Saturday, January 4, 2014

20 Months - Progress!

If a person is able to look at a situation while still in it, without having gone through the entire process from beginning to end, and accurately say when the situation was turning a corner, then I declare that a corner has been turned in the last few weeks.

We received a packet in the mail from the feeding clinic we're heading to at the end of this month.  There were a lot of materials in that packet and among them was an informational article on "applied behavior analysis," the method they use at the clinic to help with feeding issues.  This article was a game changer for me.  The authors were describing us (and every other parent in our situation).  Everything we had been doing up until this point to help with mealtimes, it was... wrong.  I mean, we were doing our best with what knowledge we had, but basically, Lucas and I had been reinforcing all his bad eating habits.  From the article:
Reinforcement. One of the basic components of treatment for food refusal is reinforcement. Inappropriate mealtime behaviors such as crying and throwing food, often result in favorable outcomes for the child in the forms of adult attention, toys or the meal being terminated. These outcomes simply reinforce the child's food refusal behavior.
Say for example that the caregivers provide soothing statements (attention), a favorite toy (coloring book), and terminate the meal (a break from eating) when their child turns his head, cries, and bats at the spoon.  We now have information about what seems to motivate the child: attention, a coloring book, and a break. These data also indicate that they may currently be reinforcing undesirable behavior.
One approach is to provide these same reinforcers following appropriate eating behavior, such as accepting and swallowing a bite, rather than when the child refuses. We strongly recommend that some reinforcement-based component be included in all treatments developed for food refusal, because reinforcement generally makes the meal more pleasant for the child and simultaneously encourages him to engage in appropriate eating behavior. 
In the past few weeks I've done a ton of independent research as well as talked a lot to my sister Amy (who uses applied behavior analysis with autistic children).  We then implemented some simple but very effective changes:
1. All meals at the table.  The table is cleaned of distraction, only food and drink on the table. (Previously he would point at or want things on the table that were unrelated to food).
2. No eating or drinking milk outside of the designated times for meals and snacks (this is to induce hunger).
3. Ignore all negative behavior - crying, asking to get up, throwing food, dropping forks on the floor, spitting food out.  He gets no feedback from us for these behaviors, except, possibly, a simple "no" about getting up.
4. Set time limit for meals.  This is so we won't end a meal due to bad behavior.  If he happens to be crying or whining when the set meal time is up we extend it just a little longer to separate the end of the meal from his negative behavior. If the time is up but he is eating like a champ and isn't asking to get up, we let him eat until he is done and then end the meal.
5. We cheer or sing songs like he has won the Superbowl when he eats!

How have things changed?

  • He wants to eat.  By dinnertime he is begging to eat.  Because he is hungry.  In the past, when there was constant food available to him, he never got hungry.  He would graze all day on low calorie foods and barely take in any substantial food through the day.
  • With the positive reinforcement of his eating, we now have to stop him from putting too much in his mouth at once.  He gets so excited about high fives and songs and cheering that he stuffs his mouth full and gags.  We've managed that hurdle by paying close attention to how much he has in his mouth at once and helping him pace his food intake.
  • Meal time is fun!  He dances at the table!  In his little chair, his shoulders moving, his head bopping.  All the while he's chew, chew, chewing.  He asks for high fives, he wants us to sing and to dance and to cheer.  And in part meal time has gotten more fun because:
  • The crying, whining and asking to get down have decreased.
  • His daily caloric intake has gone from approximately 700-800 calories to 1000-1200 calories on a good day.
  • He still has bad days of eating, but even his bad meals would have been considered okay meals before we made these changes
A couple people have suggested that since these changes have resulted in a drastic difference in his behavior that maybe we don't need the feeding clinic anymore.  I hesitate for two reasons.  One, it took us three months to get into the clinic just for an initial assessment.  If they think he needs therapy there will be a wait for him to get into a treatment program.  Two, I don't think it's all the way fixed.  I don't think that the changes we've made (from the research I've done and the information my sister Amy gave us) have eliminated this problem.  He still whines.  He still refuses food.  He still has really bad meals.  We need more feedback about how to work with this issue over the next couple of years (or possibly more) and the feeding clinic is the place to get that feedback.

Overall, though, I feel a great burden has been lifted.  I don't dread mealtime with Miles anymore.  I feel like I see him getting a little stockier. He's definitely a little taller. And this eating issue, it doesn't consume my every waking thought anymore. I was talking about the issue with some peers at work and one of the women, a doctor, sent me an email later that day saying, "Just wanted to say how happy I am to hear that eating is going well for your baby!  You guys must be so excited.  I can only imagine what a stressful experience it has been for you.  You looked positively exuberant today!" Obviously the lifting of this weight is showing on my person.  

Because it has been a hard year.  Because, if you're doing it right, parenting is hard work.  Because, beyond the interrupted sleep, the lack of alone time, the guilt about not being the best parent you could be during his every waking moment, beyond the struggle for me and Lucas to maintain some sense of independence, to partake in our hobbies, beyond all that, our kid wouldn't eat.  And he fell off the charts. And nothing we were doing was fixing it.  I have seriously thought, this kid could stop eating and waste away to nothing. He could die from lack of calorie intake.  That's where my brain was this past year.  And now, it's floating clouds and easy rolling waves.  It's the notion that we're on our way to making it better.  That a simple behavioral therapy could turn it all around.  


I feel better. I feel better now that we've turned a corner.


Now, as a reward for reading all that, here is our little dude, twenty whole months old:



Enough with this eating stuff already!


Train Museum!


Train table at the Train Museum


Train obsessed!

Helping bake cookies with Granny

Lots and lots of cookies!


Eating his lunch at his desk. Busy worker bee.

Christmas Morning Chaos

New DumpTruck!

Half clothed coloring with cousins!

Gramps and Miles, Christmas Night

Who even knows what's going on in his head.

New Slide at the neighborhood park!

Being obsessed with trains is tiring.

Bundled.
SNOW!
Little Brooks wearing sunglasses!

Sweetness between Miles and our neighbor's dog, Polly.

Ready for New Year's Eve.
Ready to go to bed at 9:30 on New Year's Eve.


   

Thursday, December 12, 2013

19 Months

The words are coming so fast these days.  He picks up new words every day.  He's started saying two word sentences too, "Bye bye Momma," "No milk," "Hi Daddy."

He's finally picking up a tiny bit of weight and height.  I've taken to tailoring all of his pants so that they  don't fall of his hips.  

I said last month that each age and development is more enjoyable than the last.  This still holds true.  It's so much fun to be around him.  He's super cute, happy, and funny.  He's loving and sweet.  And that old cliche about seeing the world anew through a child's eyes has turned out to be cliche for a reason.  Watching him in the snow was just so cool.

Here's our little dude this month:


We might have let him play in a sewer pipe.
Or a tunnel in the park.

He's quite cute in glasses.

Really. Cute.
New hangout.


Moo?

Raspberry fingers!

Another new hangout.

Hello?

Hanging out with friends on a snow day.

Sometimes we watch tv standing up.


A couple of dudes.

Snowpants!

We look a little bit alike.



Christmas lights

SNOW!!!

SNOW!

Eh... snow.



Monday, November 11, 2013

18 Months!

It's a classic battle of the ages.  Toddler against toddler.  Unlimited resources at their disposal but they both must have the same piece of chalk.  In this battle, Miles happened to start out with the coveted pale yellow chalk.  The battle ensues.  A parent intervenes.  Miles gets knocked down, the chalk wrested from his hand.  But, justice prevails; the parent hands the chalk back to Miles and gives him a deserved kiss on the forehead. And this is where one might expect that the story ends, the toddlers heading off in opposite directions, the other whimpering at her loss. But now, as a ray of light shines down from the sky, highlighting his golden tresses, Miles does the unthinkable (at least for an 18 month old). He walks to the chalk bucket, carefully selects another piece of chalk, ambles to the defeated toddler and hands over the bounty.

Our hearts melt.

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We had a pediatrician visit today, his 18 month check up.  His head is growing really well.  So much so, that it's difficult to fit it through the appropriate sized clothing for him (for those family members who might be reading this and might want to get him clothes for the holidays, he's wearing size 18 month shirts and size 12 month pants).  The 18 month shirts are a little baggy on him but his darn head won't fit easily through the 12 month sized tops!  And most of the 12 month sized pants fall down because his waist is too narrow unless he's wearing cloth diapers.  Thank goodness for cloth diapers.

His head growth is really showing too!  He is picking up new words daily.  He can identify a bunch of letters in the alphabet and he says a whole bunch of them too.  It's fascinating watching him learn the letters, because I see patterns among the letters I don't think I had ever noticed before.  He gets V and Y and K mixed up.  They all have a V shape contained in them and it's really interesting to watch his brain work the through the similarities.

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Lucas and I commented recently that this age is so much more fun than any age before it.  Miles has become a completely separate person, with his own very distinct personality. A little person who lives with us.  And it's not like having a crappy roommate (although he doesn't pick up after himself very much), we totally get a kick out of him.  He's good natured and funny!  He made his first joke!  Baby's first joke:
Lucas: Miles, where's the ball?
Miles: points at the ball
L: Where's the zebra?
M: points at the zebra
L: Where's daddy?
M (with a gigantic silly grin on his face): points to himself
It's subtle but he was totally pointing to the wrong person to be funny!  "Look how funny I am, I know I'm not daddy but I'm saying I am!" Anyway, we're very, very happy to be a little family together. I feel I lucked out on the husband and the kid fronts.

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Here are the most recent pictures of our funny little roommate:



Just relaxing.  No need for back or butt support.

Hanging with the neighbor girls.
You think in 15 years this will be them, but taller and sneaking cigarettes?

Cheese architect.

Autumn leaf pile!

There has to be a yoga instructor out there who could use this
picture to illustrate downward facing dog.

Reading a book at sing-a-long.

Books don't go in tape decks Miles.
No, I'm sorry, I can't really explain what a tape deck is for.

cool kid

Pinky swearing with Frankie

Each of them making good use of plaid and baby strollers

I don't even know

Seeking out lady bugs

Playing with his cars.  He doesn't know it,
but he's got some hot wheels coming his way at Christmas.

It's gotten colder!

Batman totally came to our pizza night a few weeks ago.
How cool is that?

Little tuckered out guys

Little dude, chilling out in a fire engine cab.
His life is so cool.

City fireman. City fire engine. City kids.

He will drop whatever he's doing and put his hands up to be carried to the train.

Train watching.  It's a neighborhood pastime.

We're always at the train tracks.

Lots of love for the toddlers.

Let us out (or in)!

Toddler jail can only lead to experimentation.

Chilling out, watching Elmo.  Note the super cool boots.
They were brought back from Spain.  Miles has lots of people who love him.

My two favorite dudes.

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I decided to combine all the videos from the last month or so into one 5 minute video.  Let me know if you prefer this method or you like a bunch of different videos!