Guest guest Posted April 16, 2004 Report Share Posted April 16, 2004 > > > It takes inner strength to stand up to our urge to help out, but > sometimes we need to be tough and remember that we are parenting a > child with OCD, and not the child we previously knew. Among the > techniques I have suggested to parents is to use humour when asked to > comply, be too busy and unavailable, put on ear phones/plugs and > ignore the demands, go away from the area (go outside, to another > room, ...), but stay tough! > Any opinions on the role of " coping mechanisms " ? The last time we were at the NIH and were discussing possible compulsions, the doctors felt that several of the things my son (7) was doing were more like healthy coping mechanisms than compulsions. For example, he has some gender obsessions. One thing that is really difficult for him due to this is using the bathroom with other people present. At school he was actually wetting his pants several times a day rather than go to the bathroom. His solution was to use a stall and ask his teacher to please hold the door shut for him. Since he's started that, he's been using the bathroom without any problems. Since this has solved the problem and hasn't hatched any new problems, or made the obsessions worse, they felt like it was simply a way of coping. (As opposed to when he used to have a counting ritual before he would enter the bathroom, or he would completely refuse to even use the bathroom). Now, the intrusive thoughts about monsters are back. He's identified it as obsessive thoughts. He realizes that they aren't real; but the thoughts are still there. Despite that, he's been fine sleeping in his room and he'll play by himself in his room; but, he still wants someone to come with him when he first enters a room by himself, especially at night. I'm not sure where to draw the line. When he says, " Come with me to my room " I've tended to go along, especially since it isn't getting any worse...but I still wonder. Jeanne jwestpha@... NBCT - Exceptional Needs (2000) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 16, 2004 Report Share Posted April 16, 2004 Jeanne, jwestpha@... wrote: His solution was to use a stall and ask his teacher to please hold the door shut for him. Since he's started that, he's been using the bathroom without any problems. This is a good solution - but it can only be temporary as the teacher cannot be expected to always be available. My instinct tells me this is an ocd manipulation since someone else is involved. Perhaps she could hold the door only part of the time, or only on occasion, to break the dependance he has on her? Rewards would work well here. As far as avoiding the bathroom when others are in the room may have to do with typical childhood fears of bully's or something along those lines. Again, I would encourage practice, perhaps when only one other child is in the room, gradually building up to a larger group. At 7 he is still considered a 'little kid', but next year peer pressure may interfere and cause him unwarranted embarrassment. >I'm not sure where to draw the line. When he says, " Come with me to my room " I've tended to go along, especially since it isn't getting any worse...but I still wonder.... Now, the intrusive thoughts about monsters are back. Jeanne, follow your instinct. I used to ask " Is this an ocd thing? " if I wasnt sure! With younger kids, you can use their imagination and help them learn techniques to quiet the intrusive thoughts. Popular ones are to 'turn down the volume:' work at making the sound of the thoughts quiet so they can't hear them; naming the ocd so that it is externalized and imagine getting into a battle and defeating the oc 'monster'; Talk about the characters from ocd related story's and what they did (Casey and his ride up, and down, the Worry Hill), Drawing a picture of what ocd looks like: you can throw away the ocd, frame it (externalizes the ocd), just about anything is worth trying! At about 7 my son had a Superman doll that slept under his pillow so that he could battle the monsters of Tom's dreams and Tom could have a good night sleep! whatever works, eh? I hope these suggestions are helpful, wendy, in canada --------------------------------- Post your free ad now! Yahoo! Canada Personals Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 16, 2004 Report Share Posted April 16, 2004 > > Jeanne, > > jwestpha@... wrote: His solution was to use a stall and ask > his teacher to please hold the door shut for him. Since he's started > that, he's been using the bathroom without any problems. > > This is a good solution - but it can only be temporary as the teacher > cannot be expected to always be available. My instinct tells me this > is an ocd manipulation since someone else is involved. Perhaps she > could hold the door only part of the time, or only on occasion, to > break the dependance he has on her? Rewards would work well here. I guess I kind of feel like yes and no. First off, we are putting something into his IEP that he should be allowed to go to the bathroom somewhere private (with a few different options to accomplish this). To be honest, a better solution, *for all kids*, would be to have actual latches on the doors... And, it hasn't " grown " . This has been a stable solution for several months. It hasn't turned into any " bizarre " rituals to go with the teacher holding the door. And it hasn't moved on to needing a higher level of support. > > Jeanne, follow your instinct. I used to ask " Is this an ocd thing? " > if I wasnt sure! With younger kids, you can use their imagination and > help them learn techniques to quiet the intrusive thoughts. Popular > ones are to 'turn down the volume:' work at making the sound of the > thoughts quiet so they can't hear them; naming the ocd so that it is > externalized and imagine getting into a battle and defeating the oc > 'monster'; Talk about the characters from ocd related story's and what > they did (Casey and his ride up, and down, the Worry Hill), Drawing a > picture of what ocd looks like: you can throw away the ocd, frame it > (externalizes the ocd), just about anything is worth trying! He's pretty sure that it is, to some extent, part of the OCD. His reasoning is that he " knows that there really aren't monsters, but he is still worried about them. " Sounds OCDish to me. OTOH, is is still somewhat age appropriate, and it isn't having a huge impact on his life. (Like I said, he'll still sleep in his own bed-which he wouldn't do a few months ago. And, we're not getting the hysteria about it. It's pretty limited and not growing....which hasn't been typical of the OCD stuff. I tend to feel like most of the OCD stuff isn't that easily resolved. It's an evil taskmaster. Again, I just don't know. > > At about 7 my son had a Superman doll that slept under his pillow so > that he could battle the monsters of Tom's dreams and Tom could have a > good night sleep! whatever works, eh? > > I hope these suggestions are helpful, > > And that's where this is hard. If he didn't have the OCD, I probably wouldn't think twice about accompanying him into his room.... Thanks, Jeanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 2004 Report Share Posted April 17, 2004 Hi, Jeanne. It is hard to decide what we will do for our OCD kids and what we won't do. I know that we should not participate in any way that will enable the OCD but at the same time, if I were to force the issue on everything, my kids' heads would explode! I think that you are right in thinking that since it isn't getting any worse (you walking into the bedroom) that it is okay for you to do. I would go with that. My youngest daughter used to want us to be with her in her room all night when she slept and when we finally got her over that, she would ask us to lie down with her " for a little bit. " Boy, I only fell for that one a couple of times--she would get a minute and want hours! It ballooned so quickly, I knew it was a bad thing. I would tell her that I had " mom things " to do downstairs and then I would check on her as promised. It went away without much hassle. Kelley in NV Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2004 Report Share Posted April 19, 2004 Hi Jeanne I don't mean to go against 's advice (or the folks at the NIH my goodness!), but with my child I found I needed to keep an eye on the " coping mechanisms " as they tended to morph into compulsions pretty routinely. At least with my child there didn't seem to be any such thing as a " healthy " coping mechanism--only " baby " compulsions :-) It just seemed that, once she had OCD, my child no longer had the capability to develop a coping mechanism that solved a problem and then gracefully faded out once no longer needed. So I always have tried to mix things up, not fall into a routine with Kel especially when she was younger and more prone to this. I would just contrive to do things differently without making a big to-do about it. Kel's reaction told me if the thing was trending towards compulsion or not. My daughter had a similar issue with having me go into a room with her. I used humor which worked pretty well. I told her why on earth would I go up there, I had it from a reliable source that the room was infested with monsters!! OK not fall-down hilarious but then she'd get to giggling and telling me what the monsters looked like and their special powers, disgusting features, etc. She made the monsters pretty awful since by this point Kel's idea was that she was the brave one and I was the wimp. The whole situation got to be exposure for her, and the issue faded away. Or when your son asks you to come to his room with him, have you ever told him to go on, you needed to go get (whatever) and then you'd be right there? Does he go or wait for you? My daughter surprised me by going ahead sometimes. Kathy R. in Indiana ----- Original Message ----- > > > > > > It takes inner strength to stand up to our urge to help out, but > > sometimes we need to be tough and remember that we are parenting a > > child with OCD, and not the child we previously knew. Among the > > techniques I have suggested to parents is to use humour when asked to > > comply, be too busy and unavailable, put on ear phones/plugs and > > ignore the demands, go away from the area (go outside, to another > > room, ...), but stay tough! > > > Any opinions on the role of " coping mechanisms " ? > > The last time we were at the NIH and were discussing possible > compulsions, the doctors felt that several of the things my son (7) was > doing were more like healthy coping mechanisms than compulsions. > > For example, he has some gender obsessions. One thing that is really > difficult for him due to this is using the bathroom with other people > present. At school he was actually wetting his pants several times a > day rather than go to the bathroom. His solution was to use a stall and > ask his teacher to please hold the door shut for him. Since he's > started that, he's been using the bathroom without any problems. Since > this has solved the problem and hasn't hatched any new problems, or > made the obsessions worse, they felt like it was simply a way of > coping. (As opposed to when he used to have a counting ritual before > he would enter the bathroom, or he would completely refuse to even use > the bathroom). > > > Now, the intrusive thoughts about monsters are back. He's identified > it as obsessive thoughts. He realizes that they aren't real; but the > thoughts are still there. Despite that, he's been fine sleeping in his > room and he'll play by himself in his room; but, he still wants someone > to come with him when he first enters a room by himself, especially at > night. > > I'm not sure where to draw the line. When he says, " Come with me to my > room " I've tended to go along, especially since it isn't getting any > worse...but I still wonder. > > > Jeanne > jwestpha@... > NBCT - Exceptional Needs (2000) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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