Anonymous wrote:Is he in any sports? Mine was highly sensitive at 2-7 and putting him in soccer and flag football in K and 1st grade helped him relate more to other kids and to be able to get over small things. He can also deal better with noisy places, crazy places like arcades, and stand up for himself.
Anonymous wrote:I have a highly sensitive DS. He is 14. He did not do well in a large public elementary school with large classes and lots of ostentatious behavior. He has done much better in a small private school with small classes. It also took trial and error to find sports/ extra curriculars that clicked for him given his personality. In some sports he could play well, but his sensitivities made it a hard sell. Band / strings can be a good fit for kids like this. And individual sports like swimming and running, maybe tennis/ golf. He's doing well by all measures. The sensitive nature is an asset, it just takes a bit more work helping him navigate the loud "look at me" culture we live in and finding his place. FWIW, adults who meet DS for the first time think he's awesome and comment on him being a better listener, more respectful/mature, etc. than your average HS boy.
Anonymous wrote:What you're describing sounds a lot like my 7 year old son. I don't know if it's neurological or something else. He is more introverted, plays with stuffies like they are real, and is sensitive to violence and loud noises. Last year we went to the Indiana Jones stunt show in Disney HS. He was so worried about the actor's wellbeing that he started crying, despite my assuring him the show was just pretend. He will also start crying and hold his ears if we go somewhere that is very loud. However, he also has friends and is doing well in school. He wanted to do soccer because his older brother plays, and it's been great for his confidence. He is almost too well-behaved and needs some encouragement to advocate for himself, go after the ball, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I (a man) was a pretty sensitive kid and I still am as an adult, (your first story made ME sad for instance).
I think I turned out okay. There's a lot of ways that people (especially men) relate to each other that don't work for me, things like friendly insults. I gravitate towards people who are calmer and more overtly kind. It's meant my closer friends are often women, though not exclusively.
Various times as a kid were hard. I cried pretty easily, and that's not cool when you're in sixth grade. I think kids today ARE nicer though, in a lot of ways. I grew up somewhere where there weren't a lot of options for activities, so I never found people like me that way, but I found people who I liked in school most of the time.
None of it mattered after I started college though. It's still who I am, but it's not something I think about most of the time.
Anonymous wrote:I have a highly sensitive DS. He is 14. He did not do well in a large public elementary school with large classes and lots of ostentatious behavior. He has done much better in a small private school with small classes. It also took trial and error to find sports/ extra curriculars that clicked for him given his personality. In some sports he could play well, but his sensitivities made it a hard sell. Band / strings can be a good fit for kids like this. And individual sports like swimming and running, maybe tennis/ golf. He's doing well by all measures. The sensitive nature is an asset, it just takes a bit more work helping him navigate the loud "look at me" culture we live in and finding his place. FWIW, adults who meet DS for the first time think he's awesome and comment on him being a better listener, more respectful/mature, etc. than your average HS boy.