Guest guest Posted February 1, 2011 Report Share Posted February 1, 2011 Jill, thank you so much for this insight and method. My son is just turning 12 and so far no signs of puberty but we have noticed a few times at home lately he will be "exploring". My son is able to spend a lot of independent time alone playing in his room , so hopefully it will be easy for him to have privacy with this behavior Sent from the KFree iPhoneOn Jan 31, 2011, at 8:17 PM, Pat <pkuenstler@...> wrote: Jill; it is a very appropriate subject. We have taught Karac to go to his room too, and it works very well. Karac is 18. Pat K Addressing Puberty and hands-in-pants Well I'm a little nervous addressing this one because some of you may freak out. And frankly I feel really awkward. It's something I never dreamed I would have to deal with when I had children or even when my son was diagnosed at age 2. My son now is 15 yo. At around age 13, he started putting his hands in his pants a lot. We had been working on reducing that behavior with no results. Finally the ABA consultant recommended a private time program. The idea is to teach your teen that you can request and go to your bedroom to be alone. And as long as you're not destructive, you can often have time alone in your room (many of our kids are never alone). Also there's things you can do in your bedroom when you are alone that is OK.... but these things can only be done here. My son is significantly challenged but the consultant had a very systematic way to teach private time. It included him putting a sign on the outside of his door (to remind us) and on the inside of the door (to remind him). We could and did establish boundaries around it.... which is very necessary. I only had to make a couple modifications to the program but after several months, he was fully trained. Now he still sometimes puts his hands in his pants to adjust himself (working on this) but the more extreme behavior is completely gone. And interestedly, once he learned to successfully relieve himself, his anxiety dropped dramatically and he overall became more happy and less aggressive. Now a year later, he requests private time on average 1-2 times per day. Since it's mastered, we say yes only during free time... never during therapy or school. My son's staff asked their husbands and ALL the men said this is something most early-teen boys do as often as possible. The women were all were Shocked. I know. It's something no mother wants to deal with or even think about. But the alternative (masturbation in public) was much much worse. And believe me, he's behaving much more appropriately in this area than most of his Autistic peers in his ABA middle school classrom. I think a well-written social story would work for kids with enough language. But for our language-challenged kids, this program works. If you want more details on how to teach this program, email me separately. I apologize if anyone is upset with this topic. Jill > > My son's self talk and inattentiveness has increased. got note from teacher today. I was fortunate to have someone make a weighted blanket for me that is adult size. I used it last night and self talk and vocal stimming subsided. He's going through hormone changes because I see increased growth of hair on his face and his shoe size has changed. Need to talk to neurodevelopmental pediatrician--correct? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2011 Report Share Posted February 2, 2011 Please don't apologize for posting this, it's entirely appropriate and something we all are or will face. I'm going through it right now with my almost 17 year old son. I just recently heard of teaching the private/public method. What did you do, make him go to his room, or just tell him that he should go to his room stressing the public/private aspect? I had minimal success so far, I did however come up with code words to use with him for this and for when his pants/bathing suit are hanging so low, his butt is exposed (a too frequent event unfortunatley). He knows that when we say " BC " (for butt cover) it means for him to pull up the back of his pants and now he knows " hoop " means hands out of pants. It helps when we're out in public so he's not embarrassed and it doesn't draw attention to him. > > > > My son's self talk and inattentiveness has increased. got note from teacher today. I was fortunate to have someone make a weighted blanket for me that is adult size. I used it last night and self talk and vocal stimming subsided. He's going through hormone changes because I see increased growth of hair on his face and his shoe size has changed. Need to talk to neurodevelopmental pediatrician--correct? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.