Guest guest Posted February 22, 2000 Report Share Posted February 22, 2000 Hi Dennise, Thanks for your thoughts and ideas. I'm back to my normal level of worry/concern these days! I think a 5 week checkup on the GH is early...and, prior to this listserve and the GH listserve, I would have even thought 6 months was too short a time to judge success of GH. So, we'll see. Our next visit is mid-May which will mark 5 months on GH. I didn't get any responses to my question about when the GH kicked in....and I posted it on the GH listserve too. I was afraid that was because everyone else experienced great growth during the first 5 weeks and they didn't want to be bearers of bad news!(!@($ I've also been thinking a lot about 's comment ...something like " focusing on what our children are, not what they are not " . I think there is so much wisdom in that. Sometimes I think our kids get over analyzed because they have a diagnosis. On the other hand, as a first time mom, I'm always open to what people have to say about . I like the tip about taking two more bites. In 's case, she is really just learning how to eat. From reading here, I think has the most extreme case of eating issues. She has only been taking nutrition orally since 2 1/2 years, and that includes drinking. Her oral aversions were so strong that she put nothing but her fingers into her mouth. She has done a lot of vomiting in her lifetime. She has a super sensitive gag reflex. And she has tremendous oral sensitivities (actually other sensory based aversions I've come to realize). Anyway, through great OT services, she is overcoming the oral issues....but it is so slow. She is now able to take 4 ounces of puree by mouth. But, she still can vomit if too much was on the spoon, or if the spoon reached too far back, or who knows what else. She has no chewing skills. We are just working on those now. The chewing is really challenging to learn at this age. She is learning it cognitively. She has no intuition (or whatever it should be called) to use her tongue in the chewing process. So, if a bite of teddy graham falls off her back teeth and into her mouth, she doesn't know how to get it back onto her teeth for further chewing. Can you imagine learning something so primitive in a cognitive way? I see it every day, and yet I still can't comprehend the whole thing. Irene Mom to , 3 years old, G-tube, GH, 24 pounds, 32.5 " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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