Okay. We know that your Facebook group tells you this. You don’t have to insert this on every thread. You really need a new job or a hobby. |
|
This sounds like my seven year old who never stops talking and is way ahead of his peers in math and on target in reading. He did get special services in preschool years (two days a week, public school). I doubt it made much difference. He was just a late bloomer.
|
|
OP here. No, my 2 year old is not interested in talking at all even though he understands a lot of instructions. He loves pretend play (e.g. cook kitchen, play pranks, and use screwdriver on any screws) & any physical activities (e.g. climbing, kick ball, running). He is a happy, social & active boy, and not talking does not frustrate him at all.
I checked cdc 2 year old milestone, he fails the following: Language/Communication: Points to things or pictures when they are named Knows names of familiar people and body parts Says sentences with 2 to 4 words Repeats words overheard in conversation Points to things in a book Cognitive (learning, thinking, problem-solving): Completes sentences and rhymes in familiar books Names items in a picture book such as a cat, bird, or dog Movement/Physical Development: Makes or copies straight lines and circles It looks really bad, right? |
OP, stop this. Again, how was the delay "diagnosed"? by child find or the pediatrician? I doubt the ped said there was a cognitive delay. The milestones you think he is missing cognitively are speech related. Many of our kids have fine motor issues. And he is two. Just two. You already know he is delayed so I don't understand why reiterating how "bad" it looks is helpful. Kids with delays make progress, and it is likely some of these delays will abate. You just have to take it one step at a time, like all of us. |
If he's socially typical, he's not autistic. |
My 28 months old son is similar to yours! may be we should meet in person! |
OP here. To explain, Infant & toddler program evaluated him a couple months ago, and told me he had social & emotional delay, expressive & receptive language delay & cognitive delay by 30-50% delay of each categories. He failed the mchat test, was referred to children hospital for evaluation by his pediatrician. Children hospital's developmental pediatrician evaluated him 2 months ago, and suspicious of ASD, no official diagnosis yet but need to do a follow up every couple months. So, every professionals tell me that he has delay. |
Go to a good pediatrician and ask for advice. They take a while, but set up an appointment at Childrens or at Strong Start if in DC https://osse.dc.gov/service/strong-start-dc-early-intervention-program-dc-eip - or most counties have something comparable - vs. trying to find answers on DCUM. I have gotten some very helpful special needs advice on this board, but it is full of a range of informed and uninformed and people coming with perspectives ... Age 2 is really young. If he is interacting with people fairly well, that would seem to indicate ruling out a lot of things or extremes of things if that's reassurance -- but if you have a gut sense something is up, set up the appointments and then cancel if there's nothing there. My niece didn't speak until two and then spoke in full sentences. Neither of my kids could draw a good circle until at least three. Etc. The only caveat is sometimes if you go to specialist, they find what they are looking for (and we for instance, went to one evaluator who scared the crap out of us with all sorts of extreme things, and it basically in the end was my son had some motor planning and coordination stuff that is mostly manageable). |
Well, you are doing all you can. We none of us have a crystal ball and we can't diagnose over the internet. I will tell you that I was told my child had all of the same delays at 2, but not ASD - he has made huge strides in speech, behavior became a bigger problem later, and while we suspect he may have a low average IQ, we know he is not likely intellectually disabled (at 4, he can read many words, do basic math, dress/feed/clean himself, etc., ride a bike, etc.). |
It doesn't sound that bad. Lot's of kids have delays then they catch up, as your husband did. They throw a lot of statistics and diagnoses at you that make things sound worse than they really are. Monitoring and symptom-based intervention is the best you can do right now. Try not to worry about it so much. It doesn't help you or your son. |
|
OP, I'm in a very similar situation. My DS has delays, and everyone says he's EXACTLY like my DH was as a child. So there's a big familial component, and there's every reason to believe my DS will catch up in the important ways.
However, times are VERY different now than they were in the 70s. School (even kindergarten) is more demanding, and we have a lot of ways to help kids that we didn't in the past. So even though my kid may just be a "late bloomer," I'm definitely taking advantage of all the support and therapies that will help him. Another motivation is that I think my DH has in fact suffered from his undiagnosed/unsupported issues. I think my DS deserve a happier childhood than DH had -- for example, to be able to learn how to swim instead of never learning due to motor skill issues and sensory issues. Social skills are another big one. The family laughs about what "loner" DH was as a kid; I'm not willing to just let my DS have no friends without trying whatever interventions might work. If your in laws are pressuring you or making you feel guilty for "labeling" your child, just ignore them. Your responsibility as a mom is to help your child NOW, not to parent your child as if you only had the resources of 1975. |
that's not really true. We do know that a lot of ASD diagnoses when made at 2 are "lost." It's fairer to say that ASD is a big spectrum, and you can't always tell at 2 where a child will be on that spectrum. |
While that does happen in some cases, if he did have ASD or ADHD, it's likely he would have some residual symptoms, but they are within the normal range, so they look like personality quirks rather than a disorder. Like is he unusually quiet, easily distractable, or have a hobby that he is really engaged in? |
| It is good that you are seeing specialists and working on it. It might be the he is a late bloomer, but better safe than sorry. |
Then they were misdiagnosed. |