Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a dentist once who hummed while she cleaned my teeth. She couldn’t help herself. It was off-putting and I switched dentists.
I agree with others those teachers did her a favor.
That dentist seems unhygienic. Why force more air, spit and snot out your nose into your mask or customer than necessary.
Anonymous wrote:This is one of the things I regret from my oldest child’s life. She’s in high school now but she went to two preschools and each time a teacher commented that she hummed when she ate lunch and snacks and that I needed to work on that with her and teach her not to. I did and she stopped humming during meals but looking back, she was just happy and enjoying her food.
What did it matter to the schools? Why should little kids not hum when they eat?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is neurodivergent and has some stimming behaviors like this. Not this specific one, but she makes a specific noise when she's concentrating (impossible to replicate, it's like a clicking in her throat). We understand this is a self soothing behavior and it's very satisfying to her, but we also know that if she continues to do it, it will annoy peers, teachers, coworkers, friends, etc. So we have talked to her about being self-aware about it and trying to only do it when she is alone. She has actually been pretty successful with this.
It's very hard as a parent of an ND kid because I am actually NOT trying to "norm" her -- her neurodivergence is pretty apparent to most people who interact with her and we are more than okay with that. But we feel we have an obligation to her to help her with certain habits that could become real obstacles to living a fulfilling life.
I also have some ND behaviors and I wound up talking to her about stims I do that are silent or unobtrusive. She wound up adopting a kind of nodding head jerk instead of the sound. She's literally doing it right now while reading next to me lol. It's still the kind of think that will annoy some people, but it's less disruptive than the sound so we've encouraged the switch.
What happens if your ND child is next to an ND child who is disturbed by jerky movements?
All hell breaks loose and they put too well behaves buffer girls in between then. Buffer girls never get to sit by their real friends, they’re always buffering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Making noises that are not usual can be a sign of ADHD and/or autism (some symptoms overlap). Your preschool teacher was old-fashioned in that she wanted you to train your child not to do this... but a more modern take on it would have been to bring it to your attention as a potential red flag for neurodivergence.
Pp with the brother who does this, definitely has ADHD.
My DD with ASD did this as a preschooler.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Making noises that are not usual can be a sign of ADHD and/or autism (some symptoms overlap). Your preschool teacher was old-fashioned in that she wanted you to train your child not to do this... but a more modern take on it would have been to bring it to your attention as a potential red flag for neurodivergence.
Pp with the brother who does this, definitely has ADHD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:humming while eating can lead to choking so I would not regret that op.
How?!
Because humming opens your airways. Air comes out.
Any swimmer or scuba diver knows this
Many of us hum on flip turns since that makes water come out our nose or mouth and not get us our nose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a dentist once who hummed while she cleaned my teeth. She couldn’t help herself. It was off-putting and I switched dentists.
I agree with others those teachers did her a favor.
That dentist seems unhygienic. Why force more air, spit and snot out your nose into your mask or customer than necessary.
Anonymous wrote:I had a dentist once who hummed while she cleaned my teeth. She couldn’t help herself. It was off-putting and I switched dentists.
I agree with others those teachers did her a favor.
Anonymous wrote:My sister and my niece hum while eating. Drives me nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is neurodivergent and has some stimming behaviors like this. Not this specific one, but she makes a specific noise when she's concentrating (impossible to replicate, it's like a clicking in her throat). We understand this is a self soothing behavior and it's very satisfying to her, but we also know that if she continues to do it, it will annoy peers, teachers, coworkers, friends, etc. So we have talked to her about being self-aware about it and trying to only do it when she is alone. She has actually been pretty successful with this.
It's very hard as a parent of an ND kid because I am actually NOT trying to "norm" her -- her neurodivergence is pretty apparent to most people who interact with her and we are more than okay with that. But we feel we have an obligation to her to help her with certain habits that could become real obstacles to living a fulfilling life.
I also have some ND behaviors and I wound up talking to her about stims I do that are silent or unobtrusive. She wound up adopting a kind of nodding head jerk instead of the sound. She's literally doing it right now while reading next to me lol. It's still the kind of think that will annoy some people, but it's less disruptive than the sound so we've encouraged the switch.
What happens if your ND child is next to an ND child who is disturbed by jerky movements?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:humming while eating can lead to choking so I would not regret that op.
How?!
Anonymous wrote:It must’ve been bad enough that two completely different preschools and teachers felt the need to comment and ask you to work on it with her.
Anonymous wrote:My brother has always done this and frankly it's just annoying and distracting for others trying to talk to each other at the table if it's not very quiet humming.
Anonymous wrote:My DH was a hummer at school. At home he was a chatterbox. He talked a lot, even playing by himself at home. He outgrew it