NiniMorris
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2008
- Messages
- 2,910
Hi,
So glad this is available! I spent several hours last night reading posts, taking notes, and in general, feeling pretty good about our upcoming trip. Then, after I went to bed, my mind couldn't turn off. New questions and problems popped up. More fears appeared, and now I am just as scared as I was before I found this site.
My plans currently call for re-reading this the night before we leave... LOL
Seriously, here is my problem. My 6 year old foster son was injured in an automobile accident 3 years ago. He spent over a month in the hospital, between being in a coma and being in rehab. He suffers from TBI (traumatic brain injury). That is just a medical way of saying he had a closed head injury. Prior to the accident he was a bright, active 3 year old who was starting to teach himself how to read. Now he is a 2 year old emotionally, a 3 and a half year old intellectually, and has actually started growing again and is the size of a normal 5 year old. He has had to learn how to swallow, speak and walk all over again, he has almost no short term memory (but that is finally starting to get better!), can't stand sudden loud noises (unless HE is making them!), can't stand to be in crowds, has NO fear, feels NO pain, has violent meltdowns, and does not understand the meaning of patience! He has a tendancy to disappear, and when he does, he hides. He is a roller coaster junkie, and is excited that he is tall enough to ride the Dinosaur ride!
We last went to Disney 2 years ago. At that time he was still severly handicapped (in that he couldn't walk for more than a few minutes at a time) and we rented a stroller. His melt downs were not that bad then, so the only real problem came when we were waiting for Dumbo. There was a sign saying a 30 minute wait, so Dad took him to the potty to kill some of the time, and when he came back, all was fine. Except that the wait AFTER he came back was over an hour! He and I did not get to ride as he had a major meltdown and we left, while Dad and sister rode. Later, one of the CMs told us about the GAC. Even though we got one, we never actually used it. Using Fastpass was enough.
Fast forward to our trip in 2 weeks. He is now improved physically, but emotionally, the progress has been non-existant. We frequently have to restrain him during meltdowns to keep him from injuring himself or others. He is a very strong little boy! He is on medication that helps, but around 5 pm he crashes...hard!
When I read about some of the hardships and challenges of parents with autistic children, I know exactly what you are going through. Most of those symptoms are what we see daily. In fact his OT uses a lot of the same sensory training as she uses with her autistic patients.
Now my problem. We will probably get a stroller again, just in case. He probably won't want to get in it unless he wants to hide. We will use a harness, again, just in case. We will get the GAC, even though we probably will not use it much but it will be nice to know it is there. we will plan our day around his normal schedule. Being ready to head back to the resort around 5 to avoid a major crash. We are getting him ear phones to help with the noise, letting him decide when he wants to use them. We are using a touring plan to avoid longer lines, and will be having one character meal so he can get his fill of characters without waiting in lines. We will take his handheld video game to play with while we are in lines. His doctor is giving us extra meds for the car trip down (he cannot take the long drive). We are taking DVDs from home and his portable DVD player to use in the room as he needs it. The only thing I am worried about, is his meltdowns. They are MAJOR. before we started homeschooling, I was called to school at least 3 times a week. The teachers could not restrain him enough to keep him from injuring himself or them.
When people see me restrain him, well let's just say I have been reported more than once to DFACS. Our caseworker thinks it is funny! His therapists and doctors have showed me how to restrain him in a way that does not hurt him or me, but it does look pretty bad. I have to put him in a modified basket hold. I am concerned that I will get reported and our vacation could end on a really bad note! Any suggestions on how to prevent that? I'm used to strange looks. But I also know the restraint has to be done at the moment and not after we have removed ourselves from the 'public view'. If I wait until then, it becomes too much for me to handle, and a black eye or broken bone for Mommy isn't how we want to end our vacation either.
As I re-read the last paragraph, I think it really sounds terrible! It really isn't all that bad. we can probably get the melt downs to maybe once a day, with good planning on our part. I guess I'm just concerned with how to deal with other people. Probably not much different than the way I deal with them at home. I think it actually bothers my husband a lot more than me!
Sorry this was so long and such a rant, but I actually feel betternow. Putting it down in words has made it clear to me I have most of the process in place, and we are going to have a GREAT time1 (but if you hear of a mother getting arrested for 'child abuse at WDW" somewhere between the 23rd of Feb and 1st of March there is a good chance it is just me!!!!)
Nini Morris
So glad this is available! I spent several hours last night reading posts, taking notes, and in general, feeling pretty good about our upcoming trip. Then, after I went to bed, my mind couldn't turn off. New questions and problems popped up. More fears appeared, and now I am just as scared as I was before I found this site.
My plans currently call for re-reading this the night before we leave... LOL
Seriously, here is my problem. My 6 year old foster son was injured in an automobile accident 3 years ago. He spent over a month in the hospital, between being in a coma and being in rehab. He suffers from TBI (traumatic brain injury). That is just a medical way of saying he had a closed head injury. Prior to the accident he was a bright, active 3 year old who was starting to teach himself how to read. Now he is a 2 year old emotionally, a 3 and a half year old intellectually, and has actually started growing again and is the size of a normal 5 year old. He has had to learn how to swallow, speak and walk all over again, he has almost no short term memory (but that is finally starting to get better!), can't stand sudden loud noises (unless HE is making them!), can't stand to be in crowds, has NO fear, feels NO pain, has violent meltdowns, and does not understand the meaning of patience! He has a tendancy to disappear, and when he does, he hides. He is a roller coaster junkie, and is excited that he is tall enough to ride the Dinosaur ride!
We last went to Disney 2 years ago. At that time he was still severly handicapped (in that he couldn't walk for more than a few minutes at a time) and we rented a stroller. His melt downs were not that bad then, so the only real problem came when we were waiting for Dumbo. There was a sign saying a 30 minute wait, so Dad took him to the potty to kill some of the time, and when he came back, all was fine. Except that the wait AFTER he came back was over an hour! He and I did not get to ride as he had a major meltdown and we left, while Dad and sister rode. Later, one of the CMs told us about the GAC. Even though we got one, we never actually used it. Using Fastpass was enough.
Fast forward to our trip in 2 weeks. He is now improved physically, but emotionally, the progress has been non-existant. We frequently have to restrain him during meltdowns to keep him from injuring himself or others. He is a very strong little boy! He is on medication that helps, but around 5 pm he crashes...hard!
When I read about some of the hardships and challenges of parents with autistic children, I know exactly what you are going through. Most of those symptoms are what we see daily. In fact his OT uses a lot of the same sensory training as she uses with her autistic patients.
Now my problem. We will probably get a stroller again, just in case. He probably won't want to get in it unless he wants to hide. We will use a harness, again, just in case. We will get the GAC, even though we probably will not use it much but it will be nice to know it is there. we will plan our day around his normal schedule. Being ready to head back to the resort around 5 to avoid a major crash. We are getting him ear phones to help with the noise, letting him decide when he wants to use them. We are using a touring plan to avoid longer lines, and will be having one character meal so he can get his fill of characters without waiting in lines. We will take his handheld video game to play with while we are in lines. His doctor is giving us extra meds for the car trip down (he cannot take the long drive). We are taking DVDs from home and his portable DVD player to use in the room as he needs it. The only thing I am worried about, is his meltdowns. They are MAJOR. before we started homeschooling, I was called to school at least 3 times a week. The teachers could not restrain him enough to keep him from injuring himself or them.
When people see me restrain him, well let's just say I have been reported more than once to DFACS. Our caseworker thinks it is funny! His therapists and doctors have showed me how to restrain him in a way that does not hurt him or me, but it does look pretty bad. I have to put him in a modified basket hold. I am concerned that I will get reported and our vacation could end on a really bad note! Any suggestions on how to prevent that? I'm used to strange looks. But I also know the restraint has to be done at the moment and not after we have removed ourselves from the 'public view'. If I wait until then, it becomes too much for me to handle, and a black eye or broken bone for Mommy isn't how we want to end our vacation either.
As I re-read the last paragraph, I think it really sounds terrible! It really isn't all that bad. we can probably get the melt downs to maybe once a day, with good planning on our part. I guess I'm just concerned with how to deal with other people. Probably not much different than the way I deal with them at home. I think it actually bothers my husband a lot more than me!
Sorry this was so long and such a rant, but I actually feel betternow. Putting it down in words has made it clear to me I have most of the process in place, and we are going to have a GREAT time1 (but if you hear of a mother getting arrested for 'child abuse at WDW" somewhere between the 23rd of Feb and 1st of March there is a good chance it is just me!!!!)
Nini Morris