[blindkid] never stands still
Brandy W
branlw at sbcglobal.net
Fri Jun 11 01:04:32 UTC 2010
Hi, OK as an adult I still wriggle and move all over the place. The
important skill to be learned is when and where it is OK to be moving. To
have the will power or self monitor to stand still when you are speaking to
someone for example. I am very pro giving the child opportunities for
movement, but by 7 or 8 and honestly younger the child needs to be taught
that not everyone starts spinning while having a conversation. I bit of
restlessness is one thing, but constant moving is another. I had and in some
cases still have some small habits that no one dealt with as a child, and
boy do I wish they had. For being still what seems to have worked is someone
firmly putting their hand on my shoulder and just applying pressure for
about 10 seconds. It gets my attention with out drawing attention to me, and
helps me come back to focus. If I notice I've needed too much support I
usually excuse myself and take a quick walk to get it out. It is great that
she has the place to jump, but soon it won't be appropriate to say "Excuse
me I need to go bounce now." Always think 10 years down the road. Do I want
my child to need this in 10 years? if the answer is no start thinking of
alternatives. For now the jumping is great, but in just a few short years
she will be a preteen and running, weight lifting, swimming as you already
do are more typical outlets. For those of you with very young children third
grade or younger try a spin bored if you can't get your hands on a
trampoline. The suggestions here have been wonderful, but we always need to
be thinking ahead. For example I was never much of a rocker, but when I
became sick and was in bed a lot, (Not my normal busy activity.) I began
rocking. We recognized I had started this out of the blue and tolerated it
semi when I was very sick. Now if I'm sick and need motion I try to rock in
a rocking chair like a normal adult. Now these are suggestions on how to
help the need, but the the question was how to stop the behavior. Well If
your sighted child jumped or spun out of control or all the time you would
firmly tell the child enough and insist they stop, and if the didn't your
consequence method for your house would kick in. Same for blind child. Just
as you don't allow your blind child to hit, be rude etc. you don't allow
them to do socially inappropriate things. It feels harsh to say and to read,
but it is a behavior that needs to go and there for in a loving but firm
manner the child needs to be taught it won't be tolerated. Please take my
word for it, as I speak from experience. Not finding out that people think
it is strange for you to wriggle every where till you are an adult is scary
and upsetting and one feels betrayed. excusing a child's rude behavior
didn't stop the rudeness so excusing a child's strange behavior won't stop
it. It is unexceptable and needs to be dealt s such. So how do you stop it?
You stop it like you would any other behavior you don't want, and when
appropriate you find the child an outlet for the need like the jumping,
spinning on a spin bored, rocking in a chair, squeezing silly puddy etc.
It is wonderful to read all you parents of young children asking now and not
when they are 12.
Bran
"Families that play together learn together!"
Brandy Wojcik
Discovery Toys Educational Leader
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(512) 689-5045
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----- Original Message -----
From: "Richard Holloway" <rholloway at gopbc.org>
To: "NFBnet Blind Kid Mailing List,(for parents of blind children)"
<blindkid at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Thursday, June 10, 2010 5:46 PM
Subject: Re: [blindkid] never stands still
> Our 7-year-old still does that occasionally and has done it since she was
> probably 2. I used to try to tell her to stop but we had far better
> results long term when we redirected her to something else. Then once we
> started offering her more and more movement alternatives the problem
> decreased greatly. If she's spinning a lot at home now, we'll usually ask
> if she needs to go and jump. Generally, she'll stop spinning with the
> question and walk straight to her trampoline.
>
> Richard
>
>
>
>
> On Jun 10, 2010, at 6:26 PM, L wrote:
>
>> My daughter does the same thing, she is 3. SHe will spin in circles and
>> makes me dizzy. We have just told her, stop spinning, most of the time
>> she does. But even while spinning she is holding her favorite sensory
>> toy, so I am not sure what to do either! Thanks for the question.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ________________________________
>> From: Marie <empwrn at bellsouth.net>
>> To: Blindkid email <blindkid at nfbnet.org>
>> Sent: Thu, June 10, 2010 12:42:54 PM
>> Subject: Re: [blindkid] never stands still
>>
>> I'm no expert on this but I'm wondering if she is filling a sensory need
>> by this constant motion. Does she stop moving when you are talking with
>> her or she is otherwise engaged? Perhaps providing her with other ways
>> to gain sensory input would help.
>>
>> Marie (mother of Jack born May 2005)
>> See glimpses of life with my determined son who is developing in his own
>> way at his own time at http://allaccesspasstojack.blogspot.com
>> Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Kathy B <burgawicki at yahoo.com>
>> Date: Thu, 10 Jun 2010 04:18:43
>> To: <BVI-Parents at yahoogroups.com>; <blindkid at nfbnet.org>
>> Subject: [blindkid] never stands still
>>
>> Hi All-
>>
>> My daughter (4), totally blind, has a real hard time holding still. She
>> is constantly in motion by fidgeting, wiggling, bouncing, etc. She
>> doesn't do a whole lot of rocking but she does need motion. How do I
>> get her to stop.
>>
>> Please help!
>>
>> Oh, the swimming lessons are going great!
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Kathy
>>
>>
>>
>>
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>>
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>
>
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