Guest guest Posted March 30, 2010 Report Share Posted March 30, 2010 I have 2 kids with Autism. My dd is 7 (2nd grade) and my ds is 5 (homeschool. My dd is having a very difficult time. Her non-stop thoughts are back. They are really bothering her this time. She needs to tell us her thoughts every single time, even about brushing her teeth again or putting her fingers in her pockets, etc. She keeps it together as school well enough until lately. She is starting to tell her thoughts to students. Then she comes home and explodes! At everyone. She is oppositional as well. I suppose I am writing to see what others have done about thoughts that don't stop and need to be told and recognized. Her coping mechanism is that when she has a thought and/or tells us it, she ends it with " but not. " Meaning she really doesn't feel that way but she can't stop thinking it. My daughter is a wonderful reader. Very intelligent. But falling behind in other subjects and of course social skills are lacking. When do you homeschool? I am worried about the type of things she is saying at school will be misinterptreted. I have spoke to the school but they say she is perfect in the class. There is nothing wrong. She does not have an IEP. She qualifies for no services per testing/evaluations. Any thoughts or opinions? Keri Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 30, 2010 Report Share Posted March 30, 2010 Hi Keri, and welcome from another relative newbie. I have homeschooler simce my oldest was in 2nd grade; it s not easy with an OCD child, and I don t know how it would be with autism. But I do know there are moms out there who are doing it. We tried puttingour kids in school about six weeks ago (before we got the OCD diagnosis), in hopes of relieving some stress in my life as I do my own work on childhood trauma, but it rathceted up my daughter s OCD badly, and stressed us all out so much that we finally brought everyone back home after two weeks. Homeschooling isn t for everyone, as I m sure you know; and it s never easy for me, but it is what works best for our family. What are your husband s thoughts (if you re married)? -Angi >I have 2 kids with Autism. My dd is 7 (2nd grade) and my ds is 5 (homeschool. My dd is having a very difficult time. Her non-stop thoughts are back. They are really bothering her this time. She needs to tell us her thoughts every single time, even about brushing her teeth again or putting her fingers in her pockets, etc. She keeps it together as school well enough until lately. She is starting to tell her thoughts to students. Then she comes home and explodes! At everyone. She is oppositional as well. > >I suppose I am writing to see what others have done about thoughts that don't stop and need to be told and recognized. Her coping mechanism is that when she has a thought and/or tells us it, she ends it with " but not. " Meaning she really doesn't feel that way but she can't stop thinking it. My daughter is a wonderful reader. Very intelligent. But falling behind in other subjects and of course social skills are lacking. When do you homeschool? I am worried about the type of things she is saying at school will be misinterptreted. I have spoke to the school but they say she is perfect in the class. There is nothing wrong. She does not have an IEP. She qualifies for no services per testing/evaluations. > >Any thoughts or opinions? > >Keri > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 30, 2010 Report Share Posted March 30, 2010 Welcome to the group, Keri. If the school thinks she is fine, how are you aware that she is telling others her thoughts? Just curious. Does she tell you she tells them? Have you tried any CBT/ERP (cognitive behavioral therapy / exposure and response prevention) for her thoughts? Is she on any meds for OCD, or does that cause more problems with her Autism? The CBT/ERP is a matter of learning to recognize the thoughts as OCD thoughts, then learn to either " boss them back " which might be the easiest approach at her age, or treat them like " junk email " . With junk email, they scream " important " headlines, but when you open them you see they are junk so you delete them. With OCD, you learn to disregard them as junk and not give them importance. There is also the use of loop tapes, which is a way to deliberately expose them to a disturbing thought, over and over, for a period of time, which can help desensitize them. Since she is also dealing with Autism, I was wondering if you have a good therapist onboard? Glad you found us. BJ > > I have 2 kids with Autism. My dd is 7 (2nd grade) and my ds is 5 (homeschool. My dd is having a very difficult time. Her non-stop thoughts are back. They are really bothering her this time. She needs to tell us her thoughts every single time, even about brushing her teeth again or putting her fingers in her pockets, etc. She keeps it together as school well enough until lately. She is starting to tell her thoughts to students. Then she comes home and explodes! At everyone. She is oppositional as well. > > I suppose I am writing to see what others have done about thoughts that don't stop and need to be told and recognized. Her coping mechanism is that when she has a thought and/or tells us it, she ends it with " but not. " Meaning she really doesn't feel that way but she can't stop thinking it. My daughter is a wonderful reader. Very intelligent. But falling behind in other subjects and of course social skills are lacking. When do you homeschool? I am worried about the type of things she is saying at school will be misinterptreted. I have spoke to the school but they say she is perfect in the class. There is nothing wrong. She does not have an IEP. She qualifies for no services per testing/evaluations. > > Any thoughts or opinions? > > Keri > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 30, 2010 Report Share Posted March 30, 2010 She has to tell me when she comes home that she told kids her " weird thoughts " sometimes they are very private. Then her autism kicks in and she scripts everything from her day. Meds have never been good. She is also seizure prone. She has not seizure in 4 years, since taking off meds. She does recognize her repetitive thoughts and needing to voice every opinion. She says at the end of every " brain " thought " ,but not " meaning that she doesn't mean what she just thought (sometimes they are bad thoughts...death, illness, etc.). We have started telling her to tell her brain to shut-up. She had a good day today with that. she was happy today. She still tells me in detail what she did and what she does and what she is going to do and when. So OCD's or Autism? Both? She will tell me her thoughts. I tell her " okay " or if they take further talking I will. She knows if I say " okay " it is not a big deal. If she cannot get to myself or my husband she will write it down. Then we will read it when we are together/have time, etc. The thing I am concerned about is when she tells her brain to " shut up " she is internalizing it or does that mean her brain is receiving it as it should...not important? We are dealing with this ourselves. We have tried professionals, but it takes so much to get to the real her we just get turned away as being over sensitive with a intelligent child, etc. She will outgrow it. I hate that one! Thank you. This is a warm and friendly group. Keri Re: New to this group...my daughter... Welcome to the group, Keri. If the school thinks she is fine, how are you aware that she is telling others her thoughts? Just curious. Does she tell you she tells them? Have you tried any CBT/ERP (cognitive behavioral therapy / exposure and response prevention) for her thoughts? Is she on any meds for OCD, or does that cause more problems with her Autism? The CBT/ERP is a matter of learning to recognize the thoughts as OCD thoughts, then learn to either " boss them back " which might be the easiest approach at her age, or treat them like " junk email " . With junk email, they scream " important " headlines, but when you open them you see they are junk so you delete them. With OCD, you learn to disregard them as junk and not give them importance. There is also the use of loop tapes, which is a way to deliberately expose them to a disturbing thought, over and over, for a period of time, which can help desensitize them. Since she is also dealing with Autism, I was wondering if you have a good therapist onboard? Glad you found us. BJ > > I have 2 kids with Autism. My dd is 7 (2nd grade) and my ds is 5 (homeschool. My dd is having a very difficult time. Her non-stop thoughts are back. They are really bothering her this time. She needs to tell us her thoughts every single time, even about brushing her teeth again or putting her fingers in her pockets, etc. She keeps it together as school well enough until lately. She is starting to tell her thoughts to students. Then she comes home and explodes! At everyone. She is oppositional as well. > > I suppose I am writing to see what others have done about thoughts that don't stop and need to be told and recognized. Her coping mechanism is that when she has a thought and/or tells us it, she ends it with " but not. " Meaning she really doesn't feel that way but she can't stop thinking it. My daughter is a wonderful reader. Very intelligent. But falling behind in other subjects and of course social skills are lacking. When do you homeschool? I am worried about the type of things she is saying at school will be misinterptreted. I have spoke to the school but they say she is perfect in the class. There is nothing wrong. She does not have an IEP. She qualifies for no services per testing/evaluations. > > Any thoughts or opinions? > > Keri > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 30, 2010 Report Share Posted March 30, 2010 Hi Keri! I am in the same boat, having a 9 year old daughter that has to insert " I think " into every sentance she says some days. She is very intelligent as well, so much so that most people look at us like we are crazy when we try to tell them anything about the problems we have had. She has shown signs of something being wrong since she was a year old, but has yet to be diagnosed. She had an IEP but it was dismissed at the end of first grade, and about a week later she started telling us she was touching people in thier privates. (Turned out to be a worry) It is a frustrating thing to go through but helpful to find encouragement here. I'm afraid I don't have too much advice since we are in the learning stage of things too. I will say, stick to your guns and fight for your children, because no one else will. You know them better than anyone else. Good luck with everything and please keep us posted! Heidi -WA New to this group...my daughter... I have 2 kids with Autism. My dd is 7 (2nd grade) and my ds is 5 (homeschool. My dd is having a very difficult time. Her non-stop thoughts are back. They are really bothering her this time. She needs to tell us her thoughts every single time, even about brushing her teeth again or putting her fingers in her pockets, etc. She keeps it together as school well enough until lately. She is starting to tell her thoughts to students. Then she comes home and explodes! At everyone. She is oppositional as well. I suppose I am writing to see what others have done about thoughts that don't stop and need to be told and recognized. Her coping mechanism is that when she has a thought and/or tells us it, she ends it with " but not. " Meaning she really doesn't feel that way but she can't stop thinking it. My daughter is a wonderful reader. Very intelligent. But falling behind in other subjects and of course social skills are lacking. When do you homeschool? I am worried about the type of things she is saying at school will be misinterptreted. I have spoke to the school but they say she is perfect in the class. There is nothing wrong. She does not have an IEP. She qualifies for no services per testing/evaluations. Any thoughts or opinions? Keri Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 30, 2010 Report Share Posted March 30, 2010 Hi Keri, I have multiple kids with Asperger's and OCD and I homeschool all of them. They are better off at home where they are understood and are not under huge amounts of stress and pressure.. I would be happy to answer any specific questions you may have about homeschooling.. My children are 12, 9, 7, & 3.. All girls except the youngest. And we have homeschooled since the beginning. Misty http://www.livingmynormal.blogspot.com ________________________________ To: Sent: Tue, March 30, 2010 2:38:14 PM Subject: New to this group...my daughter...  I have 2 kids with Autism. My dd is 7 (2nd grade) and my ds is 5 (homeschool. My dd is having a very difficult time. Her non-stop thoughts are back. They are really bothering her this time. She needs to tell us her thoughts every single time, even about brushing her teeth again or putting her fingers in her pockets, etc. She keeps it together as school well enough until lately. She is starting to tell her thoughts to students. Then she comes home and explodes! At everyone. She is oppositional as well. I suppose I am writing to see what others have done about thoughts that don't stop and need to be told and recognized. Her coping mechanism is that when she has a thought and/or tells us it, she ends it with " but not. " Meaning she really doesn't feel that way but she can't stop thinking it. My daughter is a wonderful reader. Very intelligent. But falling behind in other subjects and of course social skills are lacking. When do you homeschool? I am worried about the type of things she is saying at school will be misinterptreted. I have spoke to the school but they say she is perfect in the class. There is nothing wrong. She does not have an IEP. She qualifies for no services per testing/evaluations . Any thoughts or opinions? Keri Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 30, 2010 Report Share Posted March 30, 2010 Oh yeah, sounds like meds could impossible with the seizure issue. Is she on any meds for the seizures? I have a brother-in-law who had a brain tumor removed, who now has a seizure disorder. Having the tumor removed also changed his brain chemistry so he gets some pretty severe depression. He is on an SSRI, along with seizure medication, but they monitor his regularly, due to the risk, so understand your concern. Can she tolerate anything like Inositol? BJ > > > > I have 2 kids with Autism. My dd is 7 (2nd grade) and my ds is 5 (homeschool. My dd is having a very difficult time. Her non-stop thoughts are back. They are really bothering her this time. She needs to tell us her thoughts every single time, even about brushing her teeth again or putting her fingers in her pockets, etc. She keeps it together as school well enough until lately. She is starting to tell her thoughts to students. Then she comes home and explodes! At everyone. She is oppositional as well. > > > > I suppose I am writing to see what others have done about thoughts that don't stop and need to be told and recognized. Her coping mechanism is that when she has a thought and/or tells us it, she ends it with " but not. " Meaning she really doesn't feel that way but she can't stop thinking it. My daughter is a wonderful reader. Very intelligent. But falling behind in other subjects and of course social skills are lacking. When do you homeschool? I am worried about the type of things she is saying at school will be misinterptreted. I have spoke to the school but they say she is perfect in the class. There is nothing wrong. She does not have an IEP. She qualifies for no services per testing/evaluations. > > > > Any thoughts or opinions? > > > > Keri > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 31, 2010 Report Share Posted March 31, 2010 She is on no seizure meds...no seizures for 4 yrs. She is on supplements for the autism. She is on Inositol, Gaba, Taurine, Omegas,Zinc, Biotin,Cal/Mag w/extra Calcium, B vitamins. Keri Re: New to this group...my daughter... Oh yeah, sounds like meds could impossible with the seizure issue. Is she on any meds for the seizures? I have a brother-in-law who had a brain tumor removed, who now has a seizure disorder. Having the tumor removed also changed his brain chemistry so he gets some pretty severe depression. He is on an SSRI, along with seizure medication, but they monitor his regularly, due to the risk, so understand your concern. Can she tolerate anything like Inositol? BJ > > > > I have 2 kids with Autism. My dd is 7 (2nd grade) and my ds is 5 (homeschool. My dd is having a very difficult time. Her non-stop thoughts are back. They are really bothering her this time. She needs to tell us her thoughts every single time, even about brushing her teeth again or putting her fingers in her pockets, etc. She keeps it together as school well enough until lately. She is starting to tell her thoughts to students. Then she comes home and explodes! At everyone. She is oppositional as well. > > > > I suppose I am writing to see what others have done about thoughts that don't stop and need to be told and recognized. Her coping mechanism is that when she has a thought and/or tells us it, she ends it with " but not. " Meaning she really doesn't feel that way but she can't stop thinking it. My daughter is a wonderful reader. Very intelligent. But falling behind in other subjects and of course social skills are lacking. When do you homeschool? I am worried about the type of things she is saying at school will be misinterptreted. I have spoke to the school but they say she is perfect in the class. There is nothing wrong. She does not have an IEP. She qualifies for no services per testing/evaluations. > > > > Any thoughts or opinions? > > > > Keri > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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