Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just told one new professional that I would not take my son to see her during rush hour, meaning a 3 hour total trip for 45 minutes of therapy. Every week, while my other son was home alone.
She told me I wasn't doing everything I could do for my son who needed the therapy. I can't believe how stressed I was until I told her no. Sometimes you have to prioritize.
Heck yeah!! Good for you!!!
Anonymous wrote:As someone who has done the schlep for years: does anyone out there really think the schlep is worth it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone who has done the schlep for years: does anyone out there really think the schlep is worth it?
We're in the early stages of schlepping and I already don't think it's worth it for us. Son is 4, has some quirks, and according to the dev ped his only diagnosis will be AHDH impulsive (not inattentive). Looking at my family history, we were probably all in this category. But my family is all gifted, had great attention for school, and though we have some social quirks, we've all generally been popular and well-liked and successful.
But every time we talk to an expert, there's some new-fangled therapy that we're advised to follow. First it was OT (waste of time), now speech (unrelated to his ADHD - related to his major hearing loss from fluid), and now the words floating around are more OT, therapy, social skills groups....
The thing is, my son is exceptionally well-behaved when he's calm and low-key. I work and my husband travels all the time, so the idea of hauling my kids to three simple therapies a week from preschool is crazy stressful - for me and for him. I have pretty high confidence that my son will end up okay either way. Therapy may theoretically "fix" some of his issues. Or therapy may just resolve them earlier than they might have in the absence of intervention. But if we don't do therapy at all, worst case is that we suffer through some tough preschool years while he works out the kinds, and then he's a little off as an adult (like 95% normal) but still smart and successful and well-liked. So all this stress now -- which literally makes him worse on a day to day basis by escalating his stimulation, but has the potentially to help him long term.... I think we're going to slowly back away from this whole process, implement common sense parenting that we see helps, and just wait if/when his elementary teachers insist we get him help.
Anonymous wrote:I just told one new professional that I would not take my son to see her during rush hour, meaning a 3 hour total trip for 45 minutes of therapy. Every week, while my other son was home alone.
She told me I wasn't doing everything I could do for my son who needed the therapy. I can't believe how stressed I was until I told her no. Sometimes you have to prioritize.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who has done the schlep for years: does anyone out there really think the schlep is worth it?
Anonymous wrote:I just told one new professional that I would not take my son to see her during rush hour, meaning a 3 hour total trip for 45 minutes of therapy. Every week, while my other son was home alone.
She told me I wasn't doing everything I could do for my son who needed the therapy. I can't believe how stressed I was until I told her no. Sometimes you have to prioritize.


Anonymous wrote:I feel your pain. My worst experience was a time when dc finally got in to see an ot and was doing vision and speech therapy at the same time. Dc was very young and most nights of the week we got home close to bedtime. The ot was young and had no children of her own. She had issues and would insist I jump through hoops that she made up each week and held over my head that she had 40 people trying to get one of 4 spots she had open. She allowed only 3 missed sessions in a year and she didn't allow time off for Christmas. I would get fed up that each specialist expected me to be an expert in their field. I remember being exhausted.