iluvmickey2008
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2008
- Messages
- 63
Hi,
I'm planning a trip in 2014 for my sons, who will be 3 and 6 at the time. My older son was diagnosed with Mixed Expressive and Receptive Language Disorder (MERLD), meaning he cannot talk (he is completely non-verbal) and he is not fully understanding what we say to him. I really think that he is on the autism spectrum somewhere, but we are going to take him for a 2nd opinion. He goes to a special preschool and has speech therapy.
He has tantrums and we are working with him on that. He is improving (pointing to things, enjoying other kids more, trying to say some things) so we are thrilled!! By the time he goes to Disney, he will have come even further.
My question is how do you handle eating/food? Like if my son sees grapes, ice cream, etc, he goes nuts. He is ok if we go to an amusement park for a day; not sure how to deal with it every day.
I was thinking of doing pictures for the disney food and making a book or using a visual schedule with ice cream at the end of the day, etc. We are going to use a grocery service for his favorite snacks. Also, it won't hurt to have some lollipops on hand! Any other ideas?
I'm planning a trip in 2014 for my sons, who will be 3 and 6 at the time. My older son was diagnosed with Mixed Expressive and Receptive Language Disorder (MERLD), meaning he cannot talk (he is completely non-verbal) and he is not fully understanding what we say to him. I really think that he is on the autism spectrum somewhere, but we are going to take him for a 2nd opinion. He goes to a special preschool and has speech therapy.
He has tantrums and we are working with him on that. He is improving (pointing to things, enjoying other kids more, trying to say some things) so we are thrilled!! By the time he goes to Disney, he will have come even further.
My question is how do you handle eating/food? Like if my son sees grapes, ice cream, etc, he goes nuts. He is ok if we go to an amusement park for a day; not sure how to deal with it every day.
I was thinking of doing pictures for the disney food and making a book or using a visual schedule with ice cream at the end of the day, etc. We are going to use a grocery service for his favorite snacks. Also, it won't hurt to have some lollipops on hand! Any other ideas?
We took two approaches. First we dodged balloons and tried to distract him when someone brought a balloon close. But we also gave him his own money which we talked about for months. Each morning I put money in his pocket and told him he could buy whatever he wanted with his money. Next, when the time came that we just couldn't sneak past balloons, we let him buy *one*--with extra weights. We helped him take the money out of his pocket, give it to the balloon person. That seemd to give him some control (he's non verbal).