I'm no expert.
I'm a mom.
I'm also a teacher. An Early Childhood Special Education teacher.
Which is really a long title for "I teach special preschoolers."
I LOVE my preschoolers.
I LOVE special learners.
I LOVE having a difficult child to "unwrap."
I did not dream of being the parent of a special learner.
I
thought I was empathetic when I told parents that their child qualified
for special education services based on delays in the areas of
cognitive, motor, speech/language, adaptive behaviors, or
social/emotional development.
I. knew. nothing.
My
daughter is very functional. She's the low end of "special."
Sometimes I think this is the hardest spot to be in. I expect so much
from her...I sometimes forget that her brain twists things so that the
world around her doesn't make sense.
Natalee has undiagnosed Sensory Processing Disorder.
Undiagnosed
because we haven't taken her anywhere to get a diagnosis. But as a
professional I can pick apart her file and "see" it. As a mommy my
heart can feel it. I see the anxiety rise when the environment gets
loud, the room is hot, there are new people, and someone asks her a
question. I stand beside her when the routine shifts unexpectedly and
she doesn't know what to do so she melts. I lift her up when things
don't make sense to her and she gets confused and doesn't know what to
do.
Natalee is not autistic. She makes eye contact.
She has social ability (delayed but in tact). She communicates her
needs and wants clearly. Natalee probably has Asperger's. She gets
fixated on one topic. She likes sameness. She is black & white
(literal). She has a rigid imagination.
Natalee is a
little girl. She is 3. She is funny, loving, lovable, ornery, sincere,
thoughtful and perfectly made in the image of Christ.
This
blog is a journey of helping Natalee journey out of her world of
sensory processing disorder into a world that is hopefully more
comfortable and makes more sense to her. It's not about changing her
into someone else - it's about loving her enough to help her feel the
best and be the best that she can be.
Not everything we
try will work. I want to record those things too. Some things will
work really well. I want to share those successes. My hope and intent
is to create a log so that when Natalee and her brother Xavier, and any
other future children we might have, look back they know that every
weirdo "not the norm" decision we made we did for them. To give them
every chance at living long and healthy lives.
To my babies...this is for you.
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