Guest guest Posted January 27, 2004 Report Share Posted January 27, 2004 Well ... the old two steps forward one step back has returned. Last week was being praised for keeping it together, pretty much, after someone stole his Yu-Gi-Oh deck box and about $100 worth of cards from him during lunch. He threw his book bag, hit a door on his way out of the lunchroom and went on to his next period class where his resource teacher said that even though it was a struggle, he was staying fairly much together. I chose to take him home thought because when he called me he was trying so hard to keep from crying and I did not want him teased should he break down. It ended up being the right choice, as after he got home he had a good long cry and got very depressed that he had lost the cards that I had spent money on that very morning. He also received praise for pulling his grades up by the semester end (from F's - due to missing much school because of his migraines- to C's and C+'s.) The weekend went very well. There had been much improvement since his sister moved out in his behaviors at home. This morning I received a call at work that he had had another meltdown in the lunchroom. He had again thrown his bookbag and was cussing profusely. The reason? He had gotten up from his table to take his tray back and returned to the table to find it occuppied by a buch of girls. He asked them to move and they told him they would not. He began to obsess about it " It's my seat, I want my seat " over and over, the more he obsessed the angrier he got. (this is a kid who has one or two seats that he ever sits at. This is his routine and he doesn't deviate from it.) When asked by the principal to go to the office (more as a distraction than a punishment according to the associate principal (not the same one as before - there are two) he refused, continuing to escalate to the point where they physically carried hiim out of the lunchroom. Once they got him to the school liaison officer's office, he curled up into a ball on the couch, turned up his headphones to his CD player full blast and began to read (obviously trying to isolate himself so he could try to de-escalate himself). Everytime they tried to pull him back to the present and back to the issue at hand, he'd start escalating again. To make a long story short, he received a disorderly conduct ticket and a two day suspension. I have a meeting with his med doc tomorrow to see if he wants to implement a med change he suggested in early December to help with his OCD (which seems to have steadily gotten worse since before the holidays - not so much at home, but definitely at school). One of his teachers wonders if this newest one is as the result of the additional stress from adding another class. The last big meltdown was two days after starting the last new class. I am also seeing if he can get in to see his therapist. Although this may not be possible - he's booked up until March 12. He's also a House Representative for our state ... so he has his handles full with trying to balance his schedules. We may have to find another therapist .. .although Mark is so wonderful, I hate to do that. We have a meeting with the school principal, the liaison officer, the resource room teacher, our district's Director of Special Services, and other parties that may have an interest on Thursday morning before they will allow him back in. I want to compile some information about his diagnoses .... to refresh their memories - as there are 1300 kids in this high school. 's dad made a very astute comment while I was talking to him on ICQ. " They would NEVER ticket a student with a mental/physical handicap -- yet they continually do this to -- doesn't he get SSI for it? -- That's my brainstorm " . He also said " but it's still a " mental " disorder and where he may handle himself 9 times ok-- the 10th might be the melt-down, if the situation has never presented it to him-- other times he may go 99 times then it's the straw that broke the camels back -- trouble is, the " adults " that should know better get in his face and make the entire situation worse. " and " does the person who took his seat have any consequences -- heck no, probably a model student, but if that was who took someone elses seat, and replied, as I could see him doing, it's an open cafeteria, I can sit anywhere I want -- would be asked to move, and be disorderly for that situation -- It's a no win situation, and again the " adults " at the school need to see that -- if they ever could look at it from a kids point of view, with or without a disability. " I feel that isn't a bad kid, isn't a delinquent kid ... he is a kid for whom some of the time, the world is a baffling place. and his reactions may not be what other people expect. Would any of you who have an idea or an insight, please let me know them.... even if you have nothing more to say than " I know how you feel. " I am open to any and all comments. Thanks _________________________________________________________________ Learn how to choose, serve, and enjoy wine at Wine @ MSN. http://wine.msn.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2004 Report Share Posted January 27, 2004 Hi … Your sounds a lot like my daughter….at home. Because she has social anxiety, outside of home, MOST of the time, she doesn’t allow herself to lose it completely. (Usually.) She just can’t handle things not going her way…. I think the therapist is an excellent idea…and regularly scheduled meetings would be good too if you can swing it. We see ours every 3 weeks and have for 5 years. He’s a rock in our lives…always there to bounce things off for us as parents, and there to help guide Beth through the rough twists and turns in life, too. He’s represented us at IEP meetings several times as well. He understands Beth. So few do, it’s wonderful to have someone who really does!! And then there are the meds. They are so important. I’d definitely talk to the dr about them, explaining just what you’ve told us. Anti-anxiety meds can help so much. My daughter is on neurontin and serequel….they do help her take the edge off, at least. She’s still very anxious and has her obsessions, no patience, ego-centric, etc. But really, they do help!!! LOL Hang in there Steph. You’ve got your hands full. Maralee RE: two steps forward, one step back Well ... the old two steps forward one step back has returned. Last week was being praised for keeping it together, pretty much, after someone stole his Yu-Gi-Oh deck box and about $100 worth of cards from him during lunch. He threw his book bag, hit a door on his way out of the lunchroom and went on to his next period class where his resource teacher said that even though it was a struggle, he was staying fairly much together. I chose to take him home thought because when he called me he was trying so hard to keep from crying and I did not want him teased should he break down. It ended up being the right choice, as after he got home he had a good long cry and got very depressed that he had lost the cards that I had spent money on that very morning. He also received praise for pulling his grades up by the semester end (from F's - due to missing much school because of his migraines- to C's and C+'s.) The weekend went very well. There had been much improvement since his sister moved out in his behaviors at home. This morning I received a call at work that he had had another meltdown in the lunchroom. He had again thrown his bookbag and was cussing profusely. The reason? He had gotten up from his table to take his tray back and returned to the table to find it occuppied by a buch of girls. He asked them to move and they told him they would not. He began to obsess about it " It's my seat, I want my seat " over and over, the more he obsessed the angrier he got. (this is a kid who has one or two seats that he ever sits at. This is his routine and he doesn't deviate from it.) When asked by the principal to go to the office (more as a distraction than a punishment according to the associate principal (not the same one as before - there are two) he refused, continuing to escalate to the point where they physically carried hiim out of the lunchroom. Once they got him to the school liaison officer's office, he curled up into a ball on the couch, turned up his headphones to his CD player full blast and began to read (obviously trying to isolate himself so he could try to de-escalate himself). Everytime they tried to pull him back to the present and back to the issue at hand, he'd start escalating again. To make a long story short, he received a disorderly conduct ticket and a two day suspension. I have a meeting with his med doc tomorrow to see if he wants to implement a med change he suggested in early December to help with his OCD (which seems to have steadily gotten worse since before the holidays - not so much at home, but definitely at school). One of his teachers wonders if this newest one is as the result of the additional stress from adding another class. The last big meltdown was two days after starting the last new class. I am also seeing if he can get in to see his therapist. Although this may not be possible - he's booked up until March 12. He's also a House Representative for our state ... so he has his handles full with trying to balance his schedules. We may have to find another therapist .. .although Mark is so wonderful, I hate to do that. We have a meeting with the school principal, the liaison officer, the resource room teacher, our district's Director of Special Services, and other parties that may have an interest on Thursday morning before they will allow him back in. I want to compile some information about his diagnoses .... to refresh their memories - as there are 1300 kids in this high school. 's dad made a very astute comment while I was talking to him on ICQ. " They would NEVER ticket a student with a mental/physical handicap -- yet they continually do this to -- doesn't he get SSI for it? -- That's my brainstorm " . He also said " but it's still a " mental " disorder and where he may handle himself 9 times ok-- the 10th might be the melt-down, if the situation has never presented it to him-- other times he may go 99 times then it's the straw that broke the camels back -- trouble is, the " adults " that should know better get in his face and make the entire situation worse. " and " does the person who took his seat have any consequences -- heck no, probably a model student, but if that was who took someone elses seat, and replied, as I could see him doing, it's an open cafeteria, I can sit anywhere I want -- would be asked to move, and be disorderly for that situation -- It's a no win situation, and again the " adults " at the school need to see that -- if they ever could look at it from a kids point of view, with or without a disability. " I feel that isn't a bad kid, isn't a delinquent kid ... he is a kid for whom some of the time, the world is a baffling place. and his reactions may not be what other people expect. Would any of you who have an idea or an insight, please let me know them.... even if you have nothing more to say than " I know how you feel. " I am open to any and all comments. Thanks _________________________________________________________________ Learn how to choose, serve, and enjoy wine at Wine @ MSN. http://wine.msn.com/ Yahoo! Groups Links · To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/autism-aspergers/ · Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2004 Report Share Posted January 27, 2004 Hi … Your sounds a lot like my daughter….at home. Because she has social anxiety, outside of home, MOST of the time, she doesn’t allow herself to lose it completely. (Usually.) She just can’t handle things not going her way…. I think the therapist is an excellent idea…and regularly scheduled meetings would be good too if you can swing it. We see ours every 3 weeks and have for 5 years. He’s a rock in our lives…always there to bounce things off for us as parents, and there to help guide Beth through the rough twists and turns in life, too. He’s represented us at IEP meetings several times as well. He understands Beth. So few do, it’s wonderful to have someone who really does!! And then there are the meds. They are so important. I’d definitely talk to the dr about them, explaining just what you’ve told us. Anti-anxiety meds can help so much. My daughter is on neurontin and serequel….they do help her take the edge off, at least. She’s still very anxious and has her obsessions, no patience, ego-centric, etc. But really, they do help!!! LOL Hang in there Steph. You’ve got your hands full. Maralee RE: two steps forward, one step back Well ... the old two steps forward one step back has returned. Last week was being praised for keeping it together, pretty much, after someone stole his Yu-Gi-Oh deck box and about $100 worth of cards from him during lunch. He threw his book bag, hit a door on his way out of the lunchroom and went on to his next period class where his resource teacher said that even though it was a struggle, he was staying fairly much together. I chose to take him home thought because when he called me he was trying so hard to keep from crying and I did not want him teased should he break down. It ended up being the right choice, as after he got home he had a good long cry and got very depressed that he had lost the cards that I had spent money on that very morning. He also received praise for pulling his grades up by the semester end (from F's - due to missing much school because of his migraines- to C's and C+'s.) The weekend went very well. There had been much improvement since his sister moved out in his behaviors at home. This morning I received a call at work that he had had another meltdown in the lunchroom. He had again thrown his bookbag and was cussing profusely. The reason? He had gotten up from his table to take his tray back and returned to the table to find it occuppied by a buch of girls. He asked them to move and they told him they would not. He began to obsess about it " It's my seat, I want my seat " over and over, the more he obsessed the angrier he got. (this is a kid who has one or two seats that he ever sits at. This is his routine and he doesn't deviate from it.) When asked by the principal to go to the office (more as a distraction than a punishment according to the associate principal (not the same one as before - there are two) he refused, continuing to escalate to the point where they physically carried hiim out of the lunchroom. Once they got him to the school liaison officer's office, he curled up into a ball on the couch, turned up his headphones to his CD player full blast and began to read (obviously trying to isolate himself so he could try to de-escalate himself). Everytime they tried to pull him back to the present and back to the issue at hand, he'd start escalating again. To make a long story short, he received a disorderly conduct ticket and a two day suspension. I have a meeting with his med doc tomorrow to see if he wants to implement a med change he suggested in early December to help with his OCD (which seems to have steadily gotten worse since before the holidays - not so much at home, but definitely at school). One of his teachers wonders if this newest one is as the result of the additional stress from adding another class. The last big meltdown was two days after starting the last new class. I am also seeing if he can get in to see his therapist. Although this may not be possible - he's booked up until March 12. He's also a House Representative for our state ... so he has his handles full with trying to balance his schedules. We may have to find another therapist .. .although Mark is so wonderful, I hate to do that. We have a meeting with the school principal, the liaison officer, the resource room teacher, our district's Director of Special Services, and other parties that may have an interest on Thursday morning before they will allow him back in. I want to compile some information about his diagnoses .... to refresh their memories - as there are 1300 kids in this high school. 's dad made a very astute comment while I was talking to him on ICQ. " They would NEVER ticket a student with a mental/physical handicap -- yet they continually do this to -- doesn't he get SSI for it? -- That's my brainstorm " . He also said " but it's still a " mental " disorder and where he may handle himself 9 times ok-- the 10th might be the melt-down, if the situation has never presented it to him-- other times he may go 99 times then it's the straw that broke the camels back -- trouble is, the " adults " that should know better get in his face and make the entire situation worse. " and " does the person who took his seat have any consequences -- heck no, probably a model student, but if that was who took someone elses seat, and replied, as I could see him doing, it's an open cafeteria, I can sit anywhere I want -- would be asked to move, and be disorderly for that situation -- It's a no win situation, and again the " adults " at the school need to see that -- if they ever could look at it from a kids point of view, with or without a disability. " I feel that isn't a bad kid, isn't a delinquent kid ... he is a kid for whom some of the time, the world is a baffling place. and his reactions may not be what other people expect. Would any of you who have an idea or an insight, please let me know them.... even if you have nothing more to say than " I know how you feel. " I am open to any and all comments. Thanks _________________________________________________________________ Learn how to choose, serve, and enjoy wine at Wine @ MSN. http://wine.msn.com/ Yahoo! Groups Links · To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/autism-aspergers/ · Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2004 Report Share Posted January 27, 2004 Hi … Your sounds a lot like my daughter….at home. Because she has social anxiety, outside of home, MOST of the time, she doesn’t allow herself to lose it completely. (Usually.) She just can’t handle things not going her way…. I think the therapist is an excellent idea…and regularly scheduled meetings would be good too if you can swing it. We see ours every 3 weeks and have for 5 years. He’s a rock in our lives…always there to bounce things off for us as parents, and there to help guide Beth through the rough twists and turns in life, too. He’s represented us at IEP meetings several times as well. He understands Beth. So few do, it’s wonderful to have someone who really does!! And then there are the meds. They are so important. I’d definitely talk to the dr about them, explaining just what you’ve told us. Anti-anxiety meds can help so much. My daughter is on neurontin and serequel….they do help her take the edge off, at least. She’s still very anxious and has her obsessions, no patience, ego-centric, etc. But really, they do help!!! LOL Hang in there Steph. You’ve got your hands full. Maralee RE: two steps forward, one step back Well ... the old two steps forward one step back has returned. Last week was being praised for keeping it together, pretty much, after someone stole his Yu-Gi-Oh deck box and about $100 worth of cards from him during lunch. He threw his book bag, hit a door on his way out of the lunchroom and went on to his next period class where his resource teacher said that even though it was a struggle, he was staying fairly much together. I chose to take him home thought because when he called me he was trying so hard to keep from crying and I did not want him teased should he break down. It ended up being the right choice, as after he got home he had a good long cry and got very depressed that he had lost the cards that I had spent money on that very morning. He also received praise for pulling his grades up by the semester end (from F's - due to missing much school because of his migraines- to C's and C+'s.) The weekend went very well. There had been much improvement since his sister moved out in his behaviors at home. This morning I received a call at work that he had had another meltdown in the lunchroom. He had again thrown his bookbag and was cussing profusely. The reason? He had gotten up from his table to take his tray back and returned to the table to find it occuppied by a buch of girls. He asked them to move and they told him they would not. He began to obsess about it " It's my seat, I want my seat " over and over, the more he obsessed the angrier he got. (this is a kid who has one or two seats that he ever sits at. This is his routine and he doesn't deviate from it.) When asked by the principal to go to the office (more as a distraction than a punishment according to the associate principal (not the same one as before - there are two) he refused, continuing to escalate to the point where they physically carried hiim out of the lunchroom. Once they got him to the school liaison officer's office, he curled up into a ball on the couch, turned up his headphones to his CD player full blast and began to read (obviously trying to isolate himself so he could try to de-escalate himself). Everytime they tried to pull him back to the present and back to the issue at hand, he'd start escalating again. To make a long story short, he received a disorderly conduct ticket and a two day suspension. I have a meeting with his med doc tomorrow to see if he wants to implement a med change he suggested in early December to help with his OCD (which seems to have steadily gotten worse since before the holidays - not so much at home, but definitely at school). One of his teachers wonders if this newest one is as the result of the additional stress from adding another class. The last big meltdown was two days after starting the last new class. I am also seeing if he can get in to see his therapist. Although this may not be possible - he's booked up until March 12. He's also a House Representative for our state ... so he has his handles full with trying to balance his schedules. We may have to find another therapist .. .although Mark is so wonderful, I hate to do that. We have a meeting with the school principal, the liaison officer, the resource room teacher, our district's Director of Special Services, and other parties that may have an interest on Thursday morning before they will allow him back in. I want to compile some information about his diagnoses .... to refresh their memories - as there are 1300 kids in this high school. 's dad made a very astute comment while I was talking to him on ICQ. " They would NEVER ticket a student with a mental/physical handicap -- yet they continually do this to -- doesn't he get SSI for it? -- That's my brainstorm " . He also said " but it's still a " mental " disorder and where he may handle himself 9 times ok-- the 10th might be the melt-down, if the situation has never presented it to him-- other times he may go 99 times then it's the straw that broke the camels back -- trouble is, the " adults " that should know better get in his face and make the entire situation worse. " and " does the person who took his seat have any consequences -- heck no, probably a model student, but if that was who took someone elses seat, and replied, as I could see him doing, it's an open cafeteria, I can sit anywhere I want -- would be asked to move, and be disorderly for that situation -- It's a no win situation, and again the " adults " at the school need to see that -- if they ever could look at it from a kids point of view, with or without a disability. " I feel that isn't a bad kid, isn't a delinquent kid ... he is a kid for whom some of the time, the world is a baffling place. and his reactions may not be what other people expect. Would any of you who have an idea or an insight, please let me know them.... even if you have nothing more to say than " I know how you feel. " I am open to any and all comments. Thanks _________________________________________________________________ Learn how to choose, serve, and enjoy wine at Wine @ MSN. http://wine.msn.com/ Yahoo! Groups Links · To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/autism-aspergers/ · Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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