Guest guest Posted January 2, 2004 Report Share Posted January 2, 2004 In a message dated 1/2/2004 7:04:41 AM Eastern Standard Time, marcjen123@... writes: > I don't know how everyone else manages to keep up and keep there sanity. > We have 2 speech therapy sessions, 1 session with an aural therapist and > another session with an ASL instructor every week. Then we have trips to Boston > Children's for all of the hearing testing. I also have a 3yr old daughter > that goes to pre-school and has to be the center of everyones attention, > understandably. On top of our family needs my husband and I work full time jobs. > There is not enough hours in the day!!!!!! > Hopefully this will slow down when Isaac is able to let us know what he > likes and doesn't like, and what is more beneficial to his learning. > Welcome to the group -- and vent away. Everyone needs to do that! Your note made me smile. I know that feeling of not having enough hours in the day, the feeling that I spend more time with doctors and specialists than with my husband ... and it does get easier. Not that the schedule really gets better, just that you adapt your life to it, you schedule it around those visits. And at some point it becomes your version of normal. Your daughter will also adjust. She's younger than mine was when we learned of our Ian's hearing loss, so my guess is that she'll have an easier time. What now seems abnormal to you will be her regular routine. I worried about our from the very beginning, about what it was going to be like for her since I had to spend so much time taking care of Ian. Even with our added efforts, she felt like an also-ran. We'd make special time for her, but did not make a big deal of it and I think that was our mistake. When she was about 6, she started to complain about every doctor visit and tell us that we didn't love her as much as our son. Or that we spent more time with our son because we like him better. Oy! She was, of course, wrong. But it was her perception and feelings, so we had to acknowledge them and show her how it was wrong. A tough job. We intentionally scheduled Dad/ or Mom/ time, and pointed out that we had done it. I intentionally did special things with her, things that Ian was not invited to join in, and I made a big deal of it. " Girls' day out " became a thing because it is usually me that takes Ian to his doctors, so it was MY time that she was most jealous of. The doctor visits were the one thing that she held onto as proof that we treated him " special. " I explained that she was going to have to learn to live with that because doctor visits were going to be a part of his life and therefore hers. She'd grumble about maybe is she was lucky she'd need glasses. We explained that she should try to feel happy and grateful that she inherited her dad's perfect teeth and 20-15 vision (and he can cook too ...sheez) To show her what " fun " Ian had on a " doctor day " in NYC, I took her along. I try to schedule all the different appointments into a single day. It is exhausting, but it is over in one day. She would get a play-date and dinner out with Dad but she was still jealous. That day she got to see one doctor clamp things to his head to do bone conductivity tests, she watched another doctor measure his skull to see how it was growing, a breathing test for lung capacity .... all the fun things she was missing. She got the point. No one in our house ever said life is equal or fair, but I pointed out that we try to keep it balanced. After a day like that, I usually take Ian out to dinner, or to Forbidden Planet -- a comic book store in NYC. A treat after a day of being a lab rat. That day realized why there was a treat attached to the day and never complained about it again. And ever since that day, Ian picks out a comic for her as well because he realized that she feels left out. I've rambled on and I know it's not quite on-topic for the list. But I'm the mom to two kids, and it is sometimes very hard to do that job. Best -- Jill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2004 Report Share Posted January 2, 2004 In a message dated 1/2/2004 7:04:41 AM Eastern Standard Time, marcjen123@... writes: > I don't know how everyone else manages to keep up and keep there sanity. > We have 2 speech therapy sessions, 1 session with an aural therapist and > another session with an ASL instructor every week. Then we have trips to Boston > Children's for all of the hearing testing. I also have a 3yr old daughter > that goes to pre-school and has to be the center of everyones attention, > understandably. On top of our family needs my husband and I work full time jobs. > There is not enough hours in the day!!!!!! > Hopefully this will slow down when Isaac is able to let us know what he > likes and doesn't like, and what is more beneficial to his learning. > Welcome to the group -- and vent away. Everyone needs to do that! Your note made me smile. I know that feeling of not having enough hours in the day, the feeling that I spend more time with doctors and specialists than with my husband ... and it does get easier. Not that the schedule really gets better, just that you adapt your life to it, you schedule it around those visits. And at some point it becomes your version of normal. Your daughter will also adjust. She's younger than mine was when we learned of our Ian's hearing loss, so my guess is that she'll have an easier time. What now seems abnormal to you will be her regular routine. I worried about our from the very beginning, about what it was going to be like for her since I had to spend so much time taking care of Ian. Even with our added efforts, she felt like an also-ran. We'd make special time for her, but did not make a big deal of it and I think that was our mistake. When she was about 6, she started to complain about every doctor visit and tell us that we didn't love her as much as our son. Or that we spent more time with our son because we like him better. Oy! She was, of course, wrong. But it was her perception and feelings, so we had to acknowledge them and show her how it was wrong. A tough job. We intentionally scheduled Dad/ or Mom/ time, and pointed out that we had done it. I intentionally did special things with her, things that Ian was not invited to join in, and I made a big deal of it. " Girls' day out " became a thing because it is usually me that takes Ian to his doctors, so it was MY time that she was most jealous of. The doctor visits were the one thing that she held onto as proof that we treated him " special. " I explained that she was going to have to learn to live with that because doctor visits were going to be a part of his life and therefore hers. She'd grumble about maybe is she was lucky she'd need glasses. We explained that she should try to feel happy and grateful that she inherited her dad's perfect teeth and 20-15 vision (and he can cook too ...sheez) To show her what " fun " Ian had on a " doctor day " in NYC, I took her along. I try to schedule all the different appointments into a single day. It is exhausting, but it is over in one day. She would get a play-date and dinner out with Dad but she was still jealous. That day she got to see one doctor clamp things to his head to do bone conductivity tests, she watched another doctor measure his skull to see how it was growing, a breathing test for lung capacity .... all the fun things she was missing. She got the point. No one in our house ever said life is equal or fair, but I pointed out that we try to keep it balanced. After a day like that, I usually take Ian out to dinner, or to Forbidden Planet -- a comic book store in NYC. A treat after a day of being a lab rat. That day realized why there was a treat attached to the day and never complained about it again. And ever since that day, Ian picks out a comic for her as well because he realized that she feels left out. I've rambled on and I know it's not quite on-topic for the list. But I'm the mom to two kids, and it is sometimes very hard to do that job. Best -- Jill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2004 Report Share Posted January 2, 2004 Hello, > husband ... and it does get easier. Not that the schedule really gets better, just > that you adapt your life to it, you schedule it around those visits. And at When we found out Christian was deaf after meningitis, I went out of my way to see all sorts of therapists, doctors etc. Sometimes there were two sessions per day, I was on the road a lot thinking the best I could do for my child was to meet as many specialists as I could. Our first-born son was not even two years old when our journey with the ci's started and I did my best to include him in everything. Maybe the fact that he was so young made it easier. Anyway, it has worked well as he has obviously not suffered from lack of attention. He does not care about his brother's hearing loss, either. For him his brother is just that ... his brother. They love each other dearly and have so much to talk about. It's great to watch. I also wanted to say that in our case the schedule did in fact get better. At some point I realized that all those therapists were only humans after all and that I could do what they did. The fact that I could not really find a therapist that supported us 100% (i.e. our decision to mainstream Christian and to raise him bilingually with German and English just like his brothers) helped me to draw a clear line. I did a lot of reading, I searched the net, exchanged notes with parents that were in a similar situation ... and we stopped seeing therapists a couple of months ago. It is demanding to keep track of eveything and to have the full responsibility myself but for us it was a good decision. I feel very comfortable incorporating language goals into our daily routine and I really don't need a therapist for that any more. And I've found ways to include our two hearing children into language games, informal or more formal " therapy sessions " at home etc. That way they don't feel excluded (at least not more than any other siblings in a family without a special needs child do once in a while). My children are no angels but I am absolutely sure that they tantrum fits etc. don't have anything to do with our family's special situation. For our family it has worked very well. We are expecting our fourth child in August and the children (and us parents of course *g*) are thrilled. All the best, Sabine in Cologne, Germany with (12/98), Christian (4/00; meningitis 10/00; 2 N24 1/01), Florian (6/02) and ? to make the family complete in August 2004 :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2004 Report Share Posted January 2, 2004 > He does not care about his brother's hearing loss, either. For him his brother is just that ... his brother. They love each other dearly and have so much to talk about. It's great to watch. I had to comment. Sometimes I talk to like I expect him to talk back to me (just playing) and my 5 year old will yell at me " HE CAN'T TALK " it is so funny. He doesn't usually, but sometimes when he thinks I actually want to talk back to me, he gets upset. He also tells strangers who talk to that he can't talk. But usually he says he's too small to talk he doesn't understand he can't talk because of problems with his hearing. He is not too small to talk, he is 3 years old, and Andy was speech delayed but was talking way before 3, maybe not as much as he should but he was talking. Anyway I thought that was funny. It's just normal for not to talk in Andy's eyes. -- Re: new to group, plus my other, non-HOH child Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2004 Report Share Posted January 2, 2004 > He does not care about his brother's hearing loss, either. For him his brother is just that ... his brother. They love each other dearly and have so much to talk about. It's great to watch. I had to comment. Sometimes I talk to like I expect him to talk back to me (just playing) and my 5 year old will yell at me " HE CAN'T TALK " it is so funny. He doesn't usually, but sometimes when he thinks I actually want to talk back to me, he gets upset. He also tells strangers who talk to that he can't talk. But usually he says he's too small to talk he doesn't understand he can't talk because of problems with his hearing. He is not too small to talk, he is 3 years old, and Andy was speech delayed but was talking way before 3, maybe not as much as he should but he was talking. Anyway I thought that was funny. It's just normal for not to talk in Andy's eyes. -- Re: new to group, plus my other, non-HOH child Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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