[blindkid] rocking

Traci Wilkerson traci.renee27 at gmail.com
Mon Apr 30 20:14:30 UTC 2012


So what suggestions do you have for eye poking?  Our son has decreased it,
but then will kick it back up again, he even quit completely for about 4
months, but then it started up again.  He is 5, right now we are at the
bribing stage.  :)

I was just wondering about this reading your posts about movement, if I
could somehow spin these to apply to his poking,no intention to hijack!

Traci (Olivia,7 Evan,5, both LCA)
On Apr 30, 2012 3:17 PM, "Barbara Hammel" <poetlori8 at msn.com> wrote:

> Richard's suggestion of a rocking chair might be a good one.  I can tell
> you that when I was 12, I was a jumper.  In the dorm I was always reminded
> that I couldn't jump without a jump rope.  Needless to say, when I'd go to
> the Gym, I'd grab a jump rope and jump as fast as I could.  (I always won
> the "How many times can you jump in x amount of time" contests, too.)
> Barbara
>
>
>
>
> Poetry is an echo, asking a shadow to dance. -- Carl Sandburg
> -----Original Message----- From: Richard Holloway
> Sent: Monday, April 30, 2012 12:35 PM
> To: Blind Kid Mailing List,(for parents of blind children)
> Subject: Re: [blindkid] rocking
>
> Frequent rocking or spinning or other "blindisims" can be an issue for
> certain. Our daughter, Kendra (age 9) is much more prone to spin than to
> rock, but I suspect a similar approach may work for both.
>
> Blind kids generally move around less and end up with other motion in
> their "sensory diet" than sighted children. I'm absolutely certain this is
> true for Kendra. We got her jumping in a trampoline when she was very
> young. She has jumped to the point of destroying so many that I have lost
> count, She is 9 years old and we have gone through roughly 8 new
> trampolines (give or take a couple) in roughly 8 years. She used to jump as
> much as an hour or two a day. She still jumps, though a bit less now.  She
> has broken countless elastic loops, springs, trampoline mats, and even
> actual frames (the springs wore the frame until it failed while being
> jumped on in one case). We have been through at least 5 designs from
> different manufacturers. It isn't the trampolines, she just wears them
> out...
>
> We have added other movement as much as possible. Gymnastics, Dancing,
> Swimming, Biking, Swinging on various kinds of Swings... If Kendra feels
> she "has" to spin? We tell her to put it into a dance... We never really
> had to deal with the rocking so much, but I wonder if more "appropriate"
> rocking, like using a rocking chair would help get that out of her system,
> so to speak. THAT (a rocking chair) is just a guess-- I suppose it could
> make it better or worse, but I doubt a test for a short time would do much
> harm. On the swinging, if the feels to old to swing in a kid's swing, use a
> bench type (porch) swing. She can swing with a friend, sibling, or
> parent....
>
> Our thought here is that socially appropriate movement like spinning in a
> dance, or in the pool is a good thing as compared to spinning in the middle
> of the den or a department store... Kendra has also developed sort of a
> "spinning seat drop" in the trampoline which we are okay with, so long as
> it stops (or at least reduces) other less desirable movement when she's not
> jumping.
>
> Our approach has generally been  to send our girl her to the trampoline
> when she starts to spin at home. "Do you need to go jump?" We usually don't
> mention she's spinning but just suggest she go and jump, though sometimes
> we have addressed it directly too. What we have noticed is when she stops
> jumping so much, she starts to spin more when she is just standing around.
> It is very repeatable. Go back to jumping more and the spinning is quickly
> reduced. When she has the routine, sometimes she'll just say "I need to go
> to the trampoline" and she will self-correct for a desire to spin. That
> took a while, but it is pretty neat that she does it at this point.
>
> So my suggestion is to redirect when she is rocking (spinning, etc.) and
> keep her moving as much as possible.
>
> Good luck!
>
>
> On Apr 30, 2012, at 10:12 AM, hpscheffer at aol.com wrote:
>
>  Hi, I'm looking for suggestions or your feedback on how to help my
>> daughter to stop rocking. She is gotten a lot better, but as some of you
>> may know, when she gets excited or really into something she will do it
>> without realizing it. I'm thinking we are missing something, because just
>> reminding her does not do it. I've heard about the vestibular stimulation
>> rocking will do for a blind person, but her OT and her PT have never worked
>> with a blind child and they do not seem to have an answer. She is 12 and
>> soon to be 13, she is blind from ROP.
>>
>>
>> Any information will be appreciated.
>>
>>
>> Heidi
>>
>>
>>
>>
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