
conference with both Chad, his mother, his older sister and his math tutor Chad
listened and participated appropriately most of the time. The first part of the conversation was Chad
providing us with information about what upsets him.
The list was
exhaustive but clearly outlined the build up process from frustration to anger:
1.
Gets the assignment but didn’t understand the
directions
2.
He asks the teacher but the teacher asks a peer
to re-explain it to him
3.
He is still confused but afraid to ask
again—thinking the classmate will think he is “stupid”
4.
So he does the best he can and gets it wrong and
the teacher accuses him of
not listening” and “not doing his best” (this is last fall back response is a major pet peeve of mine)
not listening” and “not doing his best” (this is last fall back response is a major pet peeve of mine)
5.
He gets upset and cries and then can’t stop and
is sent to the principals office for being “disruptive”
6.
He gets angry because he feels he is being
punished unjustly…and then…
7.
P…..O….W!!
And this
cycle repeats itself everyday. Enthusiastic about learning and simultaneously
experiencing diminished self-esteem because he “can’t ever seem to get it
right”. He also reported experiencing rejection (by both the teacher and the
students) and fear of interaction.
Chad should
be receiving in school OT 2X a week for 30 minutes each, but the OT quit and
services have been sporadic and with various fill in OT’s.
We talked
about Chad getting a fidget such as one of these squishy balls where the
eyeball pops out but stay attached to the ball and when he feels the
frustration building just squish the ball he can do this in his desk away from
the eyes of his classmates or keep it in his pocket, etc.
One of those
times came up for him during our conference.
I told him (he was squishing a balled up damp paper ball) that this was
one of those “squish” moments, and just gently taking his hand, he self-calmed
and the conversations went on without missing a beat.
Now let’s go
back to the dysfunctional road to anger and see if we can re-work it:
The issue
|
The behavioral shift
|
1. Gets the
assignment but didn’t understand the directions
2. He asks the
teacher but the teacher asks a peer to re-explain it to him
3. He is still
confused but afraid to ask again—thinking the classmate will think he is
“stupid”
4. So he does the
best he can and gets it wrong and the teacher accuses him of
not listening” and “not doing his best” (this is last fall back response is a major pet peeve of mine)
5. He gets upset
and cries and then can’t stop and is sent to the principals office for being
“disruptive”
6.
He gets angry
because he feels he is being punished unjustly…and then…
7.
P…..O….W!!
|
1.
Chad can read
it over 2x and highlight exact areas of confusion
2.
Prearrange via
condition on the IEP that Chad and his teacher will have a system by which
she answers his questions directly and not a fellow student.
3. If he is
still confused he should put the issues that confuse him most on separate
pieces of paper.
It is also
important to reinforce with Chad that he is engaging in a form of “fortune
telling” and “mind reading”. He does
NOT really know what the other children are thinking and emphasize that most
likely they are thinking about themselves; just like he thinks most about
himself!
4.
Have the
attending OT explain clearly about sensory modulation and that right now this
is a skill Chad is learning and as with any new skill there will be days
where he “gets it” and days where he needs to “practice some more”.
5.
It should not
get to this point but if it does, then ask Chad if he needs some time in the
bathroom to “cry it out”—this should be done discretely and not as a
classroom announcement. Chad responds
extremely well when he feels safe. At
times like these the teacher can pull up a chair next to him, take his hand
and just keep on giving the lesson.
Human touch has been verified and the most healing of all touch and
using it for external (teacher OT instigated) calming can be extremely
effective.
6.
/ 7. This doesn’t happen, and by slowly working
back up this pattern it will over time extinguish itself.
|
What has been happening with Chad is that his amygdala has
consistently been hijacked by irrational thinking that has led him to incorrect
conclusions that in turn provided him with dysfunctional action choices.
Occupational therapy should be focused on his thought
processes as well as increasing his tolerance of extraneous background noises
and movements. Additionally, OT should
help Chad establish fallback action choices that will be acceptable to the
school still provide him with both self-calming and relief from
frustration. In addition to squishing
the eyeball-ball, having a pre-made list of behavior choices he can flip
through (3x5 spiral pad) so that he can get in the habit of doing something
else before reacting, etc.
Over-reaction to everyday stimulations in typical classrooms
can be addressed through structured games and activities that have these
distractors built in to them.
Sensory sensitive children are reacting because of one of
two reasons; either they see and hear everything blasting away, or they hear
and see everything muffled as behind a thick curtain. Either way the “environmental message” is not
getting delivered properly resulting in
what seems to be, upon superficial glance, intentional, but what is probably a
child in survival mode.
It is the job of occupational therapists in addition to
treating the child, to differentiate and
explain these actions and reactions to the teacher so that the child can be
understood and not blamed; motivated instead of being labeled “mean”.
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