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Updated on July 05, 2012
B.A. asks from New Brunswick, NJ
4 answers

I have 3.5 year old twins and then a 1.5 year old baby.Twin A is talking and generally brilliant but am having problems with MH (twin B).I just want to know if any one has any advice.He has been receiving services from Speech and Language Pathologist AH (twin A ) received them too but he is talking up a storm so no worries with him.MH was potty trained before AH despite being silent.But has regressed since.Most often would not tell me and go in his pull up.he doesn`t have much words,likes to play alone,has good eye contact but ignores pretty much all the time.he hasn`t being dignosed anything.I feel he likes the attention.he kinda took it hard when the baby came along.
the daycare teacher said he has hard time transitioning.Does any one has any advice on that. and also about potty training regression

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J.B.

answers from Louisville on

The regression is something you really need to let your pediatrician know about. A lot of children with autism spectrum disorders regress, and other symptoms you describe - I would have him evaluated for that. I have a son with Asperger's and he too, has has extensive speech therapy. There are different forms of that too - one focuses on making the sounds right and having clear speech. The other focuses on pragmatics - making eye contact, taking turns in conversation, manners, etc. My son needed both. He also had difficulty in transitioning, and did not do paralell play. Preferred to be by himself. Early intervention is the key, and it is a neurological disorder, new treatments are discovered daily. Good luck!

2 moms found this helpful
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D..

answers from Charlotte on

You are doing the right thing getting him speech services. How long has he been in speech therapy? Do you have a written evaluation from the therapist?

You should have a written eval. Go through it and look up all the terms she uses in it. Figure out what she means, and then ask her any questions you still have.

Do you work with MH at home every single day, twice a day, on his home program? If you don't, you HAVE to start. Speech therapy will not work if you aren't doing it with him at home faithfully, every day. You need to watch the therapist work with him so that you know how at home.

I can only imagine how hard this is with a baby, truly. But you owe it to him. He will be behind in school if he doesn't catch up now.

Be kind and loving to him when he has a toilet mistake. Work up a token economy system to give him incentive to make it to the potty. Maybe a sticker chart, etc. At the end of the week, if he has earned "x" amount of stickers, he can DO something that he really enjoys, like watch a beloved video, or play outside under the sprinkler, etc. Don't tie it to big gifts because that gets too expensive.

For transitioning, everyone should give several warnings that activities are going to change soon. When you want to get his attention, touch him on the shoulder when you say his name. Ask him if he is listening and get him to look at you before giving him direction. When you are working with him on speech work, practice giving him two directions at a time and see if he can do them. Some kids naturally figure this out - others need help.

When he wants something, say to him "Use your words, MH." And wait for him to try. Like if he wants water. "Tell Mommy wah-wah". And smile at him. "Use your words, honey - wah-wah". If he attempts, praise him. If he has a fit, wait the fit out. Turn away from him and wait for him to stop, and then pretend that it didn't happen and try again. Another thing to teach him is "help me". The "h" and "l" are pretty hard, so teach him "ep me". That way, when he is frustrated because you don't understand what he is asking of you, he can say "ep me" and you will know what's wrong.

You are not only working on his speech when you do that. You are working on communication. As he is better able to communicate, everything else will get better.

It is CRITICAL that you really work h*** o* all of this with him now. If you don't, he may not be ready for school when his twin is, and it will be so hard for you to send them separately. If he has major issues that are uncovered later, you may have to, but right now, work h*** o* what you CAN do with him.

I wish you much luck, Mom.
Dawn

1 mom found this helpful
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S.S.

answers from Chicago on

what is MH and AH I hate it when I can't answer a question because of initials I don't understand. sorry . :(

J.W.

answers from St. Louis on

I think it is important to know are they identical twins? Most issues like spectrum disorders are genetically linked so if one identical twin is fine so is the other.

My oldest didn't talk or be potty trained until three and a half. We loved him too much! Just kidding but we gave him everything he needed without having to ask so he had no need to talk. He started talking along with his younger sister so I had one very advanced kid and one late kid. They are both fairly normal adults now. :)

It very well can be that one twin is communicating for the both of them. This can also happen if they are not identical. Problem is only time will tell what is going on.

If your state has some first steps type program seek them out. My younger son is autism spectrum, they were a lifesaver in getting him early intervention.

Sorry if this is all over the place but it seems the more kids you have the more diverse your experiences become. :)

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