Growing Tall OT

Growing Tall OT Occupational Therapy paediatric practice sharing play ideas for kids, parents and other therapists

Today marks the end of my season at Pillars of Health centre in Winterton and a “fuller” season at my Bergville practice...
01/08/2024

Today marks the end of my season at Pillars of Health centre in Winterton and a “fuller” season at my Bergville practice. I’ll still be seeing kids in Winterton (at the school) once a week; two days in Bergville and 2 days assisting a colleague with functional capacity evaluations. This is all a balancing act whilst being a wife, a mother to my own 3 kids and a full-time therapist🤗❤️

Yes! Sensory isn’t just about playing with rice or shaving cream in a bin🤣
12/04/2024

Yes! Sensory isn’t just about playing with rice or shaving cream in a bin🤣

“Sensory” is one of those buzzwords these days in parenting groups, on Pinterest, and in relation to different diagnoses. I’ve seen people use it to mean pretty much everything. When I talk about sensory processing, I am not talking about kids playing with rice or shaving cream in a bin. 😊

There are a few different ways of conceptualizing sensory processing, but the way that I’m familiar with and is one of the most popular is Winnie Dunn’s “four-quadrant” model.

In an attempt to nutshell this, the concept is that there are two axes (as pictured). One axis runs from low tolerance to high tolerance for sensory input. The other runs from passive to active in terms of how someone will respond to that sensory input. That leaves you with four quadrants, which describe literally everybody — not just people with sensory processing difficulties. In the way that a scale like introversion/extraversion can measure everybody (some are high, some low, some somewhere in the middle), this scale can describe everybody.

Someone who has a high tolerance for sensory input, and actively moves toward that level of comfort, is sensory-seeking.

Someone who has a low tolerance for sensory input, and actively moves toward their level of comfort, is sensory avoiding.

Someone who has a low tolerance for sensory input, but does not behaviorally respond to it, is sensory sensitive.

Someone who has a high tolerance for sensory input, and does not behaviorally respond to it, is low registration (but I call it “sensory missing”, because that fits the pattern better).

It gets more complicated when you factor in the different types of senses: touch, sight, hearing, smell/taste (usually rolled into one for these purposes), vestibular (inner ear sense of uprightness/dizziness/movement), proprioception (inner body sense of where you are in space), interoception (ability to feel and interpret inner body signals including hunger, thirst, toileting, etc). This is because people could have a low tolerance for auditory input but a high tolerance for visual input, for example. People are not necessarily always grouped into one category, and the extremes of the categories are usually where there is some kind of associated dysfunction.

This overlaps with autism (and, more broadly, neurodivergence) because sensory processing differences are arguably a ubiquitous part of autistic people’s experience of the world. Sensory processing is one of the big categories in which autism (almost unanimously) causes difference.

The correlation doesn’t go in the opposite order; having sensory processing difficulties doesn’t automatically imply autism.

I suspected for a long time that I have sensory processing difficulties — as soon as I had language to begin describing what was going on inside my body. I’ve scored myself on assessment tests in the past, but all the assessments I had access to were designed for children, so I was guessing/remembering what I thought might have been true when I was a kid. As a therapist, I was able to use an adult assessment (not something freely available online, unfortunately) to confirm it for myself.

There is some debate about whether sensory processing disorder is, in and of itself, a distinct disorder. It is not its own classification in the DSM-5, for example. Some people argue that it should be. Others argue that SPD is always associated with another neurodivergence, such as autism, ADHD, etc. The amount of overlap between SPD and neurodiversity seems powerful enough to me to tentatively lean towards the latter, but this isn’t an area of research in which there is certainty to be had just yet.

This is an area that I have written quite extensively on, so I'll drop some additional resources about it in the comments.

[Image description: A plus sign splits the image into four quadrants. The two axes of the plus sign are labelled “high tolerance” to “low tolerance” and “passive” to “active”. In each of the quadrants is the category corresponding to that description: in the high tolerance and active quadrant are the “sensory seekers”; in the low tolerance and active quadrant are the “sensory avoiders”, in the low tolerance and passive quadrant are the “sensory sensitive”, and in the high tolerance and passive quadrant are “sensory ‘missers'”. End description.]

17/05/2023
13/05/2023
Explained so well ❤️
13/12/2022

Explained so well ❤️

Proprioception is a fancy word for "deep, internal body sense". It involves being able to sense where your body is in space, and feel internal feelings like pressure at your joints or pulling in your muscles.

Vestibular is a word for "inner ear sense". It involves your sense of balance and your sense of whether you are right-side-up. Tipping your head, going upside down, or spinning all affect and are felt by this sense.

Children seek out movement activities (spinning, running fast, jumping, crashing on the couch or a bed, going upside down, rolling, etc) when they know they need more of these sensations! This type of movement helps brains organize and store and process information.

"Children with healthy neurological systems naturally seek out the sensory input they need on their own" -- means that telling children to sit down and be still all day is quashing their ability to seek out that input on their own. (And trying to pack all of the movement that a child needs into one 15 minute break in the day is unrealistic!)

Kids wiggling is not a sign of disobedience or defiance, it's a sign that their brains KNOW what they need to be able to rise to the challenge of what they're being asked to do...and what their brains need is movement!

(Image credit: Neurochild Community )
[Image description: A picture of feet splashing into a puddle over the text which reads, "Children need to develop proprioception and vestibular sense via adventurous play. This then assists them in learning to listen, focus, and follow directions. Children with healthy neurological systems naturally seek out the sensory input they need on their own." End description.]

❤️❤️❤️
29/11/2022

❤️❤️❤️

It takes time to get into the "flow" of creative, unstructured play.

If you imagine that playing is where children are doing the most learning, making the most connections, doing the most work, growing, and changing the most -- does that change at all how you prioritize your child's day?

[Image description: A photo of a toddler with dark skin and curly, fluffy hair, wearing a yellow shirt, walking on a playground bridge, away from the camera. The text reads, "How many hours of free, unstructured, uninterrupted play does your child have each day?”]

18/11/2022

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