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Hearing things?
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<blockquote data-quote="AllStressedOut" data-source="post: 59774" data-attributes="member: 3837"><p>Thanks Suz for bumping it up.</p><p></p><p>I do that too Amber. It does happen during the day sometimes though. He thinks someone is calling him or that you said his name and no one is talking. I can be reading with everyone else doing something pretty quiet and he can be in the same room and say "What Mommy?" like I called for him. I've thought I've heard someone call my name when they called someone else, but this just happens whenever. Sometimes its possible he could have mistaken something being said and sometimes there isn't any talking going on.</p><p></p><p>We went to the GP today and he is looking through our list of providers to refer us to a neuropysch? for testing of all 3 difficult children. I'm really starting to think my youngest difficult child may be on the spectrum. He doesn't like loud noises, movies or the vacuum. He doesn't make eye contact easily. He will if you tell him to, but only for a brief moment and then he looks away. He lines up his cars when he plays. Unfortunately, I don't know much about his development as a baby. The only thing I recall my husband and mother-in-law saying was that he never put anything in his mouth. I'm not sure if that means anything, but it seemed odd to me. All 3 of the kiddos I've raised since birth put things in their mouths to discover it really. It wasn't always a teething thing, it was just how they played with it.</p><p></p><p>We cancelled this weeks appointment with the psychiatrist because we're hoping to get the boys into the neuropysch and were told they'd have to be off their medications for this testing. Does this sound right? The psychiatrist hasn't really helped much in the last year and we're just exhausted with the same routine of upping medications and adding medications, always the same medications for each kid. If one changes, so does the next one. Just doesn't make sense to me.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AllStressedOut, post: 59774, member: 3837"] Thanks Suz for bumping it up. I do that too Amber. It does happen during the day sometimes though. He thinks someone is calling him or that you said his name and no one is talking. I can be reading with everyone else doing something pretty quiet and he can be in the same room and say "What Mommy?" like I called for him. I've thought I've heard someone call my name when they called someone else, but this just happens whenever. Sometimes its possible he could have mistaken something being said and sometimes there isn't any talking going on. We went to the GP today and he is looking through our list of providers to refer us to a neuropysch? for testing of all 3 difficult children. I'm really starting to think my youngest difficult child may be on the spectrum. He doesn't like loud noises, movies or the vacuum. He doesn't make eye contact easily. He will if you tell him to, but only for a brief moment and then he looks away. He lines up his cars when he plays. Unfortunately, I don't know much about his development as a baby. The only thing I recall my husband and mother-in-law saying was that he never put anything in his mouth. I'm not sure if that means anything, but it seemed odd to me. All 3 of the kiddos I've raised since birth put things in their mouths to discover it really. It wasn't always a teething thing, it was just how they played with it. We cancelled this weeks appointment with the psychiatrist because we're hoping to get the boys into the neuropysch and were told they'd have to be off their medications for this testing. Does this sound right? The psychiatrist hasn't really helped much in the last year and we're just exhausted with the same routine of upping medications and adding medications, always the same medications for each kid. If one changes, so does the next one. Just doesn't make sense to me. [/QUOTE]
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