Tag Archives: auditory processing

“Come here right now!”: The Iceberg Effect and More About Transitions

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I find myself talking about transitions to the parents I see perhaps more than anything else. A parent will say, for example, “When I call her to come to dinner and finally say, ‘Kate, I need you to come here right now!’ I will either get a nasty response or none at all. If she does respond it will take 10 minutes and more nagging before she comes! Why does it have to be that way?!” the beleaguered mother will ask. These parents are good parents of good children. Most of the children whose parents consult me have major or minor neurodevelopmental problems, ranging from autism to ADHD or the kind of organizational problem commonly called “executive function disorder”. All of these problems involve difficulty making transitions. The good mother who is explaining that her daughter does not come when she calls is looking at the top of an iceberg. She sees a little mound of snow or ice. It is a simple, reasonable request. Why can’t her daughter make a “normal” response? However, beneath the water is a huge iceberg of patterned behavior and the meanings associated with it that has been built up over the child’s life.

Let’s analyze the mother’s “simple request” to “come now”. First of all, she is requiring that the child take in the auditory command. This is harder for some children who have ADHD or who have what is called “auditory processing problems” than for others. The mother might not know that Kate has auditory processing problems or if she did hear that from a tester, she may not have entirely understood what it meant. Or even if she did understand what it meant when the tester was explaining it to her, it is hard to keep in mind during the course of family life.

Second, the mother’s command requires Kate to shift her attention from whatever she was doing at the moment to what her mother is telling her. That shift in attention can be much more difficult that you would think. It involves taking apart the current organizational state of the child – her attention, narrative (the story of what she is doing), and her motor activity. It requires Kate to change her postural position and her physiological state of excitement or of comfort, and prepare for something else. Usually, these shifts in our state of being take place out of awareness. We have an intention to change, and it all happens – we stop reading, get up, and walk to the kitchen to start cooking dinner. We don’t realize that all these small changes of everyday life take energy. Other transitions – sleep to wake, home to school, bedroom to bathroom, bedroom to kitchen table, pajamas to school clothes or even worse, snow pants, also take energy. For some children it requires more energy than for others.

In addition to all those shifts, there is the relational and symbolic meaning associated with the transition. For Kate’s mother it may mean, “Oh, dear. I shouldn’t have taken so long reading that paper. I need to get dinner started!” That may be slightly annoying, but no big deal. For Kate, her mother’s calling her may have a very different meaning. That may be something like, “She is bothering me again, just when I got comfortable watching t.v. I had a really hard day at school and Susie was mean to me, and Mom just can’t give me a break. Why is she always making me do things and not Freddie (little brother)!” I am not suggesting that these coherent sentences appeared in Kate’s mind, but that her mother’s reasonable request may feel entirely unreasonable to her, and this meaning comes together with all the other transitional demands – that she shift her attention, her body, get stirred up inside instead of comfortable, etc.

There are two general antidotes for the stress of transitions. One is routine and the other is what I call “herd mentality”. Herd mentality is more available to teachers than to parents of children in small nuclear families. I first noticed it at the orphanage in El Salvador when the little children – most of whom had suffered early neglect and abuse and therefor could be expected from a neurodevelopmental point of view to have difficulty with transitions – all seemed to manage transitions relatively well. I came to think that it was because they all did the transitions together. When it is time to come to dinner and all the other kids start heading in the direction of the dining hall, the stragglers seemed to notice the general movement and catch up, as if noticing that they didn’t want to be left alone. There is another factor – those children didn’t have the hypnotizing effect of video games or other screens to interfere with the process of the transition.

In addition to the herd mentality, there is the importance of routine. What I tell parents is that routine is their best friend. That is because a routine has momentum. The teacher of the children in the preK classroom in the photo above is using routine, herd mentality, and the rhythm of dance, to facilitate a transition. Once you have established a routine the child does not have to move into that state of limbo, an extended disorganized state, with all the stress that entails. (Remember that stress can be expressed as irritability or aggression!) Instead, although the child may not want to interrupt what she is doing to come to the table, it is easier for her to do it. Kate’s mother’s command does not “come out of the blue”. Dinner is at the same time every night, more or less. Kate’s mother has given her a warning five minutes ago, just as she always does. She may even have gone into the family room to join Kate temporarily in her present state (“That looks like a good program! How about if we record it so that you can finish it later!”) and then used her own body to generate a rhythm in the direction of the kitchen. She may also have initiated a conversation about something that interests Kate – “Remember that girl, Karen, who moved out of the school? I just heard that she was moving back!” All these things help establish a routine. Once the routine is established, it makes everything easier.

 

“Los Momentos Magicos”: A poster at WAIMH

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This is one of the two posters I presented at WAIMH (World Association of Infant Mental Health) this past week in Edinburgh.

“Los Momentos Magicos”: A Practical Model for Child Mental Health Professionals to Volunteer by Supporting Caregivers in Institutions in Developing Countries.

“Los momentos magicos” refers to small interactions between caregiver and child that when repeated multiple times can have a lasting positive effect. This hopeful perspective is important for caregivers of children in institutions in developing countries, many of whom carry the scars of early neglect and abuse. Through her experiences in visits to orphanages in Central America and India, Dr. Harrison has developed a model for mental health professionals in developed countries to volunteer their consultation services to caregivers (CG) of children in care in developing countries in the context of a long term relationship with episodic visits and regular skype and video contact.

Weekly Skypes:

Example of Notes from Skype Sessions with Director of Caregivers (DCG) – In a meeting with the teachers, DCG felt frustrated when the teachers implied that the children were neglected. The teacher said the children do well in school but do not bring in their homework. The teacher was concerned that they were hanging out with kids at school who were a negative influence. DCG has told them that they can be friends with these kids, but when they see them involved in problem behavior they should walk away. I suggest – because this has been successful in the past – the possibility of a community meeting in which the other children at the home are invited to brainstorm how to stay out of trouble and how to deal with other kids who are getting into trouble at school. DCG says that is a good idea. She will try it and let me know how it went. We talk about how much responsibility to expect from a 10-yo with his homework. A CG is leaving, and we talk about how to prepare the children for this loss – which children will be most affected, how they might express their distress, how to say good bye.

El Salvador Workshops:

Workshops take place in the orphanage during a weekday, when the children are in school. They begin with coffee and pastry, and there is a break for lunch, sponsored by the workshop leaders. The format is a power point presentation with accompanying video. Following a consultation model, the workshops focus on the caregivers’ chief concerns, underscored by the consistent message of the importance of the relationship. Videotapes of caregivers engaging in interaction with children are used to illustrate successful caregiving techniques, while also demonstrating how the caregiver’s ability to imagine the mind of the child is crucial. Discussion is encouraged throughout the presentation. After the first workshop, examples of the caregivers’ evaluations included, “It is good what you said, but now you should tell the children to do what we tell them to do.” Examples of evaluations after subsequent workshops included, “ I learned that it’s important to get down to a child’s level and listen to him, before I set a limit.” And “How to have a better relationship with a child and how to understand his situation.”

North India Workshop

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Workshop to 80 nursing students at mission hospital in No India. Subject: Supporting the First Relationship.

Using Nugent’s book, Your Baby is Speaking to You ( 2011), Harrison and Gregory emphasized three points: (1) Babies are speaking to their mothers; (2) Mothers can listen to their babies; and (3) Nurses can help mothers listen to their babies in a way that can influence the future health and well being of the children. We stressed the importance of making the mother feel competent to understand the communications of her own baby. To illustrate these points, Ginger played the role of the mother, and I played the role of the nurse. As usual, eliciting the help of the translator added another dimension of cultural richness and respect to the consultation process.

South India Consultation to Teachers at School

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Again followed consultative model focusing on teachers’ questions about students. Using data from teacher and child interview to answer the questions. For example, (1) Why does he not attend school regularly? (2) How can we make school more interesting to him and motivate his learning?

Child was observed in the classroom and child and teacher were interviewed. Data from observation and interviews were used to answer the questions:

(1) There is the feeling in the family that he will be the brother who stays home and keeps the farm. He is also afraid of family discord and wants to protect family from fighting. He does not see the practical reason for studying. He also has some learning problems – working memory, auditory processing, executive functioning. (Include explanations of executive functioning, working memory, auditory processing).

(2) Story problems about farming (math) – buying selling, ratios of the fields, making calculations on the spot to determine prices and make sure venders are not cheating.

Auditory processing support – when possible, give him important factual information parsed in chunks separated by few seconds pause, with repetition of information afterwards.

Building working memory – tasks that require remembering longer and longer bits of information over time (addresses, phone numbers, “telephone games” of hearing information from one person who repeats it to the next person, etc., drills, repetition, and rote memorization for basic facts, making up his own acronyms for information that is hard to retain.

Strengthening executive functioning –practicing organization of homework, building predictable routines, checking homework lists to make sure everything is done and in its place, going over tests and assignments afterwards to identify errors and to understand how to avoid those errors in the future.