Sensory Chat: A Sensory Perspective

Sensory Integration Education

Would you like to know the tips about sensory differences that therapists wish that every family knew? Listen in as experienced Advanced Sensory Integration Practitioners discuss solutions and strategies for daily life people with sensory integration or sensory processing difficulties.

Sensory Chat is a series of informal, friendly and fun chats between Occupational Therapists, Physiotherapists and Speech & Language Therapists.

If you work or care for people with sensory integration or sensory processing differences, autism, ADHD, dyspraxia (DCD) or special needs, Sensory Chat is for you.

Sensory Chat is brought to you by the Association for Sensory Integration Practice (ASIP) and training course provider Sensory Integration Education.

Who’s Talking in Series 2 of Sensory Chat?

Emer Broderick is an Occupational Therapist and Advanced SI Practitioner, working in independent practice with children and young people. Emer has worked predominately with children with ASD, DCD, ADHD, CP, as well as babies with developmental difficulties.

Amy Stephens is a Speech and Language Therapist and Advanced SI Practitioner with a long experience working with children and adults with a wide range of different speech, language and communication challenges. As a coach and mentor, Amy enjoys uncovering new insights into effective and positive strategies for supporting clients as well as the families, educators and clinical professionals who support them.

Lelanie Brewer is an Occupational Therapist and Advanced SI Practitioner and also the Director of Student Development for Sensory Integration Education. A highly experienced clinician, Lelanie is currently working towards a PhD with her research focusing on self-care in children with motor difficulties.

Angela Tieman is a Paediatric Occupational Therapist and Advanced SI Practitioner with extensive experience working in Early Childhood Intervention in both Australia and the United Kingdom. Angela has been trained by and received supervision from world-renowned experts in the field of Sensory Integration, Trauma and Attachment, and also works as a clinical mentor in this field.

Emma Snowdon is a Paediatric Physiotherapist and an Advanced Sensory Integration Practitioner. With extensive experience in the public and independent sectors, Emma is also a clinical supervisor and delivers training to numerous agencies including Adoption Central England (ACE) and lectures for national conferences. read less
Health & FitnessHealth & Fitness
Kids & FamilyKids & Family
ParentingParenting

Season 2

S2 E3: What Is Sensory Processing - and Why Do We All Need It?
02-05-2023
S2 E3: What Is Sensory Processing - and Why Do We All Need It?
The Sensory Chat team think about what sensory processing does, and how everyone has an individual combination of preferences and dislikes in their own sensory profile.  We consider how this relates to how we as parents might set up the routines and activities of the day, and what happens when there is a mismatch between the sensory preferences of different family members.  As always, we share practical ideas about to recognise where sensory differences are affecting family relationships, and how to recognise your own sensory style. Transcript Transcript Speaker: Hello and welcome to this episode of Sensory Chat, the podcast for parents and others interested in all things sensory integration. Speaker: Hello, I'm Amy Stevens and I'm calling in from Salisbury in the southwest of England. I'm a speech and language therapist and an advanced practitioner in Ayres Sensory Integration. Speaker: Hello, I am Emer Broderick, and I am an occupational therapist based in London in the UK. I am also an advanced practitioner in Ayres Sensory Integration. Speaker: Hi. I'm Emma Snowdon and I am a children's physiotherapist and I'm also an advanced practitioner in sensory integration. Speaker: Hi, my name's Angela. I am an occupational therapist based in Melbourne, Australia, and I'm also an advanced sensory integration practitioner. Speaker: Hello, I'm Lelanie Brewer. I'm a children's occupational therapist and academic and researcher based in Bahrain. Speaker: This morning, we're going to start exploring the idea of a little bit of myth-busting, basically, about what sensory integration, sensory processing is. When we talk about sensory processing difficulties, sensory processing challenges, you might accidentally come away with the idea that sensory processing is a problem. If you've got sensory processing stuff, there's something going a bit adrift, but actually, that's not really the case, and we're going to explore a little more widely about what sensory processing more generally means. Speaker: If we think about sensory processing, what it is, essentially, it's just how we take in all the information from all the senses that we have, and how our brain processes that and comes up with a response to that information. It's happening constantly throughout the day. Just a reminder to people about the senses we're talking about, we're talking about the five common senses, you know, what we see, what we hear, what we smell, what we taste, and what we touch, and also some of our more internal senses. Our sense of balance, ou​r vestibula​r sense, we call it, knowing our head position and what position, our sense of movement. Then we have our body awareness, knowing what our body is doing in space. We call that our proprioceptive sense. Then we also have an interoceptive sense, which is picking up on those internal cues, things like hunger, earth, bowel and bladder cues, prompting us if we need to eat, if we need to drink, if we need to go to the bathroom. Our body's constantly taking in all this information from the environment from our body and processing it. It's a really complicated system and there's lots of things going on. We all process this information slightly differently, and how we process it can impact our response to it, and this is what we see every day in ourselves and in the people we support and work with. Speaker: Our sensory preferences influence us in ways that we don't even realise every day from the moment we wake up, how hot or how cold is your shower? What clothes am I going to choose to wear today? What am I going to eat for breakfast? How do I get ready? Those are subconscious decisions that are actually informed by our sensory preferences and it also affects our choices in nature and everything we do. Speaker: I think it goes even deeper than that, doesn't it, Lelanie? It influences our greater choices in terms of what we're going to do. I often say when I have children that I'm working with the proprioceptive seekers or vestibular seekers that really need to move their body a lot. These aren't the type of kids that are going to end up in an office job sitting down, and if they are, they're going to also probably be very active, and as soon as they finish work, they're going to go off on a 10-mile bike ride or go for a run. I think our own sense and preferences really influence everything about our lives and what we choose to do and how we choose to work and how we choose our leisure time as well. We don't often think about that in terms of ourselves as adults or parents we work with when we start considering our own sensory preferences. It not only helps us to understand our children better, but it helps us to understand why we might have difficulties interacting with our children and potentially meeting their needs if they're different to our own needs. Speaker: Absolutely. It's not until something disrupts the norm that we start worrying about it. When I used to see quite a lot of families in our clinic in London, it wasn't until there was one child doing something slightly different from the rest that it would become an issue. For example, let's just take a simple activity, go and eat to a restaurant, and this might be a particular food, maybe if people have a preference for curry or something spicy. Then there's the one person in the family who actually hates spicy food and wants to go for a burger instead. It's really not a big deal, but that person will say, "Oh, there's nothing on the menu that I can eat." Then people start thinking, "Well, why doesn't he like this? Why doesn't she like that?" Then, going on holiday and choosing activities, and when you have a family with, say, three children with three different sensory profiles, it can get quite interesting organising your activities as well. Speaker: I think one of the classic examples for me is always that messy play piece, isn't it? When a lot of the children that we work with really enjoy that messy play and I'm thinking clay and foam soap and glitter, that's always a contentious one, isn't it? Glitter. We often find that some of the parents really struggle with this and that they'll reveal that they have an issue with this and, therefore, those kinds of play activities aren't really usually done in the home. That's when we start to see that we have these competing then preferences, which impact on how then we play with our children and how our children get or don't get their sensory needs met. Speaker: Listening to all of your comments and thoughts on this topic just got me thinking about a conversation I had with a mum recently. I guess explored this idea with her of thinking about her own sensory preferences as a way to help her reduce her stress. At the time of starting to work with this family, Mum had a lot of competing demands. One of the things she said to me was that she went to the gym that morning and she commented on just how, I guess, grounded she felt after doing that and it's something that she had missed in the week prior. We started to talk about what type of sensory input was that giving her and this idea of heavy work and proprioception, and she'd never really thought of that activity, that exercise from a sensory lens. I guess by making that link to proprioception, she then went on to say, "Oh, is this why when I did that one week of trialing pilates classes, it just did nothing for me?" We then started to think about how different activities, lifting, carrying heavy things, carrying a heavy basket of washing, doing the vacuuming, going to the gym, versus the activities that don't involve that heavy work really didn't have the same calming and grounding effect. Essentially, this goes back to her preferences and this idea of her needing a high intensity of this piece to feel her best self. Speaker: Similarly to that, Angela, I had a similar conversation also, very much around playgrounds, where our supporting a family, we actually were outside in playgrounds for our session, and I think the mum started to realise that she has a very reactive vestibular system and she was getting incredibly nervous around her child doing some activities which really challenged his balance. It was really a good opportunity to open up the conversation around this particular child loves swinging off things, he loves really, really intense vestibular activities. It was a really good opportunity and it was great to be able to do it there in the moment around our sensory systems' needs may be different to what our children's sensory systems need and how we can have a think about that and going forward and what's best for our child and what's best for us. It may be different things. Speaker: I think also, that ties into the different kind of roles that parents may play within a family unit. This goes back to what Emma was saying earlier around the parent that may not typically be the one that's setting up the messy play activity at home because that's not something that they would particularly enjoy participating in, but it's this idea of maybe the second parent if they're available, maybe that becomes their role because that's something they naturally gravitate towards because their nervous system can handle it or it might actually be fun for them. I think the same can apply to rough and tumble play in terms of those parents that really like that physicality within play. Some parents, they'll happily hand that over to the fun aunt or the uncle or another member of the family. Again, subconsciously, this could be tied to our preferences and what our body enjoys. Speaker: Angela, what's coming up for me listening to you talking is very much the idea that there isnt really such a thing as normal and not normal sensory processing. That we all, every single human being, has a way of engaging with the world of our senses, picking up information, and either that fits and that works with what we need or want to do in the day, or there's a mismatch, there's a clash and it's hard for us to do what we need or want in the day because how we process sensory information makes it harder for us to take part in those things. Where that takes my thinking is that it's not really that sensory processing challenges are a problem, it's that there's potentially a sensory processing mismatch. We are looking more at problem-solving a mismatch than fixing a sensory system. That's quite a different way of looking at sensory integration, sensory process. Lelanie, what do you think? Speaker: Absolutely, and I think that's where it becomes really interesting is when you live by yourself and you can plan your whole day according to your own sensory preferences. Then in a family situation, it starts becoming very different because there are other people's needs to consider. I had a friend who thought she give baby-lead weaning a go and it was a disaster for her. Because the child, this child loved it, complete mess, caked in food, and I think my friend thought she took on more than she could handle. They got over it but it was just interesting. It was just everything as you say from the messy clay, but it's also just all the other things as well and daily routine. It's definitely when your sensory preferences, when there are other people to consider, even the volume of the TV can become an issue if there are different people in the household. Speaker: I think that's important to think about when environments change then because you may be in a home where your sensory needs are met quite easily and then there may be a big change. You may start school, for example, as a child, and suddenly, you're in a very different sensory environment with very different sensory demands, and that's where things can potentially get quite tricky. Having an awareness of how your senses work and how you process that information can be really helpful. Speaker: I like that idea that actually, maybe the place where supporting your child to be able to manage their sensory processing needs. The place where that starts is perhaps recognising your own preferences and your own pattern. That actually, when you understand that, you may well have set up your world, may well have set up your home, may well have set up the routines of the day to fit your own sensory needs, to fit your own sensory preferences, as it would be perfectly normal to do. That maybe recognising that would be the place to start. I wonder just to finish up, does anybody have any ideas or ways that people could start to do that, start to recognise their own sensory preferences? Speaker: I think one of the ways maybe of doing that is really just being very reflective and also just focusing on how things might feel for us. I think for me, the way that I've been able to do this is really just tuning into myself about what I find good and what I find not good. Really keeping it really, really simple. I think this is how I start with the children that I work with as well. What just feels good and what doesn't feel good? It's not that we're trying to avoid everything that doesn't feel good and just focus on why that is and what's happening in our body. Speaker: I really like that Emma, that have got me thinking about the daily tasks we do that we participate in throughout the day from the moment we wake up. Thinking about what things are currently embedded in your morning routine, for example, and thinking about what's the purpose of those activities. Just say you are someone that wakes up and the first thing you need to do is to have a shower. It's thinking about, okay, so why do I think that I do that? Is it because it helps me to feel more alert? Does it help to soothe me? Then what follows, is it a cup of coffee? It's thinking about, yes, our likes and our dislikes, but also then does this particular thing that I do, does that make me feel more alert or does it help to calm me? We can start to bring in I guess those two elements too. How does that sensory input change the way I feel? Speaker: I think that's really important, isn't it? Then not to assume that our children are the same as us. To look at what they do and how certain activities impact them because I think this is one of the things we have a very belief about of the way I experience the world must be the way that everyone else experiences the world and that actually the more and more timely work with children within this sensory processing, we realise that actually, no, that's not the case. We all experience it in a very different way and each way is perfect and valid. Do it for ourselves, to understand ourselves, and also try do it reflectively for our children as well. Speaker: It's like a beautiful way to celebrate our unique differences, right? Our sensory preferences, really. Speaker: Beautiful. Thank you so much, guys. Obviously, I think that was a really interesting conversation. Maybe where we'll take this for another episode is starting to think now about how can a parent, when they're in tune with their own sensory preferences, how can they support their child to manage their child's sensory preferences? Once you start with yourself, how do you then move on to help somebody else to co-regulate somebody else? Maybe that's where we'll go next. Thank you very much. Lovely to talk to everybody today. Speaker: Sensory Chat is produced by Sensory Integration Education. In each episode, qualified sensory integration practitioners share their personal opinions and ideas with parents and families in mind. We would love to hear from you. You could find us on Facebook and Instagram at sensoryintegrationeducation. Please note that for specific advice for your child, a sensory integration assessment would be needed. Speaker: Sensory Chat is produced by Sensory Integration Education. In each episode, qualified sensory integration practitioners share their personal opinions and ideas with parents and families in mind. We would love to hear from you. You could find us on Facebook and Instagram at sensoryintegrationeducation. Please note that for specific advice for your child, a sensory integration assessment would be needed. Sensory Chat is brought to you by Sensory Integration Education www.sensoryintegrationeducation.com
S2 E4: The Importance of Regulation and Co-Regulation
06-06-2023
S2 E4: The Importance of Regulation and Co-Regulation
In this episode, Amy, Emer, Emma, Angela and Lelanie discuss regulation, defining the term and sharing the neurology of being regulated and dysregulated. They dive into how we as individuals experience this through our senses as well as through our emotions. In this conversation, they also highlight co-regulation and how co-regulation can support individuals who may need the support of another to regulate their nervous system. Transcript Speaker: Hello, and welcome to this episode of Sensory Chat, the podcast for parents and others interested in all things sensory integration. Speaker: Hi, I'm Amy Stevens and I'm calling in from Salisbury in the southwest of England. I'm a speech and language therapist and an advanced practitioner in Ayres sensory integration. Speaker: Hello, I am Emer Broderick and I am an occupational therapist based in London in the UK. I am also an advanced practitioner in Ayres Sensory Integration. Speaker: Hi, I'm Emma Snowdon and I am a children's physiotherapist and I'm also an advanced practitioner in sensory integration. Speaker: Hi, my name's Angela. I am an occupational therapist based in Melbourne, Australia and I'm also an advanced sensory integration practitioner. Speaker: Hello, I'm Lelanie Brewer. I'm a children's occupational therapist and academic researcher based in Bahrain. Speaker: Today we thought we would move on slightly from our last episode. We talked in our last episode about our sensory preferences, and we introduced the idea that actually rather than there being anything wrong and that sensory processing, there's something wrong with that, we all process sensory information and we all have our preferences. We talked about maybe some of the difficulties that we experience in our families and with our children, not because there's something wrong with our child, but that we have different preferences that may clash or not necessarily sit together really well. That led us into thinking about regulation, and what we mean by regulation and self-regulation and the importance of co-regulation with the parent-child interaction, that parent-child bond when they're really little to help lead us and to be able to self-regulate. We thought that we would have a discussion about that for this episode. When thinking about regulation, I think we all have an idea what regulation is in our mind. I think we can certainly recognize when we are not regulated, but what do we mean? For me, I always take this back to the neurology, and I don't get into really serious sciencey stuff here, but really simplistically, let's take this to what we would consider as stress. When we are stressed, we are not regulated, we are not calm, we are not in a state where we can function efficiently. For me, that's what regulation is. We can look at regulation in terms of our senses. Are we sensory-regulated? Are our senses working in a way that is going to allow us to function? We can look at it in terms of our emotions as well. Emotionally, if something really bad happened to us that impacts how we are feeling and how calm and how focused we are able to be. For me what's really important is those two things are really, really closely linked. If our senses are not regulated very well and they're not in balance and they're not allowing a dysfunction, that is really going to impact how we emotionally feel, but vice versa as well. If something really awful has happened to us or something really exciting has happened to us, that's going to impact how our senses will feel as well and how we will process the sensory information that's coming in. Just to give you an example of that is a time in my life when I was really, really stressed, taking too much on as you do as a working parent. It was those times that I started to notice that actually I couldn't cope so well with noises around me and I couldn't cope with bright lights in supermarkets. The big thing for me is I worked up, I just couldn't cope driving because that was just too much of a sensory demand. I think this helps us to realize that this is actually, when I'm working with children and sensory difficulties, it always comes back to regulation. Let's focus on where we are, how we are, and how our child is. That is the bit that I like to start with. If we think about co-regulation and where does this ability come from to be able to regulate ourselves? That comes right back from when our babies were actually in our womb or those early days. This is what we mean by attachment. Normal child development happens that we nurture, we comfort, we keep our children safe so we meet all of their needs, and our child will learn that their needs will get met consistently. Obviously, there's situations where this doesn't happen and we know that that leads to difficulties in later life. Let's imagine that this has happened. Our child is safe, we nurture our child, typical child development. Our child then gets confident and they start to explore the world. They go out, they'll play happily, but something will invariably happen. It may be they fall over, it may be another child comes and steals their toy, but that will dysregulate them, that will upset them when something goes wrong. Typically, that child will return to you and we give them nurture and we give them comfort and we regulate them. That is co-regulation. That is two people, one person helping to regulate another person to get them back to that point where they need to be, and then they go off and explore the world again. That is what happens throughout life. For some reason, I think once babies have grown up, we think we don't need to do that anymore. We do that with everybody, we do that with our partners, we do that with our children. I'm nearly 50 and yet if something goes wrong, I still call my mom. This is not something that is just for children, this is something that happens throughout life. This is where regulation comes from. This is where we learn how to regulate ourselves. Ultimately, the goal is that we get to what we call self-regulation. What we mean by self-regulation is that we have that ability to be able to change our arousal levels so that we can do what we need to do. I had to get up early this morning and I had to do something to increase my arousal levels, otherwise, I wouldn't even be talking right now. I had swift cup of coffee and moved around quite quickly. Similarly, if I need to get to sleep tonight, I need to lower my arousal levels so that I can do that. The aim in life is that we move progressively towards being able to do that independently. Although I know that there's a group of people out there that would say we never actually get to that point and we are always going to be reliant on other people to help us do that. Whether that's our partner, whether that's our child, whether that's our friend, whether that's our pet dog. This is what we're talking about and we want to really relate that to those sensory challenges that we might experience and how we can recognize when sensory challenges cause dysregulation, but also how we can use sensory strategies to help us with our regulation. Amy, what, what do you think about this? Speaker: Emma, just picking up on something you said, just to clarify because I think you used a term which I think a lot of parents will have heard from therapists who support them, and just because it means something different in everyday language than it does to us as therapists. That's the word arousal. Just picking up, what do we mean by arousal because in everyday language, it would be something a bit saucy and we're absolutely not talking about that, are we? What we mean is nervous system arousal or alertness. Being sufficiently alert or engaged in order to recognize and take part in what's happening around you. Speaker: Absolutely. Thanks for pointing that out. Actually, that's one of the reasons that we don't often use that word. Certainly not with a certain age group of client because it gets quite humorous at times. Speaker: You've had the conversation with teenagers where you regret using the word arousal. Speaker: I see. I certainly have. Speaker: Me too. That's what we mean. We mean an alertness or feeling that you are able to make sense of what's happening to you without feeling overwhelmed by it. That place there, that sweet spot between feeling overwhelmed or, "Oh, it's a bit much," and actually feeling a bit low or sleepy or not quite in the zone, not quite firing or on all cylinders. That to me would be where being regulated is. I wonder if that's the same for other people. I wonder if anybody would be able to pick up on something else that parents might have heard, which is a specific program called Zones of Regulation. I wonder if anybody would just mind to quickly just explain where zones of regulation might fit with what we're talking about. Speaker: Zones of Regulation is a program that I've started to see used more and more, especially in schools. A lot of primary schools in the UK have it. Well, a basic version of it really. What it does is supporting children to recognize where their arousal stage or where they are feeling they are. They have five different zones that are identified by color. There's a green zone, which is I am happy, ready to learn, feeling calm and alert. Then there's blue zone, which is, I'm feeling a bit sad or a bit tired, maybe a bit unwell. I'm not quite at the green zone where I want to be. Then you have the red zone, which is, I'm almost out of control. I just don't feel like I'm in control of my actions. I'm feeling very, very dysregulated. I'm not feeling calm, I'm feeling very, very stressed. The yellow zone is where you are before you get to that. The yellow zone will be, I'm starting to feel a bit anxious. I am maybe starting or maybe feeling a bit silly and feeling like I'm just a bit giddy. I'm finding it hard to sit still and finding it harder to be alert enough to sit and learn. The idea is that children would be able to identify what zone they're in, and most importantly, use strategies that are specific to them and their needs and their regulation needs in order to bring them back to the green zone. There is a recognition that it's very normal to go through from zone to zone. We all do it throughout the day. The idea is that children would have strategies to get them back into the green zone when they need to be there. For example, in schools, they might, at the start of class, let's get ourselves back into the green zone because now we're sitting in learning, for example. Speaker: Thank you so much, Eva. I think that's really useful for parents to understand because what that program relies on is a child being able to self-regulate. That's a child who has sufficient control over their nervous system that they can use external strategies to regulate themselves. I think we all work with so many children who aren't able to do that. If your child is not able to self-regulate, then zones of regulation is not going to be a helpful strategy. Angela, what do you think? Speaker: I'm thinking the exact same thing. I've absolutely used the zones. It's also part of many school curriculums here in Australia, and it absolutely has merit, but I think like all programs that are manualized, the key to the success is really being able to individualize it for students. That's tricky to do in a whole classroom. I think just something to be mindful of, really, is that if we notice that this particular program is perhaps not successful, is thinking about what is this child's experience of co-regulation, and perhaps they need some more individualized support in this space. Speaker: Yes, I completely agree, Angela. I think is a therapist, that works mostly in the field of trauma, and we're working with children have had difficulties with attachment. One of the things that I sort of hold in my head when I'm working is this thing about regulation. When children struggle to regulate, one of the things that works really useful is that connection based. What I mean by that is connecting with that child on an emotional level so that we try to understand that child. The child feels understood, connected to, and ultimately then feels safe. I think that can be the starting point sometimes as well. This is why it's really helpful for us to understand where self-regulation ultimately comes from, or regulation comes from. It comes from that very early connection that we have with children, that very early attachment. I agree that there's a lot of tools out there to help children to recognize where they are, but if they don't have that capacity to be able to regulate, then that's when I think we need to really think about how we as the person that ultimately is got to self-regulate, whether you're a parent or you're a teacher or whatever your role is, what can we do. At that point, it's down to us to be able to recognize that that child is dysregulated and to help regulate that child. Whether that is with sensory strategies, or whether that is then supporting the child to access the appropriate ones, or whether that is simply connection and doing that connection piece where we meet that child where they are and accept that child where they are and we share curiosity and we connect with that child. It's surprising that when we do that, how regulated that child can become just with that co-regulation piece. Speaker: Emma, just listening to you speak took me back to a previous point you made when we were talking about sensory preferences. You do a log of your own experiences thinking what makes you feel good. For the child who has difficulties with self-regulation, we always have to do these observations for them and to help them. Thinking about zones of regulation, whether it's a teacher or a childminder, what situations triggers the child, and what situations are more calming because the child might not realize what works for them. It becomes a little log that we keep for them and trying out different things as well. That can be a lot of trial and error. Speaker: It's a really interesting point. I sometimes do a very loose narrative when I'm working with children. I don't like to give them a narrative. I don't want to tell them how they're feeling and I don't want to tell them what's working for them, but I do a lot of wandering. You seem to look really happy doing that, or that seems to make you feel okay, or that seems to make you feel good, or you seem to be enjoying that. I'm doing that induce narrative so that hopefully, that's dripping in that actually this activity makes me feel good, vice versa really. Speaker: One of the things, Emma, that's coming out from what you're saying and also what from what Leilani was saying there too is, it really emphasizes that co-regulation comes before self-regulation. Co-regulation requires that the child know you and trust you, that essentially, it would be very hard for a stranger to co-regulate a child. It has to be someone that the child feels that trust and connection with. You can see how very hard that might be in nursery and in school where perhaps you had different staff members supporting the child in kindergarten or things, that at home, it's likely to be the lead parent who is the key co-regulating figure. That's quite a big demand, a big ask that you not only manage your own sensory preferences and needs, but that you're also responsible for the sensory co-regulation and emotional co-regulation of your children as well. I think we should not underestimate the demand that co-regulating places on you, as a parent. Speaker: Building on that a bit, Amy, also is that it's very difficult to co-regulate if you yourself aren't regulated. You were speaking about the demand of co-regulating, we also must be aware of our own regulation that another demand and our own regulation, as well as the child's regulation because if we are not regulated, it's pretty much impossible to co-regulate a child if we're very dysregulated. Speaker: That's got to be the trickiest piece. In a moment of your child's distress, you need to be actively trying to keep your own nervous system calm, your face, your body, perhaps neutral or welcoming, while you're actually feeling something completely different. It's a really, really difficult thing to do. Speaker: That is so true. It's not quite relevant but it links to this topic is, I've recently analyzed some data on parents and their children during the COVID-19 lockdown restrictions. I felt that what I was looking for was how children were doing in terms of their self-care during the lockdown. What actually came out as a much stronger thing was the mental impact that had on the parents, and how actually, the more dysregulated the child became, the anxiety levels of the parents, and they triggered each other. It actually has some really interesting repercussions that's actually going to affect-- We're going to see that probably in our camps and mental health services for a while. Speaker: That's really interesting. It's really useful. Hot off the press research, Leilani, that the impact of that stress and anxiety on parents' nervous systems and emotional regulation, as well as the impact on children. We're out of time for today's episode, but I'm wondering if maybe for the next episode, we might start to think about what strategies could parents use. What are some of the things that we know from a sensory perspective, as well as from an emotional perspective, can be really helpful to put yourself in that place of feeling calm and alert and regulated so that you can co-regulate your child. If you're happy to do that, should we do that for our next episode? Speaker: That's brilliant. Speaker: Great. Speaker: Lovely to talk to you today, guys, and see you again soon. Speaker: Take care. Speaker: Bye. Speaker: Bye. [music] Speaker: Sensory Chat is produced by Sensory Integration Education. In each episode, qualified sensory integration practitioners share their personal opinions and ideas with parents and families in mind. We would love to hear from you. You could find us on Facebook and Instagram at Sensory Integration Education. Please note that for specific advice for your child, a sensory integration assessment will be needed. Sensory Chat is brought to you by Sensory Integration Education www.sensoryintegrationeducation.com
S2 E5: Regulation Strategies That Fit in with Your Family
28-06-2023
S2 E5: Regulation Strategies That Fit in with Your Family
It can be an overwhelming process working with a therapist to help your child's sensory differences. Sure, they have the expertise to offer invaluable strategies to help your child, but how does the home programme fit in with you and your child's needs day-to-day? Could you start by focusing on fewer techniques rather than overloading yourself? We unpick these ideas in this conversation, and we raise important questions to ask you and your child once you begin your home plan. We emphasize self-care and provide small and tangible methods to regulate yourself through everyday activities. Transcript Speaker: Hello, and welcome to this episode of Sensory Chat, the podcast for parents and others interested in all things sensory integration. Speaker: Hi, I'm Amy Stevens, and I'm calling in from Salisbury in the southwest of England, a speech and language therapist and an advanced practitioner in sensory integration. Speaker: Hello, I'm Emer Broderick. I am an Occupational Therapist based in London, in the UK, and I am also an advanced practitioner in Ayres sensory integration. Speaker: Hi, I'm Emma Snowden, and I am a children's physiotherapist. I'm also an advanced practitioner in sensory integration. Speaker: Hi, my name is Angela. I am an Occupational Therapist based in Melbourne, Australia. I'm also an advanced sensory integration practitioner. Speaker: Hello, I’m Lelanie Brewer, I'm a children's occupational therapist, academic, and researcher, based in Bahrain. Speaker: Following on from our last episode, where we started to talk a lot about regulation, self-regulation, co-regulation, we thought today we'd talk a little bit about strategies that can help. I've been having a think back about-- Over the last 15 or 16 years, I've been working as an occupational therapist, supporting children and families who have difficulties, maybe regulation, sensory processing, and I was thinking about how, quite often, what happens is, a family will attend a therapy appointment. They will identify that thing, really like to work on a child's regulation. What happens sometimes, is that they are given a list of strategies, a long list of strategies that quite often include things like proprioceptive activites, heavy work, we call them activities that use our muscles and our joints, or deep pressure activities. I've just been thinking about that, because although we know that these activities can be really regulating for many children in themselves, they may not be. We need to think about maybe how they fit into a child's life, daily life, day to day. Also, what sort of social contexts, maybe, even, that they're in. Should they have helping them or supporting them with this, how the child feels in relation to carrying out these strategies, and even whether they enjoy them or not enjoy them, and things like that? I was just thinking about how that may or may not be actually supporting these children. I was just wondering about what, maybe, any of you thought about that. Speaker: Yes, I really liked that idea, Emma, that sense of the strategies here, that we know what they can be helpful. What are the pieces that have to be in place, or could be in place, to make those strategies work, to make those strategies effective? Is there other stuff that parents and families can do that aren't specific follow their strategies, which are generally going to be helpful for everybody to function really well? Lelanie, what do you think? Speaker: I'm coming in from this as my time as a community paeds OT in a very busy part of London, and then going working in private practice. I think one thing that parents often found really unhelpful was if the home program or the list of activities created extra work, because by the point somebody comes to you, they're desperate for help, they want something that's going to improve their situation, not make it worse. If your list includes activities, that can be amazing, but out of the way, something that you don't have access to, your stress and anxiety levels are going to go really high, and it's actually not going to make the situation better. The other thing, especially with the current cost of living crisis, I would just think of what recommendations we make, is it actually affordable? If you make recommendations for expensive toys, trampoline, a piece of equipment that is not affordable, you can actually make people feel worse about themselves. They're thinking, "I should help my child, I should buy that." Actually, no, you don't need to buy that. There are things we can do. There's lots of free activities we have access to in our daily lives that can actually make a huge difference. There's something that I have seen work a charm many times, it's actually quite fun. It doesn't sound fun initially, because the idea of going to a busy shopping center, but there are little children sized shopping trolleys, they can while you do grocery shopping. There you go, heavy work activity available, keeps your child organised and focused, and it actually can make a shopping trip a lot more pleasant for everyone. That is something that you're really going to,Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda, or wherever you're going. You're not going out of your way trying to fit something else in, and there's an activity there that you can do. Laundry, or pushing a heavy laundry basket. Little ones often like to help in the house. Again, free activity that you can turn into a game, might spend two or three minutes longer on the job, but you can do something there. Speaker: I absolutely agree Lelanie. That idea of you don't need to buy equipment to work on sensory processing. If it fits into the routines of the day, it's much more effective. I think there's a piece there, that maybe we need to talk about, that-- If you are dysregulated, or if your child is dysregulated, then even the best strategies in the world are not going to work and not going to help. What could we do? What are the priorities to get to that place of ready for takeoff, ready to start? Was the core stuff to get us to regulation enough to put strategies in place? Emma, what do you think? Speaker: Probably going to sound, really, like I'm coming at this from a very different place, but for me, as a parent, a therapist, or a teacher, whoever I am working with, a child that's got those sensory needs, for me, the first point has got to be my self-care, my regulation, and everyone's probably sitting there, parents that are struggling or going, "I haven't got time for self-care," then I think, "Stop." Okay? Get yourself on Facebook, Google self-care. You'll get many different cheesy quotes. They're cheesy, but they're true. We can't pour from an empty cup, if we've got nothing to give, we got nothing to give. If our batteries are depleted, we can't support anyone else, we can barely support ourselves. Self-care is essential, not a luxury. When I'm talking about self-care, I'm not talking about booking yourself two weeks at the local health spa, because that is not going to be realistic. We're talking about just tuning in to where we are, what we need. As a busy parent, often, we don't eat, we don't stop for a drink, we barely stop to go to the toilet, sometimes. If that is ringing true, then that needs to stop. We need those few moments. If we don't take care of ourselves, we have absolutely no ability to take care of somebody else. The problem is, we live in a society where we seem to have forgotten this, and we seem to not appreciate this. It is true. Anyone that's thinking that they don't have time for themselves, we've got to switch that mindset. It isn't being selfish by taking care of yourself, well, it shouldn't be your basic needs of going to the toilet, it shouldn't be more than that. If you're not doing that, that is the place to start to look after yourself. We can't possibly be expected to regulate another person if we're not regulated ourselves. Personally, for me, some of my strategies to self-regulate are breathing. Taking the breath. Now, everyone's different with this, people struggle with breathing, but for me, the bit that worked is just taking a really slow, long out-breath, the neuroscience behind that is when our out-breath is longer than our in-breath, it switches us back into a regulated state. I like a bit of visualisation. When I'm doing my out-breath, I see that switch being pressed, and it resets me. For me, my breath is something I've always got with me. I can do that wherever I am. Just tuning in to my body and its needs. Do I need water? It's going to take me a few seconds to rehydrate myself, but physiologically, I'll be back on track. Self-care is really, really important. We need to get ourselves into a state where that becomes habitual. That becomes regular. My advice to parents who are struggling is, just take it one bit at a time, take it slowly, just make one small promise to yourself that you're going to stop and breathe, or you're going to hydrate yourself today. That's all it needs to take it. It's not going to happen overnight, we have to train ourselves to get back to looking after ourselves. Next bit, for me, would be that connection piece that we've really got to recognise that any challenges our child has is going to put them into that state of stress, as well, that we've been in. Once we can regulate ourselves, we're going to focus back on our child. Connect with our child, try and meet them, try to meet them where they are. I use a model called PACE, which is from attachment theory, and it comes from Dan Hughes. PACE stands for Playfulness, Acceptance, Curiosity, and Empathy. It's a way of being, and it's very much how we are naturally with newborn children, really. If you think about how we are with a newborn child, with playfulness, we accept that newborn child isn't going to be able to look after themselves, or regulate themselves. We take on that acceptance of being able to do it. We're curious about what's wrong with them. If they're crying, well, what's wrong with you? What's there? What can we do to make it better? We go through the motions to try and make it better. We empathize. I think we can empathize with somebody a lot easier when we know they haven't got the capacity to do it themselves. If we followed that way of being around everybody, really, it doesn't have to just be children. We can do it to our colleagues, to our partners, we can do it with ourself as well. Then, actually, that allows us to connect with people. Once we've looked after ourselves and we can connect with other people, then I think is when we can start to look at that regulation from the sensory perspective as well. We can do those sensory activities that we've been giving them, our big list, but do them with a child, whatever they may be. We talk about linear vestibular as being a regulating activity, and the best way to explain what we mean by linear vestibular is think about what we do with a baby when we soothe them. We rock a baby. We don't rock a baby on their own. We rock ourselves while we are doing it. We are getting that linear vestibular movement. Now, if your child's anything over 3, 4, 5, well, we can still get them on our lap and do it, but a bigger child, what can we do? This is where those sensory things come in, like the swing, or what have you, or sitting on a gym ball. If you can put that child on your lap, if you can do it with them, rock with your child. Other things we can do, deep pressure. We squeeze our child, we swallow our baby. How can we do that with an older child? How can we put that deep pressure in, to soothe them? I always remember I have a nephew who's got some very quite significant sensory needs, he gets very overwhelmed, and he was really struggling. We had a big family play day. There was a lot of noise and he was really struggling with a headache. He was overwhelmed. I just took him really nicely with his dad and said, "Just lie down on the seat there." I said to Dad, "Would you just lie on him?" You're putting some deep pressure on him. I just said, "Is that okay? Are you all feeling comfortable?" I said, "Well, I'm just going to go to the toilet. Just stay there for a bit and see how it feels." By the time I came back, I took a bit of time doing some deep breathing in the toilet, [chuckles] which is my time for myself on the toilet. Came back and I said, "How are you feeling now?" I'm connecting with him. I was at his level and he said, "I feel a lot better now." That deep pressure was there, which is the sensory bit, but that connection with dad, who you feel safe with, was there as well. It's about how we put these sensory strategies in, I think, is really, really important. Speaker: Yes, I've been thinking about perhaps some more strategies for the parents that are listening. Emma talked about this idea of self-care being a necessity and something that we shouldn't feel guilty about doing. How do we do it in a way that it doesn't feel we're doing something extra? I've been thinking about tasks that we do throughout our day, like hand washing after going to the toilet, or after doing dishes. We can do this very mundane task in different ways. This idea of deep pressure, we can wash our hands really, really briskly, and do it really, really quickly, which is going to increase our arousal levels, or we can do this task by doing it slowly, with deep pressure. We can grab some breaths while we are doing it at the same time, and so, in that moment, we're actually providing ourself with some regulating touch. I was then thinking about showering, our preferences for smell and texture, and how showering is an activity where we can bring some of our preferences in by choosing a soap that we love the smell of. Again, by getting these little hits of a pleasurable smell that, in and of itself, can just, for a micro-moment, interrupt our stress. I think it's really important to think about these daily activities that we do to reduce our stress, and make us more available for the children that we support and that we look after. Speaker: I was just thinking to share a way I describe it when I support junior therapists who are just coming into the profession. There's often therapists who are learning how to do this work, they feel quite confident about, "I know 400 things which could help, and I want to share that knowledge and information. I'm going to give the parent everything I know about getting regulated." Sometimes, I've described it this way, as this metaphor that the destination is regulation. When you give people strategies, you give them a hundred different routes on a map to get to regulation. It doesn't matter which route they take, so long as they get to the regulation. They don't need to try all of the routes. They need to find one that works for them, and use that consistently, but nobody is going anywhere if there's no petrol in the car. If your focus is on the destination and the roots, and you overlook the facts that, in this metaphor, the person who's going to get the child to the destination is the parent, the car, and there is no petrol in the car, you can't even get going. If you are bombarded with a list of strategies, but nobody is supporting you to get yourself calm, organised, and ready to be that external support to your child, throw it back. Can't do that. I need help. I need support to get to that place. Speaker: That's a really lovely analogy, isn't it? It's so true as well, that we can give you all the strategies in the world to get there, but until you find your own personal way to fuel yourself and put petrol in your own car, you are not going to get anywhere, are you? It is a really lovely example of how self-care is one of those first things that we need to think about. Speaker: During lockdown, I always used to have sanitiser, the hand gel, in my car, and I would be constantly going on it when I got in my car. If I was visiting kinder schools, and beyond, once we transitioned back into a normal way of working. Now, I have hand cream in my car, and I've figured out what type of hand cream I really like, one that doesn't leave a film on my hand, it needs to be absorbed. Then this idea of sweet almonds and vanilla, again, is something that I really like, but that's become a ritual now. This idea of driving to work now has this lovely little regulating piece that I do each day. It makes me happy when I do this. Speaker: What I find really helpful is, when I start supporting families, really just getting a really in-depth idea of their daily routine, what they do most days, then you know the environments they're in, you know what's available within that environment, and you start to see where the needs come in at different parts of the day. Help us come up with more specific strategies at specific times, in a specific environment, when we know what's available within that. Speaker: I'm going to say that, really, what we are giving parents permission to do here, and in fact, encouraging parents, is to say to therapists who are giving them lots of strategy, "This is too much, this isn't going to work. Help me to find one that fits into my life, my daily routine." Challenging your therapist to help you create routines that work within your family rather than just bombarded with more, more, more, more, more strategies. Speaker: I just want to add an extra point here. Sometimes we feel that, as parents, we need to listen to the experts, this therapist, but actually, you're the expert in yourself, and your child is the expert in themselves, and you're the experts of your family. Don't feel that you need to listen to other experts, because you know yourself best. Speaker: Well, it feels like we've covered quite a lot today, focusing in on that idea that strategies can be helpful, that they can only work in the context of you feeling regulated as the parent, and the child being as regulated as they can be. That part of what allows that to happen is the co-regulation, that's built on your emotional relationship of trust with your child, as well as any physical strategies that you do, and that more strategies isn't better, or works better. It's just different ways to get to the same point. The stuff that's going to work best is the stuff that's part of your everyday life. At core, what it comes down to is you feeling confident about using yourself as part of the therapy by investing in your self-regulation, your calm, alert, organised self-care. Thanks so much for joining us, everybody. We hope we found this useful. We'd love to hear from you. Do please feedback to us on our social media channels, Sensory Integration Education. We're on Twitter, we are on Instagram, we're on Facebook. We'd love to hear from you. If there's a topic that you would like us to think about, if you'd like to listen to some thoughts and ideas, just let us know, and we'd be happy to pick those up as a future episode of Sensory Chat. Thank you so much for joining us, and we look forward to speaking to you again soon. Bye. [music] Speaker: Sensory Chat is produced by Sensory Integration Education. In each episode, qualified sensory integration practitioners share their personal opinions and ideas, with parents and families in mind. We would love to hear from you. You could find us on Facebook and Instagram, @SensoryIntegrationEducation. Please note that for specific advice for your child, a sensory integration assessment would be needed. Sensory Chat is brought to you by Sensory Integration Education www.sensoryintegrationeducation.com

Season 1

S1 E1: Sensory Chat - Toddlers and Eating: A Sensory Perspective
04-02-2022
S1 E1: Sensory Chat - Toddlers and Eating: A Sensory Perspective
Listen in as four experienced therapists chat about the challenges that toddlers face with mealtimes. What should we be expecting of 2- and 3-year-olds at mealtimes? What skills do toddlers need to be able to successfully eat? How does their ability to sit up and sit still at the table affect their eating? Are tablets on the table a help or a hindrance? Why do we need to consider family and cultural contexts relating to mealtimes and how do our own sensory preferences affect our children’s mealtime experience? It’s all covered in this episode of Sensory Chat along with some handy tips and reassurance for struggling parents and carers. TRANSCRIPT Lelanie: Welcome to Sensory Chat, my name is Lelanie, I'm an Occupational Therapist and an Advanced Practitioner in Sensory Integration, and I'm calling in from Germany. Amy: Hi, I'm Amy, I'm a Speech and Language Therapist and an Advanced Practitioner in Ayres Sensory Integration, and I'm calling in from Salisbury in Southwest England. Angela: Good evening everyone, I am Angela and I'm calling from Melbourne Australia. I'm an Occupational Therapist and an Advanced Sensory Integration Practitioner. Emma: Hello from me, I am Emma, I am a Physiotherapist and also an Advanced Sensory Integration Practitioner. And I'm calling in this morning from Warwickshire. Lelanie: Our topic today is Toddlers and Eating. And I'm able to hand over to Amy now to set the scene for our next discussion. Amy: So, what we're thinking about in this episode, is really sort of looking at two year olds heading into three year olds around mealtimes. So that's often a time that parents talk to me as being particularly challenging. So, because I'm a Speech and Language Therapist, they're often asking me about a child who won't eat or will only eat a certain, you know, restricted range of foods, but also issues about children not wanting to, or not being able to come and sit with the family at the table, not being able to be part of the family experience of being part of a mealtime. So I think that's what we're going to talk about today. So I suppose to start off with, it would be interesting to have a think about some of the skills that you need in order to sit at the table at two and take part in a meal, have something to eat. So if we think about sort of the motor skills, the social skills, the, the cognitive skills, the language skills that you need to be building in order to take part. So, what do you think, Angela, would you like to, what kind of, if you were looking at a two year old, two to three year old, where would you be looking at their, their motor skills and development? Angela: Yeah, while just listening to you introduce that, I'm thinking, wow, like what a complex task. If we think about all the things that you know, we're asking of little ones during meal times and this idea of trying to break it down and really unpick, you know, each element to try and figure out what might be going on is really helpful, I think. But yeah, so motor skills, I guess, you know, this idea of kids needing to be able to sit upright and to sit still, if we can do both of those, then our hands and our arms are going to be more available to feed ourselves whether that's, you know, using our fingers or having a go at, you know, using a spoon. And so I think thinking about, the size of the tables and the chairs and whether or not it's, it's appropriate for your little one to be at the same table as the family. So I guess thinking about the motor skills, you know, this idea of being able to sit upright at the table, but also sit still, are two really important elements. And so it's thinking about how do we help kids to do that. The furniture, you know, the chair and the table that we use is really important. You know, making sure that the table is not too high, and that, you know, their little arms can come over the top and rest comfortably on the table, but also thinking about some support for their feet. You know, if children have that support under their feet, they're going to feel more grounded. So I think, yeah, the seating and the table height is an important thing to think about. Amy: Yeah. Angela, if I can just pick up on that. So if you think about swallowing, so the back of your throat, the tube that goes down to your lungs for air and the tube that goes down to your stomach for food, in your throat is the same, the same area, the same pipe. And there's a little flap that moves as you swallow to make sure that food doesn't go down into your lungs, you don't choke. Now obviously, as children are learning to coordinate, those are muscles too, they're learning to coordinate that chew and swallow. And that's something that takes some practice and thinking about it sort of in terms of your body's top priority is to keep you safe and keep you alive. That if you're, if you're not stable, if you're not able to sit and feel secure in your sitting or at some level your brain recognizes there's a risk that food's going to go down into your lungs, there's no way your body is going to let you carry on shoveling down peas. There's a kind of a survival response, which could easily... Yeah and equally we need to make sure our hands and arms are free, you know, so by having that secure base, they're going to be more ready, I guess, for action. Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. Lelanie: I'm so pleased to see - -in here on furniture, but one thing that's made me really happy to see in recent years is that more and more commercial providers, I'm not going to name any here cause we're not advertising anything, actually have chairs that you can adjust the foot rest, that you can adjust the seat. And also some of the providers have actually gone and have a chair that's adaptable from the stage where you can attach a tray, remove the tray, and then actually use the same chair at the dinner table. And I think that's really lovely because your chair grows with your child and from a social point as well, I think it means that your child is with you at the table. And then once they don't need the tray anymore, they can just push their chair to the table and you can adjust the Heights. And I would urge you to check those out,and any good nursery store or most stores, you can find them. Yes. I don't want to be flogging any particular ones. Amy: I was gonna say you stereotype OT's. that you are talking about chairs straight away. Angela: Well, I was just thinking about, so how long should we expect little ones to sit for right? And then if they can't sit for very long, how do we, how do we extend that? Or how do we prepare them for sitting? Amy: But do you want to pick up on that one? Emma: Yeah, well, actually in - really brings a lot to me cause I get this an awful lot and people say, you know, I sort of say, you know, does your child have difficulty sitting? You know, how long could they sit for? And it's very much the thing I get told a lot about eating and especially restaurants and going out, which is a whole other thing, isn't it doing it outside the home is, is the use of tablets and devices. And that seems to be something I hear an awful lot that yes, they can set as long as they've got a tablet or a device to keep them still. So I was just wondering what people's thoughts were about that really in terms of, how that impacts on the whole, mealtime experience. I don't know what your thoughts are there? Amy: So I'm very much torn. So in one way, I'm absolutely whatever works, works. So no judgment, if it works and the child is getting the calories, they need to grow and survive, go for it. On the other hand, it's something which might be short-term successful, long-term unhelpful. So short-term successful, but long-term, you're missing all of those cues around how to manage your body, how to manage the chew, manage the swallow. And often we learn those things by watching other people. I know it sounds pretty disgusting, but watching other people, chew and swallow is how we learn to chew and swallow. So being part of eating with other people and watching other people eat is how we learn, how we're going to manage spaghetti, how are we going to manage banana in our mouths. We learn by watching other people, by eating with other people, how to manage to eat, how to pick up rice and curry together and move it to your mouth. How to use bread, to scoop a bowl. We learn those things by being part of a mealtime where adults or those around us are doing those things as a model. Angela: And if the function of the iPad is to kind of keep kids sitting for longer than I'd be thinking about what can I do to kind of prep them before meal time, you know? And I think that's where our knowledge of some of our sensory systems in terms of providing some, a little boost of movement or a little bit of heavy work, which is, you know, where kids are using their muscles, through jumping on a trampet or doing some little yoga poses or animal walks or pushing against their parent's hands to create, you know, resistance. It's these types of activities, a little burst of that prior to meal time can actually then support sitting for longer. Lelanie: The other thing I want to add, Angela, I agree with everything you said is I've actually seen where children can sit longer than with the iPad or any other tablet, but then they're so distracted by the visual material that they're sitting, but they're not eating. I've seen that too. Angela: Or they slide off their chair. Amy: Yeah. I think as well that, you know, when we, when we talk about, you know, what's helpful for two year olds, one of the biggest helps for two year olds is predictability. So understanding what's going to happen. And that's what happens, gives you the safety, the security to be able to experiment and explore. So one of the things around meal times is, the more cues you can have about what is going to be happening, the more helpful it is. So eating at the same time, every day, eating in similar places every day, using the same kind of stuff on the table every day. But that can also be, or if, you know, if you do it at a table, I know some families, you know, the, culturally tradition is they eat together on the floor, but again, so the tradition is the same every time. And so if you can find things that your two year old can have a meaningful role in that sequence, a meaningful part of the steps that are going to bring you to mealtime so much the better. So could it be that your two year old will be pushing the chairs, you know, out from the table or something like that as part of their heavy work? Angela: Yeah, that's a great idea, integrating it into the routine, rather than thinking about doing something extra. Amy: You know, not many of us would, would kind of necessarily trust a two year old to carry a bowl of spaghetti to the table, but with support they can take a part. I can tell you, well, I can tell you a tip, a magical tip for helping with two year olds being able to keep stuff, not spill, it doesn't mean they won't spill. Let me tell you a speech therapy secret. So at two, you're really good at processing the big, important words, and it just takes you a beat longer to process some of the other words. So when you say to somebody don't spill it, what your brain hears is SPILL don't. When you say don't drop it, DROP don't. So if you say it as, keep it in the cup, keep it on the plate. Walk slowly. It's more likely that that would give them an a cue help them manage it a little bit better. Angela: Reinforcing the thing that we want them to do. Right? Yeah. That's great. Lelanie: Absolutely. Besides the posture and the carrying things around, there's also the issue about different textures and food isn't there? Because it's natural for children to you know, we try and give them a variety of food and their diets, but this is also the age where they say, oh, yeah, I've got control over mum now, if I don't want to eat this, I won't, and it's a fun age to throw things around, spill things, and you know, just exploring with different textures and it's for a two year old, you know, a nice bowl of greens or something goey might you know, they could see a different use for it, like rubbing it over the table. So, it's the tip, Angela? What is your tip for actually dealing with the texture issues and sitting, and, you know? Angela: I'm cringing a bit because like I can only tolerate a certain amount of mess and then I'm just like, ah, clean it up. And I'm sure this is the experience of many parents too. But I think, you know, there is this idea of food as play. And so, you know, children may be able to get some of that exploration, messy stuff kind of met outside of meal times. So I'd be encouraging, you know, exploration of, of messy play and, and food picnics, you know, outside of the main meal time, as a way of trying to maybe satisfy some of that need, if that's what the child is seeking, you know, if that's what they're craving, So that's one thing I'd be kind of thinking about. Amy: Emma, what do you think? Emma: It's really difficult, isn't it? Because so many things could be going on for that child, you know, it may be the child just isn't hungry, or they don't like that food, or there's other issues in terms of, you know, what's happening in terms of the family. I think in terms of just picking up from what Angela said, I think that there's balance, isn't it it's about balance. And I think if we, as parents are really aware that we are, struggle with mess, then I think that's something that maybe we need to look at a little bit as well, because actually it's normal to make a bit of a mass and it's okay. You know, unfortunately I have seen it lately where children haven't been given those experiences for mess, you know, whether that's at meal time or outside of meal times, and they then don't develop because in the same way, because they haven't had those experiences with different textures and things. So, you know, we often talk about being aware of our own needs as parents and therapists. I think that is an area to just be a little bit conscious about if we do struggle with mess because it will impact how our children are. But yeah, I think, you know, it's just a time for exploration, isn't it? And I think one of the key points that you said Amy, was this whole thing about learning through watching, and copying. And that really takes us back to what have we done previously with children and their meal times and things, because if we suddenly throw children into how to sit as a family, then they're going to struggle more than if they've watched that as they've grown up and they've seen that happening, haven't they? So it needs to be normalized, doesn't it? You know, it is normal. We eat, you know, we do it in different ways and it does need to be normalized to something that we do. So... Lelanie: Absolutely. And the other thing that is really interesting for me, its a different approach to feeding. So we're not talking about this in this podcast, but there is the whole child-led weaning versus, you know, what you're giving your child's food. And that, you know, that's a different debate for a different time, but if you're going down the child-led weaning route, I think those examples is really important because how are you going to know what to eat if you don't watch anyone else eating? Amy: I think there's that piece there that we've started to explore around, you know, sort of cultural differences and, and sort of slightly needing different skills for different ways of eating. So, Emma, you mentioned as something that we haven't really talked about here is that when you're eating outside of the home, so sort of what you eat in your kitchen is different than what you eat at Grandma's house. And perhaps the expectations for table manners are different at Grandma's house than they are at your house. But also when you eat out at a burger restaurant or you eat out at a birthday party, or you eat out at a different kind of restaurant or a celebration meal, those challenges, it's huge. Emma: And those children that go to the nursery and things like that, parents often report that their children will eat things at nursery that they won't eat at home and things like that, or they do things in a different way. And I think that could be quite difficult for parents to understand sometimes. Amy: That's about that cueing, isn't it? You know, the expectations of what will happen in one location don't necessarily match the cues of what will happen at another location. I'm wedded now to this idea of Grandma's view of table manners, it's certainly been an issue, I'm sorry mum, it's certainly been an issue in my family. So, what advice would you give people where they might, parents who might be encountering that sense of, other family members having very firm ideas about how two year olds should eat and what it should look like? Emma: You're asking me that Amy crikey. I think I'm a little bit with you and it depends on what the situation is. It depends on whether we've got a child that happily eats most of the time, because if your child's happily eating most of the time, if they're struggling with one particular meal time or they don't want to eat at one particular time, that's not a big deal, is it. But if we're dealing with a child who really struggles to eat and we're becoming quite anxious as parents, that we need to make sure they're getting the right nutrients and the calories. It's a very different situation. Isn't it? So yeah, I think it's, it's about, it's about balance. Isn't it of expectations. We can put extra demands on children short-term but I think we need to be careful about what we do generally as well. Then the last thing we ever want to do is make something an issue when it doesn't need to be an issue. And I'm a bit more of a relaxed kind of parenting person, things have never been too, you know, I I'll let things go quite easily, but then again, I haven't had major issues to deal with. So that's coming from quite a secluded kind of perspective. But yeah. Yes, I think we've all been there where we've got different expectations at different times. Amy: But one of the things that definitely, when I tell parents, they're sort of slightly surprised to learn that actually, you know, they, they get worried about how much food their child is eating and you don't actually need a massive amount of food, every meal. So kind of what would constitute a good amount of food would be the amount of food you can hold in your two hands. So beyond that, You know, that's, you know, how great, but you don't have to scoff down everything on your plate in order to have enough food to grow and develop. And then the second piece is that, you know, your, your need for different nutrients, different vitamins, different kinds of foods, they happen across a day and across a week. It's not that you have to have in every meal, every different kind of food, every different kind of vitamin, every kind of nutrient. So it can be more, you know, relaxed. The other piece as well, that when we're working with kids who have difficulties tolerating, a large range of foods for sensory reasons, we talk a lot about unhooking from those traditional notions of what you're allowed to eat at any time. So there's no reason why you only have to have toast at breakfast, there's no reason why toast can't be a dinner food. There's no reason why spaghetti bolognaise can't be a breakfast food, if that's what your child will eat. And it's a way to give them the calories that they need to grow and develop. Lelanie: That's so true Amy, one of the things I remember before the pandemic was I was traveling to Hong Kong and I was amazed that they were serving noodles and prawns for breakfast. Yeah, never thought about it, but actually in different cultures, people can be as well, eating different things at different times, but that was a real opener for me in terms of my stereotype, what breakfast should look like. The other thing that I wanted to add to what you were saying was, is we also have to remember, we don't eat everything. So if a child eats a good selection of fruit, but hates pineapples or hates bananas, but eats a lot of other foods, I think that's okay. I think I've seen a lot of frustration from people that I know are like, oh, he won't be spinach or she won't eat butternut squash, but actually if you're eating other fruits or vegetables or other food with the same nutrients, I think that's okay as well. It could be a reason, it could be the colour or it could be the taste, it could be anything. But if, if the child's eating well, generally I wouldn't, yeah, not to be too worried right now. Amy: Yeah, I would agree. And I think there's that sense of,almost kind of, it doesn't matter if they're not eating a lot of different kinds of fruit, one kind of fruit or vegetable will do. Though, you know, people get very worried that their children only eat a very small range of foods, but actually when you start to make a list of actually what they will eat, even if they only need it, sometimes it's often wider than you think. And as long as there is something there that is a good source of carbohydrates, a good source of protein, some vitamins and minerals, some vegetables, even if it's, you know, one kind of vegetable in one way, that's fine. That's fine to get going. Okay. Lelanie: Absolutely. Thank you so much for joining us on Sensory Chat today, we look forward to you joining us on future sessions and we'll carry on talking about toddlers and sensory challenges in life. Thank you. Sensory Chat is brought to you by Sensory Integration Education www.sensoryintegrationeducation.com
S1 E2: Sensory Chat - Eating Out with Children: A Sensory Perspective
03-03-2022
S1 E2: Sensory Chat - Eating Out with Children: A Sensory Perspective
Eating out with very young children can be a frantic rather than fun experience. Particularly if your child gets easily overwhelmed or over-excited. Listen in as four experienced therapists chat about how to make taking your toddler to a cafe or restaurant be less stressful and more enjoyable for the whole family. Get tips on how to help your child be prepared for the experience. Learn how a stomping walk beforehand can help your child sit for longer later. What should you look for when choosing a child-friendly restaurant -  and we don’t just mean the menu. This episode of Sensory Chat is aimed at parents but will also be useful for teachers and professionals. TRANSCRIPT Lelanie 00:31 Hello, welcome to Sensory Chat. My name is Lelanie. I'm an Occupational Therapist and an Advanced Practitioner in Sensory Integration. I'm calling in from Germany. Amy 00:43 Hi, I'm Amy. I'm a speech and language therapist and also an Advanced Practitioner in Sensory Integration and I'm calling in from Salisbury in Southwest England. Angela 00:54 Hi everyone, my name is Angela. I am an Occupational Therapist and an Advanced Sensory Integration Practitioner, and I'm calling from Melbourne, Australia. Emma 01:06 And good morning from me, I'm Emma Snowdon and I am a Physiotherapist and I'm also an Advanced Sensory Integration Practitioner. And I'm calling in from Warwickshire. Lelanie 01:19 In today's podcast, we're going to be talking about eating out. In an earlier podcast, at the side, we were talking about difficulties from a sensory perspective, that you might see with toddlers eating and feeding at home. This podcast is for parents, but would also be useful for teachers and healthcare professionals. Amy 01:44 Right, so we were thinking really about what happens when you're going out with your little one to a restaurant, I guess that could be like a fast food restaurant, like a pizza place or a burger joint, or it could be like a, sort of a more formal restaurant, particularly if you're thinking about a restaurant where you're going out for a special occasion. So there's quite a lot of excitement and up involved in going into the restaurant. So I'm just wondering, from each of your perspectives, if parents are thinking about, maybe even dreading going to a restaurant with their little one, from a sensory perspective, what kinds of things should they just have in the back of their mind that they should be thinking about? Angela, would you like to kick us off? Angela 02:34 So, I think when we're thinking about taking our little ones to a place to eat, you know, it's all going to be very new. You know, this may be the very first time they've ever been to a place like pizza hut, and so I think if parents can begin to kind of have some conversations around, you know, what the place might look like, what sorts of things they might see in there, you know, what are the people, you know, that there'll be waiters and waitresses, and so it's about preparation. Really. It's about helping our little ones to begin to, understand what to expect. So that would be a good kind of starting point to start kind of talking about it, you know, with their child. Amy 03:24 Yeah, I agree. I think that predictability is very helpful and definitely, you might be thinking about kind of how you can bring in some of the aspects into play. So for example, the idea of having to choose food off a menu is not, I mean, in my home, maybe it's different than your home, but seldom do we have menu choices in my home. So that whole idea of actually there being a choice of foods, that's a new concept, that's a new thing, but that's something that's very easy to play when you're playing, you know, games, games with your child. Emma, what do you think? Emma 04:01 Yeah, I think the thing is the same meetings to think about isn't there, because like you say, it's a whole new experience. And I suppose specifically thinking about, the environment as well. I think we've got to consider all of those extra sensory things that we wouldn't necessarily have at home. So, you know, the noise, that's going to be very different in different places, isn't it. You know, in terms of how echoey it is and how many people are there, but there's other sensory challenges, including the smells, you know, having to sit still, thinking about sitting still, waiting, all those things that can be a real challenge for a two year old in general, but particularly for a two year old with sensory challenges, that could be difficult. So yeah, there's many things, is there an element we want to particularly discuss here? Amy 04:57 I'd love to pick up on that idea of waiting, so I know that. Yeah. So as Ayre's Sensory Integration Practitioners, you know, we think a lot, we talk a lot about the development of executive functions. So those are those higher level skills. And one of those is being able to sort of, inhibit impulses and to kind of wait and to attend those kinds of things. So, you know, let's, let's give people the benefits of what we know. So, Lelanie, would you have a sense of kind of what's typical at two in terms of being able to attend, being able to wait? Lelanie 05:34 I think a two it's very difficult because you, it's all about instant gratification. I want it now, in fact, I wanted it yesterday. So I think one of the things that we have to be mindful of is actually having things to do for children. I love the idea of colouring books and crayons or something to do. But I'm also aware for families that this can be really challenging if their child's actually not happy with the activities on offer. So a tip that I would have is taking something with you that your child enjoys doing, something that's low maintenance that, wouldn't cause problems. For example, taking a toy that can keep falling on the floor could be more stressful than it's worth. So something like a sticker book, or that's a nice activity for two year old and it's quiet and easy. Or a favorite toy that they enjoy playing with, or even a tablet or electronic toy, as we said in an earlier podcast, everything in moderation and sometimes, there's no judgment from us. You have to do what's needed sometimes. So I wouldn't expect a two year old to sit in a formal setting and think, oh, this is amazing, I'm going to wait 20 minutes for my food and be happy. So I think you're setting up yourself a failure if you definitely think that's going to happen. So yes, definitely prepare. Amy 07:08 Yeah, I'm definitely from thinking back to my speech therapy training, you know, the shorthand they teach you about attention is, you know, you can reliably expect one minute attention at one, two minute's attention at two, three minute's attention at three. So if you've got essentially you're working on two minutes, attention span, you, you might be looking at what little short activities can we keep rotating through rather than pulling out the rucksack with a hundred different kinds of activities in it. So short things that you can play over and over again, hand games, you know, like, you know what I mean by hand rhymes is, I'm sure, you know, I remember my grandad and probably your grandad too, pretending to pull the top off his thumb, you know, or pretending to take your nose, those kinds of games that are short engagement, interaction games. Those would be useful to have. So, sort of thinking more now, going back to that sense of kind of executive function, inhibiting impulse, being able to attend, attending to, being able to wait. Angela, have you got more thoughts that you'd like to add to that? Angela 08:16 Yeah, just listening to you talk, got me thinking about other kind of regulating tools that we could use while we're waiting. And I was thinking about, you know, having, straws to drink through, or, you know, sipper cups, so that deep pressure touch, you know, that we received through, through sucking, and the proprioception that active muscle work, that's required, you know, would be something to think about. And also, that, you know, the sensory preparation that we could perhaps do prior to going to the restaurant, and that might look like, you know, 10, 15 minutes of jumping on the trampoline, prior to arriving and, you know, the idea is that this should really sort of help to settle their, their little bodies, and hopefully set them up for a little bit more success with sitting. Amy 09:18 What about you, Emma, do you have thoughts that you would want to.? Emma 09:23 Yeah, I think the preparation is a really good idea. In preparation for the whole experience is a really good idea, but we, I think we sometimes forget that we can prepare the child's body for having to sit for a little bit longer. So like you said, trampolining or just going for a good walk. One of my favorite things, especially with two year olds, which is great fun is doing stomping walks and different walks. They're really getting a lot of that joint compression through stomping. And so we can really down-regulate that nervous energy and prepare them to be able to sit for longer. So, as we know that the proprioception stays in the body for a while and we get a longer effect from it, so that, it's always worth considering that. And I think I can imagine in a situation where you're going out for a special meal is probably quite hectic. So again, this is where that preparation comes in. To be able to plan actually, before we go for this, we can go for a little walk in the park or something. Just so, the child's going to cope with it a lot better, and that will also cope with any sort of, it will help the child cope with any over responsivities they've got to noise and things like that as well. Amy 10:32 I think it might be worth to, sort of just flagging up as well, that, sort of traditionally, people might think of, going for a walk or having a run around a sort of burning off energy. And when we're talking about this as kind of sensory preparation, what we're talking about is doing something slightly different. So we know as sensory integration practitioners that the children and adults to using their muscles and joints, the feedback that that gives to your brain helps your brain to organize and get calm. So it's not so much kind of burning off a bit of energy or anything like that. It's much more about there's a, there's a physiological process that happens if you move your muscles, that just allows your brain and your nervous system to be a bit calmer, a bit more organized, a bit more coordinated and together. Emma 11:26 Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. Lelanie 11:29 The other thing to think about as well in terms of preparation is just checking on seating and cutlery, for example, because in our earlier episode, we talked about having chairs at the right level and how that posture can influence children's eating. A lot of restaurants have high chairs, but if you're unsure, it is worth calling ahead during busy times as well, festive season to make sure that you can actually get a chair or any other busy time. And if you are not sure that they would have child size cutlery, it's just worth taking your own. The restaurants are great at Kiddies meals. But one thing that I found is they'r not so good with making sure the drinking cups and the cutlery are appropriate for a two year old. And that could cause some problems in itself. Emma 12:21 Yeah. I think that also leads to the, the sort of looking at what type of restaurant that you choose to go to as well, you know, there's a lot of, sort of help yourself kind of restaurants. So if you've got a child that really struggles with that waiting, then that's something that, maybe more appropriate for your family. One of these restaurants where you can just go and help yourself to buffet-style thing. But then you've got those more traditional restaurants where you may potentially be having to wait a while. So I know for some people, if it's a big celebration, that's going to be dictated to you by other people. But for parents just to have that conversation about whether or not it's going to be appropriate, because, you know, we need to be moving away, as a family we have to meet everybody's needs, but that also means the child. And actually sometimes it may not be appropriate for that two year old to be going to a posh restaurant late at night where they have to wait because it's, it's not fair. You know, a two year old isn't neurologically able to cope with that very well. We may then wonder why they're having a, you know, meltdown when they just can't cope with it. Amy 13:35 I think that's leading something that I'm sure we'll talk about a lot. And that is, you know, if you're supporting a child, any child who has sensory difficulties, sensory challenges finds environments really hard to cope with, that part of what they need from you as their parent, is for you to help them advocate for themselves. So to help, to explain to the other people in the family, why this just isn't going to happen, to explain that you're not being naughty, you're not misbehaving, you're just trying your best to cope with what you're experiencing. But that puts parents in quite a tough place. You know, that nobody trains you to be an advocate for your child. Nobody trains you to have to explain to your mum why it looks like your child is wriggling round and things like that. Does anyone have anything that they would want to add? Lelanie. Lelanie 14:30 What you're saying, just reminded me of a funny, personal story. When my daughter was exactly two years old, I got told off at a restaurant in front of tower bridge, that my daughter was jumping up and down and causing the other customers to be annoyed. A very well behaved child normally. What was happening in the background though, is the tower bridge was lifting up and a boat was coming through and there was a lot coming on. And I actually thought to myself that is a lot to process. This is an extraordinary event to see a bridge lift up that you've never heard of and see a big boat. And I just thought different circumstances, I thought people could have been a bit more forgiving and I, and I just think that's an extreme example. The stimulation is just so much greater in a new environment. Children will, a different type of light, new pictures on the walls, the layout of a new place, there's so much to process. So I definitely think that we need to take that into account and for anyone going on holiday and seeing new places and restaurants, I think, you know, have to apologize to people, but actually I would never blame a two year old for getting excited about seeing new things. Angela 15:56 I am just thinking that sounds like a very appropriate response. And I'd also get excited by seeing those big gates lift up a boat come through. Amy 16:04 So I think it's sort of where, this is sort of where we're coming to the end of our time already. Gosh, time flies. But I think this is where this is leading us and maybe something that we'll pick up on again, or perhaps something that, you know, people listening to the podcast might want to contribute to or to ask us about it. And that's kind of, as a parent, as a parent of a child with some sensory difficulties, what should you be doing? How do you, how do you frame what's happening to other people? What language could you use to describe what's happening? So I know, sort of not putting people on the spot, do people have kind of phrases that they find helpful, for parents to use, to describe what's happening? Emma 16:50 I think one of the key thing there is for parents to feel confident in the fact that they know their child. Because we all get told lots of advice and your child shouldn't be doing this and your child shouldn't be doing that. But actually, most people are coming at it from a sort of neurotypical kind of perspective. So for, for parents of children that have got sensory difficulties, or other issues, it's really feeling confident in your knowledge that, you know your child best. And to help with that, that is really important that the parent is regulated themselves so they can stay calm in the face of any issues that might come. So I think it's really important that parents are really confident about their knowledge that they know that child best, and that they look after themselves as well. And so when we go back to that preparation bit about comparing your child, you know, think of yourself as well, you know, because as corny as it sounds, I always say this, you know, the whole thing that you can't pour from an empty cup, it's corny, but it's absolutely true. As a parent of a two year old, you are still very much responsible for their regulation and you can't do that if you're not regulated yourself. So, so just to look after yourself, and be confident that you know, your child best and don't be swayed by ignorance of other people, because it's not going to help you or your child. Amy 18:14 Just to wrap up, thank you so much, everybody, look forward to speaking to you again soon on Sensory Chat.Sensory Chat is brought to you by Sensory Integration Education www.sensoryintegrationeducation.com
S1 S3: Sensory Chat - Getting Dressed: A Sensory Perspective
04-04-2022
S1 S3: Sensory Chat - Getting Dressed: A Sensory Perspective
Is every morning a struggle to get your preschooler dressed? This episode of Sensory Chat is for you, particularly if your little one has sensory issues around clothing or struggles with balance, body awareness or fine motor skills. Listen as four international therapists draw on their personal and professional experience to chat over what difficulties your child could be experiencing around clothing and dressing along with some practical tips to try. TRANSCRIPT Lelanie Hello. Welcome to Sensory Chat. My name is Lelanie. I'm an Occupational Therapist and an Advanced Practitioner in Sensory Integration. I'm calling in from Germany. Amy Hi, I'm Amy, I'm a Speech and Language Therapist and also an Advanced Practitioner in Ayre's Sensory Integration and I'm calling in from Salisbury in Southwest England. Angela Hi everyone. My name is Angela. I am an Occupational Therapist and an Advanced Sensory Integration Practitioner, and I'm calling from Melbourne, Australia. Emma And good morning from me, I'm Emma Snowden. I am a Physiotherapist and I'm also an Advanced Sensory Integration Practitioner, and I'm calling in from Warwickshire. Lelanie Welcome to this episode of Sensory Chat. Today we're going to be looking at dressing skills in two year olds and what type of sensory challenges we might see in this group of children and what tips can we give you. This podcast is for parents, but it will also be helpful for therapists and teachers. Amy So I think when we're thinking about trying to get a child dressed or trying to help a child get themselves dressed, we have in mind preschoolers, we're thinking about two year olds. There is nothing that brings out that terrible twos as much as perhaps dressing. So I'm wondering if we're thinking about things from a sensory perspective, what kind of challenges the two year olds nervous system would be encountering with that whole procedure of getting dressed. Emma, would you like to kick us off? Emma Yeah. So there's so many things to consider again, isn't there really. If we just take it straight into getting dressed in terms of the sensory issues, I suppose the first thing most people are going to think about is the sort of texture of clothes, whether the child's going to be able to tolerate that. So there's all those elements of it, but then I think the environment bit as well about in the morning that they're waking up from hopefully a nice sleep, and where's their level of arousal? Are they going to be able to cope with that, or are we going to have to think about getting them up and getting them regulated first? Whether that's up-regulating them, getting them awake, so the sorts of issues around that. Amy When you say level of arousal as Sensory Integration Therapists, we know what that means, but obviously a parent might be horrified hearing that. What do you mean when you mean sensory arousal? What do you mean by that? Emma So just sort of how alert and how well the child is, are they still very sleepy in the morning like I am? Takes me a lot to get going in the morning, or were they the child that's been awake from 4 o'clock that morning bouncing off the ceiling? So where the child is, is going to really impact on whatever you're going to be doing, basically isn't it. So there's that to consider first, before we even think about getting dressed. I certainly know from my experience of being a parent, it was very much about "let's just get the job done". That's probably not always the best way to do it, particularly if you've got sensory demands, because for that child, probably the last thing they want to do is think about getting dressed at that point. Is that okay? Does that explain? Amy Yeah, absolutely. So I'm hearing that kind of almost you're saying in some cases, that kind of urge just to get on with it is a little bit counterproductive and actually it might be worth spending a little bit of time trying to get the child's nervous system regulated enough to be able to cope with dressing, and actually that's going to save time in the long run. Emma Absolutely. And particularly if they've got some sensory sensitivities to certain textures and things like that. And also coupled with what you're going to be doing from that point as well, because often this is a big transition for children; waking up in the morning, getting dressed and potentially going somewhere is the massive transition. So there could be other factors like I don't want to be going somewhere or what have you, that could impact that child's desire to get dressed and do what's expected of them. So we do need to look at the bigger picture, and then actually bring it right down to the textures and things of what the clothing is, that's going to be difficult. So there is preparation, I mean, I know a lot of the children I work with, parents have realized this is a really difficult time, and so they will start with some preparation. So that might be some deep pressure hugs in the morning, so big bear hugs. So we using deep pressure there to regulate our nervous system and make it more likely that the child's going to cope with sort of difficult things like funny textures or scenes on socks and things like that. So we can put that deep pressure on, we can also do things like deep pressure massage, and certain vibration can work as well quite nicely to calm the child down in preparation for the actual thing of getting dressed. But that's really only just looking at the texture of clothes that might be difficult, and there're so many other skills involved with dressing such as the actual motor skills needed for it and everything else. Amy That's good. Well, maybe we can pick up on that Angela, tell us about the motor skills. What does a child's body need to be able to do in order to get dressed or to take part in getting dressed? Angela Sure. Yeah. So it really involves a sequence of tasks, doesn't it? Some kids may struggle with their balance, and dressing can be done in sitting which removes that need for balance, or it could also be done in standing and in that situation, most two year olds would need to put their hands on their parent's shoulders for support to enable them to lift up one leg, to put that through their pants, and then to shift their weight over to the other foot and to put that foot through their pants. And so this idea of balance and having body awareness to be able to put their head through the hole of their jumper, all of these skills or steps involved with dressing, generally need adult support to be successful. And I think one of the tricky things about this age is that they're like, "I can do it", and they want to do these bits independently, all by themselves. So it's finding that balance between providing them with the support that they need, but also either helping them to think that they're contributing or enabling them to play a part, so for little things like zips, it could be that we align the bits at the bottom, we connect the zip to the base, and then the little one can actually do the pulling action and that involves the control of the small muscles in the fingers. So there are little bits and pieces throughout the dressing sequence that we can help our toddlers to practice and develop. But it takes time, it really does take time and repeated success. Amy That sounds like what we would perhaps describe as sort of backward training, giving the child the last bit of the process to do more and more. Lelanie, I mean, that works really beautifully when you've got a child who's, who's onboard with the project and really willing to take part but I know you've done quite a lot of research Lelanie, around families and children, where that isn't the case where. Well, dressing becomes a bit of a flashpoint for that. Lelanie Absolutely. So one of the things I want to go back through though is what Angela said about body awareness. So this is an experience that happened to me at work once. We had a nice sensory bin and the children were finding objects in all the beans and all the sensory materials and this little boy not two, but older, but still, this shows you what children with sensory difficulties can experience, was really excited to find a finger! He did not make the connection that this was his own finger. And this is actually, if you think about dressing and actually this is having a hand or your where's your foot. That's actually, if you think about the concept trying to get dressed, but you're not even sure where your body is in space, so this is your hand or your foot or your legs that are actually parts of your own body. So think of that and the added challenge of getting dressed. In terms of, to go back to your point about not wanting to get dressed, I think there's a lot of factors that influence that and it can really raise anxiety levels in parents and the children, and they can bounce off each other as well when people don't want to get dressed, and things that can be helpful sometimes is even just a t-shirt with a favourite TV character on can sometimes make a huge difference. Sometimes it's not about the texture or how to get dressed, but just something that the child likes. I remember the age where my own daughter, every second item in our house said Pepper Pig or Ben and Holly's little kingdom on it. And that was fine, that that's how we got dressed. And then you're also thinking about what's comfortable for the child, is it appropriate? I wouldn't worry too much about fancy clothes or over-dressing, if it's comfortable, if it's appropriate for the weather, I would say, stick with it, go with what's easy to wear. I would also add that comfort is key as well for children to be able to play. So all of the, sort of Frilly dresses for girls, for example, think of something that's easy to wear that enables your child to play. That's a different topic though, but it's also easy in terms of dressing. The other thing to add in as well, in consideration of clothes is at two you might start thinking about toilet training as well, which we're not going to talk about in this podcast, but you also want to start thinking about clothes that will be easy for toilet training, which we'll touch on in another podcast. But in terms of strategies for children who did want to get dressed as I think, try and work with them and find what they like. Another helpful tool to understand the concept of dressing is to maybe look at some of the dolls that you get, some of the life-size baby dolls and selection of clothes and lots of opportunities to practice the role play element and I think dressing the baby or dressing the doll would be helpful too. Amy I think that picks up on something we've talked about a lot and that one of the things that's hugely helpful and largely overlooked is predictability. So if the child understands what the sequence of getting dressed is, then it's much easier to be part of that routine. You can anticipate what's coming next. I think there's a fine line if I'm thinking about it from a speech and language point of view, there's a fine line between allowing the child to have some control and having some choices versus creating a level of demand that the child can't really cope with on top of coping with the motor demand and the sensory demand of getting dressed too. So one of the things that I talk about a lot, is it's really easy to overestimate how much negotiation a two year old can manage. So I know those of us who've been locked in a battle of will with two year old children kind of thing, they're brilliant negotiators, but actually, they don't really have the language skills to be able to compromise so they can express what they want and hold to it or release it, but they don't really have the skills to be able to find somewhere that isn't their choice or not their choice. So almost kind of as an adult, if you find yourself getting locked in that battle of wills, you're on a hiding to nothing. And the other thing to remember is that two year old children typically don't really understand conditional language very well. So conditional language is where you say something like if you do this, then you can do that. Or if you don't do this, then this will happen. So, you know, here's the, if what will happen here as a consequence, those conditions, children don't really understand those at two very well. So if you find yourself moving into language, which is kind of promising, "if you just put your trousers on I'll buy you a bicycle" out of frustration or whatever it is, children don't really understand that framing at two, and all they'll hear is "bicycle" here we go. So whatever you're promising, that's what they're expecting. So trying to avoid those I think would be, would be helpful. Any other thoughts Angela? What do you think? Angela One of the things that I was thinking about is, I guess, this process of moving into dressing often involves needing to stop something that might be quite fun for the child. And you know, sometimes there's no real easy way around this because you have to go somewhere. And so I guess I'm thinking about preparing the child for this upcoming change and acknowledging that, "Oh, I know you really want to watch more Bluey, but it's now time to get dressed." And then so bringing the clothes over, showing the clothes to the child, giving them a moment to kind of allow that, that idea to sink in, and then. I guess following through with what you've said, you know, so this idea of being predictable and doing what you say you would do. And so that can be quite tricky because it can often result in a child getting upset, because something fun is needing to stop or a favourite thing is stopping. But it's about providing that visual cue, that verbal cue and then, you know, transitioning into the task. Lelanie The other risk that I see that really tips parents over the edge, is like taking your child to an open wardrobe and say, pick your own outfit. That is how a colleague's son ended up going to church wearing a Batman suit and his slippers because she didn't have the will to argue with him. So to eliminate that risk, my suggestion is take up the clothes out of the dresser, maybe put it on the bed, or if you really feel that your child needs a choice, limited to two things that are appropriate for the weather or where you're going and just try and stick with it. But it's like taking a child to a candy store and saying, choose one thing. I think is just not going to work really well. Amy Yeah, I'm sure this is something we're going to pick up on a lot in a future podcasts. It's something that we say when we're talking about sensory integration all the time, and that is there's so much, you have to pick your battles, you have to pick the thing that's going to make the biggest impact. And quite frankly, if wearing the Batman outfit is going to mean that you get what you need done in the day, there are bigger things to put your attention and put your energies into. So wrapping up this episode, and I'm wondering if people maybe have a thought or a word of support for parents who are struggling with terrible twos and dressing? Emma, what would you say? Emma I think the theme that comes out in most of the things that we talk about really is that predictability and being very clear of the expectations and routine, the structure and everything like that. So I think that's something that's really important for parents to think about with everything, but particularly with dressing. And also from a sensory perspective, always think about that preparation. You know, if you can think about your child, where are they? Because if they're bouncing off the ceiling, getting dressed might not be quite, it's going to be quite difficult for them at that moment. So think about your child in terms of where they're at, what they're doing and support that transition that they need to do. And, and I completely agree, you know, I think there's worse things to be wearing than Batman outfits. So yeah chose your battles!Sensory Chat is brought to you by Sensory Integration Education www.sensoryintegrationeducation.com
S1 E4: Sensory Chat - Bedtime: A Sensory Perspective
04-05-2022
S1 E4: Sensory Chat - Bedtime: A Sensory Perspective
If bedtime means dread-time in your house, listen to this relaxed session of Sensory Chat where four international therapists chat over practical tips on helping your little one move towards a sleepy state. What is down-regulation? How can you use the sensory experiences of light, temperature, touch and taste to help get your toddler ready for sleep? Why does making the transition to bedtime longer and slower help, even when it’s probably the last thing you want to do! Listen to this final episode in the current series of Sensory Chat to find out how reframing your view of your child’s bedtime process can improve both your experiences of it. Transcript Lelanie Welcome to sensory chat, in today's episode we're going to be looking at the end of the day, getting ready for bed. What is the process involved in that and how that can be quite challenging for little ones with sensory difficulties. This is for parents, but will also be useful for teachers and healthcare professionals to listen to. Amy So when we're thinking about the state that your brain and your nervous system needs to be in, in order to be able to rest, in order to be able to fall asleep. There's a process of sort of calming down and it's not just sort of chilling out, but that kind of whole body, whole brain calming down, that we call that process of regulation and down-regulation. So I'm wondering if maybe we could just start talking a little bit about what down-regulation means. Angela, is that something that you would be happy to kick us off with? Angela Sure. So down-regulation is, I guess, working towards this sleepy state, you know, we need to be in a sleepy state to be able to then fall asleep. I guess how far we are away from that sleepy state can change each day, you know. And so this can be a real challenge around bedtime because you know, children, you know, may present as quite excited. And so then we perhaps need to work a little bit harder, or for longer, to reach this sleepy state. Amy So definitely in ASI, one of the ways we describe that is trying to get down to baseline for bedtime. And when we mean that, we mean quite a lot of  work that goes into managing the chemicals in your brain. So your neurotransmitters and the hormones that are going to allow you to calm yourself down. So we know that neurotransmitters and hormones like adrenaline and cortisol, those pep you up, give you energy to keep you going, but we're talking here about the opposite. So the parts of your nervous system that allow you to chill out and calm down, Lelanie, what are some of the things, what are some of the kind of sensory strategies generally that are useful for helping people to down-regulate, helping people to calm? Lelanie So one of the things that I think about a lot is around evening time, children are exhausted, and they often get this extra burst of energy running around the house. And then you have excited parents coming from work, tossing children up in the air, which sometimes doesn't help the frazzled parent who is at home with the child that time of day. It's about, for me, it's about slowing down, being calm, getting calm down. I actually think in Europe and it's very hard in the summer because you have the sun shining until 11 o'clock at night in some places, thinking about my colleagues in Scandinavia where it's sunshine so that's really hard. You want to sort of create the atmosphere as well to set the scene because a two year old doesn't have that instinctive cue, it can't make the connection, I’m tired, I need to slow down. So you need to structure it for them. If you're somewhere bright and sunny, think about curtains that are lined and blacked out or in the winter start dimming lights and just turn the TV volume down, maybe change to a calming program. I know there are BBC programs that used to be on like ‘In the night garden’, which is super annoying, but the tune is very calm and relaxing and thinking about something that is low in excitement and arousal, just to bring that calm vibe. Also in terms of eating, maybe don't eat too late at night and have lots of bright toys or excitable things around and just start packing things away slowly to almost decrease the temptation to still keep going. Amy So I'm hearing that one of the things that probably would be helpful that parents might, might be able to kind of emphasize more, is making that transition into bedtime longer and slower. So starting earlier with sort of just starting to change the pace down, to change the light levels that are around. It's very interesting to me, I’ve done quite a bit of research on, kind of what happens to your brain in terms of the light levels for sleeping. So one of the things that we know is some of the hormones that help you, it’s two different hormones, so one hormone helps you to fall asleep and a different hormone helps you to have the urge to go to bed and rest. So what you're hoping for is you're going to have high levels of both of those hormones at the same time. And for most of us as adults, we've had that experience of being really absolutely bone tired, but not being able to fall asleep. And that's because we don't have enough of the hormone that allows you to drop off. So it will be the same for children that being ready for bed doesn't necessarily mean that they're ready to fall asleep. And one of the things that regulates that, is the light levels. So, towards the end of the day, looking for warmer light, and what we mean by warmer light is trying to find lights that have a more kind of  yellow or red tone rather than lights which have a very bright or a blue tone. So that might be for example, in your home, putting the sidelights on, the table lamps on in the evening, rather than the main overhead lamp. But it might also be thinking about blue light from screens, from the TV, from computers, from phones and from tablets. Those are actually going to wake a child up more. So if you're using a tablet in bed that might not be helpful to help their hormones, allow them to go to sleep. Emma So, I mean in addition to the light, I think we also need to consider temperature as well because the body needs, the body drops temperature slightly just as it's falling asleep. And that's really difficult to do if we're in a very warm environment. So consideration of the temperature of the environment is really important as well for sleeping. Angela And adding to that, you know, in relation to taste and temperature as well, I'm thinking about the addition of a warm drink before bed, whether that might be hot chocolate, or it might be warm milk with some cinnamon or nutmeg. These types of tastes and spices are also generally quite calming and down-regulating and can help facilitate that process of moving towards that sleepy state. Amy I'm just going to pick up on that, the temperature, talking about temperature. So a study I did, we were looking at ways that for adults, you could help yourself fall back asleep if you were struggling with insomnia. And one of the strategies that we explored was changing temperature of your body. So if you were awake, making sure that you got up and got out of bed until your body got a little bit cold, and then getting back into a warm bed to help you drop off. But conversely, you could also do having a warm bath or a warm shower and then getting into a cool bed, so cool sheets. So that shift in temperature sometimes just triggered falling asleep. And I'm wondering if that would be also kind of something that would be useful for children.  Emma, I know you've done work with parents about bedtime. Emma Yeah, so bedtime is, I think what we forget, certainly in our sort of typical world, is bedtime, you go to bed every night, and this is a routine that happens, we go to bed every night, wake up in the morning, and it's just very common. But actually when we think about what it is, it's a big loss and separation for children. For any two year old, that's going to be a massive time, where they’re going unconscious and that can be a potentially scary time. And even more so for children that had a difficult start in life or have got significant sensory difficulties. This process of actually the separation from the carers is going to be really, really tricky. So when we're talking about how to manage that, we're talking about being very nurturing, very caring and everything, but then we have to consider the parents state at the end of the day. And this is where most parents have reached their limit, they really haven't got anything left. That metaphorical cup we often talk about is completely empty and this is a really challenging time for a lot of parents. So one thing I talk about a lot with parents is how we can support the parent to have enough capacity to still be there and share that moment and reframing it as well. I think, I go back to being a parent, and just desperate for my child to fall asleep so I could go downstairs and collapse. But it's that reframing of actually having that moment, that bedtime is a lovely moment. We can share that lovely, not necessarily joy and happiness, but that, that tenderness and love that is really important because that's when your child really wants you most, and spending that quality time, allowing that child to fall asleep. And one thing I've talked about with parents when they find this really hard, is to use some of those mindfulness techniques in that moment. So you can do some deep breath exercises while you're holding your child's hand in their cot, in their bed and you're there for them, but just use that as a time for yourself as well. I think typically when we think about our own regulation, we think we have to do that on our own, but how much easier would our life be if we can do that with our child. So rather than dreading night time, reframe it in your mind to be a really positive experience. And I appreciate that takes a lot of mental effort for the parent, but if you know you're going to make that change, you can adjust the day to give yourself still enough left in your cup to cope with that bedtime. So  yeah, just reframing how we see that difficult time and trying to use it as a time that's really positive. So you can give that nurture to that child that needs it at that really difficult time. Amy Okay, do you want to talk about oxytocin? Emma No. Lots of hugs, lots of big, long hugs. What is it? Thirty second hugs or something? Is that the latest knowledge? Amy So oxytocin is you know, they describe it as the feel-good hormone or the loved-up hormone. That feeling of being completely supported, completely loved. Completely connected with your child or with another person. So we know that what causes oxytocin release in a child is the touch or the smell or that looking in the eyes of the parent, but we also know it's what releases oxytocin in the parent too. If you want to feel better, you need to allow yourself to have time to touch and hold and look into the eyes of your child. Emma Absolutely. And that's what I mean by reframing it, reframe it from a stressful time to a really nice time where you can meet your own needs with your child and your child gets their needs met as well. Amy Yeah, I'm giving you a laugh. I'm thinking about some horrendous bedtimes I've been involved in where the last thing I want to do is look into somebody's eyes when really what I'd like to do is, who knows! It’s not always possible. Emma It's not always easy, and we have to be kind on ourselves as well, because we're only human and we get stressed and we get dysregulated. So we do have to be kind on ourselves as well and know your limits. And it's not always possible is it to get someone else to do the bedtime or what have you, but if that is an option and you really are feeling frazzled, then get help, you know. Lelanie Just thinking of little tips as well. Something for me, on a personal level is I don't like going to bed if I don't have a thick duvet or comforter, I like the weight of it. I'm not going to be talking about weighted blankets because that’s a controversial topic and actually not appropriate for this population, but just a normal, thick blanket. I am the type of person, if I'm going on holiday somewhere hot, I will turn on the air conditioning so I can have my blanket. And I think a lot of little ones find the weight of the blanket very comfortable. A favourite blanket or favourite toy, be careful of smothering risk though, so be really careful with pillows, but a favourite toy to cuddle and a nice comfortable blanket can go a long way. Amy Yeah, I'd say from a sensory perspective, we'd understand that what that's providing is deep pressure, and deep pressure is one of those tools that helps to down-regulate. So it all comes back to this, finding the things that help you to down-regulate, help your nervous system to get back down to baseline, to give you the best shot at falling asleep and staying asleep. So wrapping up now, gosh, time goes fast! Who would like to kind of summarize and perhaps give us a couple of thoughts to go away with? Emma I think as in, you know, these summaries are probably going to all end up very similar aren't they? But the summary is really routine, consistency, preparation, being aware that actually, you as a parent are going to be probably at your lowest capacity to cope, but actually your child potentially could be, it could be the most difficult time for them. So prepare yourself, prepare your child and remember it doesn't have to be a difficult time if you can reframe that in your brain. Lelanie To add to Emma's comments, I just want to say that a lot of parents panic about bedtime, is eight o'clock the right time? Is seven o'clock the right time? And I think that will actually vary in the different seasons. And I wouldn't be too hard on yourself, you're not an epic failure of a parent if your child goes to bed at 8:30 once in a while, or, you know, every night, it's something to do, as with anything, don't compare your child to other children, I would say. And also just as hard as it is, sometimes you just have to go with the flow. Thank you very much for joining us in this episode of Sensory Chat, we hope for you to join us soon. Thank you.Sensory Chat is brought to you by Sensory Integration Education www.sensoryintegrationeducation.com