Why You Should Not Stop Your Child from Stimming

At a recent workshop, a special educator said to me, “All these children you work with are so calm. What about children who are hyperactive? How can we
control their hyperactivity?”

 

“Good question. What do you mean by hyperactive?” I asked.

 

“Oh, they run around, they flap their hands, they tantrum for no reason.”

 

“There’s always a reason. You’ve got to train yourself to see it,” I commented.

 

You, dear reader, are in the same predicament.

 

You watch your child running up and down. He takes a particular item and flips it around. He rocks his body, flaps his hands and makes strange sounds. You just want all of this to stop because you want him to be calm and notice things around him. You want him to interact more with people rather than objects.

 

I know how it feels. I’ve experienced it with Mohit and my students. By stopping the behaviors, you’re not going to achieve what you want to.

 

Instead, use the behaviors as stepping stone to delve deeper. The following video will elucidate.

 


 

Notice how Ishaan engages in self stim behaviors and gets close to the edge?

 

I wouldn’t want to ‘stop’ any of these behaviors. They speak to me. They let me know what action I should take next. It’s my job as his guide to read these behaviors and get him to engage with me.

 

Once he does, the behaviors slowly fall away. This interaction brings up a few interesting points.

 

1. It’s more than the activity

 

My aim was not to get Ishaan to sort ball and blocks. That was the external framework. My aim was for him to recognize the underlying pattern and his role in the interaction.

 

I was the giver and he was the one who put away items. I monitored him closely as I handed him a block instead of a ball.

 

Note how he got disregulated. After he calmed down (I gave him space to calm down instead of commanding him to do so), I handed 2 items at a time, and eventually a 3rd. I watched his reactions.

 

Despite small changes, was he able to perceive the underlying pattern and still stay engaged with me? The sorting of items was an opportunity for me to go deeper.

 

2. Behaviors are a barometer

 

Ishaan’s behaviors helped me identify whether he was engaged or not. When I added a little change and if he appeared disregulated, I went back to basics and stayed there till he was calm again. Once he was back in the play, I slowly increased the level of the challenge.

 

At the beginning of the clip just after I introduced the block, he got disregulated. I slowed down and went back to just putting the ball in the basket and built it up from there.

 

3. No instructions or prompting

 

If you ask a child to do something, he’ll comply with you. It’s easy for him
to follow an instruction, as he doesn’t have to think. But if you don’t ask him to do anything and set up a back and forth interaction, he will have to figure out what he needs to do by observing you.

 

That’s a deeper level function. I didn’t ask Ishaan to do anything. I did it with him. I set up a pattern for him to observe and follow. I use a regulatory chant (“ball. basket” or “blocks, basket”). After a point, I didn’t need to use a chant.

 

Look at how Ishaan checked with me after putting the item away. Notice when he reached out for my arm and smiled at me. I wanted to build the ‘us’. We’re a team.

 

When you engage with your child, he should have the feeling you’re there to help him and support him not to get something from him or complete a task.

 

4. Strip away the inessentials

 

Note the lack of language? I didn’t ask him whether it’s a ball or block or puzzle piece. I just focused on the pattern and our emotional
connect.

 

I built the framework from there. I adjusted my guiding and the variations introduced as I observed Ishaan’s reaction. His behavior
communicated his level of regulation.

 

how to make child with autism speak

credit: Ellen Notbohm

 

We may not like the way our children behave. We want those self stimulatory behaviors out of our lives. They make us uncomfortable.

 

Stay a while with the discomfort, dear friend. Figure what the behaviors are trying to communicate. Don’t switch off the barometer. Instead study it carefully and work on increasing engagement.

 

You can try the simple kinds of activities I tried with Ishaan. You will end up with an engaged, motivated youngster who wants to spend time with you. He doesn’t run away when he sees you.

 

And the added bonus is the behaviors will fall away by themselves.

 

”Your child does not need you to focus on their behavior, or their stimming, flapping etc. It’s just a sign that your child for their brain to be better able
to engage better with the world.” — Dr Steven Gutstein

 

Do send in your questions. I’ll be happy to answer them.

 

Also, if you’re a professional who wants to add a US based credential to your skill set, do get in touch with us on saiconnections01@gmail.com. The training begins on August 8th.

 

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9 COMMENTS

  • effie das says:

    Is the training online?

  • Rucha Gujrathi says:

    Kaminiji,
    Regarding your e-book, is it available in hard copy or any other format. I am residing in UAE, and Kindle version is not supported here.

    Rucha.

  • Rucha Gujrathi says:

    Ma’am, please guide on how to increase Attention span of a child.
    My son’s attention span is less than 10 seconds… It gets difficult to teach/make him understand something this way. He’s 3.10 year’s old and not yet vocal.

    Thanks.

    • Hello Rucha. The ebook will certainly help as I’ve outlined procedures to be implemented to build engagement. We’ll work out something so you can get the ebook.

      In the meanwhile, you could email me a 10 minute interaction between you and your child. That will help me understand the issue better.

      Please send the video clip to saiconnections01@gmail.com

      Don’t ever lose hope and take care.

  • What is Stimming and Why do

  • Name Redacted says:

    Stimming is a self-destructive behavior; a total waste of time and mal-development of the brain.

    A child who does nothing but pace, spin in circles, throw things, spit, obnoxious yelling/sounds, flap hands, jump up and down, etc. isn’t trying to communicate anything. They’re just wasting their lives and rotting their brains with useless and meaningless repetitive nonsense. They have zero interest in anything meaningful , productive or appropriate, nor are they interested in learning anything meaningful, useful. or appropriate.

    Most of these children resent having their stims interrupted for “learning time” or useless attempts at connecting. They only wish to connect with other humans at and for their own convenience.. And the “replacement” options for stims only create a prompt-dependent child and later a prompt-dependent adult with no level of appropriate autonomy.

    • Concerned Allistic says:

      I hope you aren’t a parent or a professional who works with autistic children or adults in any capacity. Please get help.

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