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Moving House

SteveF

New Member
Our nine year old is non-verbal with severe learning delay. He is diagnosed with a long list of things, including autism and anxiety. It is genetic so there is unlikely to be any significant improvement.

We have just bought a house, having been renting the same place for the past five years. We have not moved in yet.

Lately he has not taken well to going anywhere for longer than a few minutes, and can become aggressive if he wants to leave somewhere and cannot.

We took him there for the first time today along with his favourite type of toy and he lasted less than a minute.

Clearly he is going to have to adapt but we don’t want to make things unnecessarily difficult for him.

Does anyone have any advice?

Thanks,
 
Hmmm...could you start bringing familiar things to the house (literally one at a time, and with him) to stay there?

Not his things at first - that would probably be too traumatic (and he might not understand?). But things he would recognize as belonging to home, especially when he would see them again at subsequent visits right where they had been left; Turning the new house into a familiar place and bridging the gap between old home and new home, hopefully.

I can't really explain why I suggest this more than I already have except to say it would have helped me when I had no language yet, and even after I had language as a child. (It would probably help me now, actually)

I still have immense difficulty with change and with challening environments...

Another thought is:

Does he have sensory sensitivities? If he does, or if it is unknown but he might, maybe try to do a sort of sensory inventory of the new house to see if for example:

Are there ambient noises inside or outside that might be upsetting him? (if he has hyperacusis like I do, and which was much worse as a child, noises you cannot even hear at all unless outside, he might be able to hear them inside and they might bother him a lot). [Normal inside the house sounds that can also be very awful: dripping tap; furnace; radiator buzzing or clicking rapidly; refrigerator or freezer or other-always-on-appliance buzzing; lights buzzing; electrical outlets buzzing...] Simple ear defenders can help if he tolerates wearing headphones (and doesn't already).

Are there new flooring or paint smells, perfumes, food smell, that are unfamiliar or that he might find aversive? Something that is barely noticeable to you could be overpowering and intolerable to an autistic child with severe sensory sensitivities. Even my father who has sensory sensitivites himself has always been amazed by the acuity of my sense of smell and hearing.

Sometimes glare or colors or lighting (too bright, too dark[; "warmth" or "coolness" of lightbulbs; mind-shattering, literal-crazy-making flickering (fluorescents are worst for this - they make my brain stop working and give me migraine headaches)] ) can be issues...

Another thought is to try things like painting/decorating walls at the new house the same colors/wallpapers/etc as you had in your old house for the same or similar rooms/areas. (Ideally exacly the same -- like take a photo a miniscule chip of paint and try to get it color-matched.) Or maybe trying to create similarity in flooring, if possible. (Like if new house has hard flooring and old house has carpet a maybe even trying to find big area rugs similar to the old carpet would help?)

If he is only comfortable at home, really try to make the new house as much like the old one in sensory terms as you can...that could address both sensory sensitivity reactions and issues with change at the same time.

Good luck to you and your son, to your family!
 
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Put something fun to do there. That he has never done before. It could be a trampoline, a race car track, a little basket ball hoop outside, a cool bike, or skateboard, something he looks forward to doing in the new "house".
 
Our nine year old is non-verbal with severe learning delay. He is diagnosed with a long list of things, including autism and anxiety. It is genetic so there is unlikely to be any significant improvement.

We have just bought a house, having been renting the same place for the past five years. We have not moved in yet.

Lately he has not taken well to going anywhere for longer than a few minutes, and can become aggressive if he wants to leave somewhere and cannot.

We took him there for the first time today along with his favourite type of toy and he lasted less than a minute.

Clearly he is going to have to adapt but we don’t want to make things unnecessarily difficult for him.

Does anyone have any advice?

Thanks,
There is likely a level of frustration and anxiety with the "loss of control" with regards to his environment. Perhaps you might allow him some autonomy with regards to decorating and arranging "his space" within the home.

"Non-verbal with a severe learning delay"... is that because of some level of dyspraxia or apraxia and is unable to use a letter board or keyboard yet? Nearly all of the childhood intelligence tests require those fine motor skills he might not have... and as a result, the physical deficits negatively impact the testing. Sometimes things are a bit deceiving with non-verbal autism... sometimes there is actual intellectual impairment... and sometimes there are savants "trapped" within their dysfunctional bodies. Where are you at with all of this? Has he been given a "voice" yet?

There is acting out because he's a little kid and that's what little kids do. There is autism-related emotional dysfunction. Then there is the frustration and anxiety related to the loss of control. There is frustration, even anger related to the fact he might not be able to express himself in words. It's a volatile mix.
 
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He has a partial chromosome duplication which is believed to be the primary cause of his condition. He does not lack intelligence, but is unable to effectively communicate which is undoubtedly a large part of his problem because he gets frustrated as a result.

We have been taking him after school every evening and giving him his tea there which seems to be working, managed an hour yesterday before deciding he’d had enough.

One of this favourite things is his trampoline so we built him a new one (his one at the old house is falling apart so wouldn’t survive relocating). He doesn’t seem interested much yet. Also got him a swing which I’ll build when he’s in respite this week.

Hopefully getting there slowly, got about six weeks left before we give the keys back to the rented house.
 
my ideas are to take him there more often, try to get him to sleep the night there.
Build him a fort in the living room out of blankets and tents. Move ALL of his favorite things there. Stay there with him for a few days/nights and just have fun. Eat his favorite foods. Start placing things for him to discover in the other rooms. Good things.
my ideas are to take him there more often, try to get him to sleep the night there.
It appears he is ambulatory... perhaps...Build a fort in the living room out of blankets and sheets/tents. Move ALL of his favorite things there. Stay there with him for a few days/nights and just have fun. Eat his favorite foods. Start placing things for him to discover in the other rooms. Good things. Pretty soon he may enjoy going to the other rooms to find things. In doing so he gets the format of the home and the rooms. Start moving furniture into each room. The last room is the one with his fort in it. Pretty soon you're all moved in. He's acclimated. He has left his old world behind and has a new safe world with you in the new house. Later, you can introduce him to his outside yard. Instead of a fort, you might also consider moving his entire bedroom and all his things to his new home and staying with him there. If you choose this method, you may want to spend a few nights with him in his room in the existing home and after his room is moved to the new home continue staying with him in his room for a few days. I don't know him but you know him well. The key as you pointed out is that he's safely with you, he's having fun, and it's a progressive trasition.
 

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