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General Parenting
Clothing tags and other sensory hot buttons
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<blockquote data-quote="Big Bad Kitty" data-source="post: 140550" data-attributes="member: 3647"><p>Thanks for posting this, Trinity.</p><p></p><p>These are very good examples! In addition, my daughter (who lives in the Silly house of Sensory issues) also reacts strongly to the odor of certain things. Not just things like onions or garlic, but she will say that she does not like the smell of cooked meat, salad dressings, even salsa. She will, however, take the top off of a Sharpie marker and smell it forever. I have hidden the Sharpies.</p><p></p><p>Certain sounds drive her over the edge. It is not the volume, but the pitch or timbre that gets her. She can have the TV at full blast and it not bug her. A plane flying overhead makes her nuts. </p><p>We can stand next to the railroad tracks and watch trains all day, but if we are going under a viaduct while a train is going by overhead, she covers her ears and screams.</p><p></p><p>Motion is another key sense to focus on. Some children with sensory issues either crave or avoid certain motions. Some like slow, repetative motion. Some crave fast motion taht would make ME sick to my stomach! (i.e. spinning).</p><p></p><p>An Occupational Therapist is a good avenue if your child seems to have sensory issues.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Big Bad Kitty, post: 140550, member: 3647"] Thanks for posting this, Trinity. These are very good examples! In addition, my daughter (who lives in the Silly house of Sensory issues) also reacts strongly to the odor of certain things. Not just things like onions or garlic, but she will say that she does not like the smell of cooked meat, salad dressings, even salsa. She will, however, take the top off of a Sharpie marker and smell it forever. I have hidden the Sharpies. Certain sounds drive her over the edge. It is not the volume, but the pitch or timbre that gets her. She can have the TV at full blast and it not bug her. A plane flying overhead makes her nuts. We can stand next to the railroad tracks and watch trains all day, but if we are going under a viaduct while a train is going by overhead, she covers her ears and screams. Motion is another key sense to focus on. Some children with sensory issues either crave or avoid certain motions. Some like slow, repetative motion. Some crave fast motion taht would make ME sick to my stomach! (i.e. spinning). An Occupational Therapist is a good avenue if your child seems to have sensory issues. [/QUOTE]
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