I was kidding myself when I posted Wednesday night that we
would go to speech therapy Thursday morning. I woke up feeling like I had been
hit by a truck. Realizing all the new equipment I had to organize, along with
Anya sleeping in until about 9 am made me decide to stay home. I had not been
home consistently for ten days and then only to grab a change of clothes and
sleep if I was lucky. Adam is really, really great at keeping up with dishes
and laundry but there was a lot of things to organize: Anya’s new equipment
drop off and pick up, and paperwork, not to mention Christmas preparations. Yesterday was spent attending to all of
this and trying to recover from having maybe three hours of sleep for several
nights.
Anya has two sets of therapies, one set at Children’s and
one with First Steps. First Steps is awesome because it is free, and it comes
to the house. This afternoon the OT with First Steps came. We had missed an
appointment last week and I had called her to say she might want to spend the
time re-assessing Anya, as she had started doing so many new things. Prepping to
work on eating, I had only given Anya half a feeding so she was hungry. Carla
didn’t think she would do much feeding, as she figured working on strengthening
was higher priority.
She was in for a surprise. As I have said before Anya has
started rolling over a bit, as well as holding up her head. She had an
outstanding tummy time session; this is particularly difficult for her. We had
more than enough time to work on feeding. Using hand towels Carla showed me how
to cradle Anya securely in her highchair, and then she used a spoon to see how
Anya took it. Turns out Anya’s left side of her mouth is less sensitive than
the other side, so we need to focus on putting food in that side. Carla showed
me how to let Anya see the spoon and the bowl I am using, talking about what is
there. ‘Apples!’ Then I give Anya the
chance to smell it, and then say ‘taste’ and put it close to her mouth. As long
as she doesn’t avoid the spoon we scoop a small amount in. I couldn’t really
tell at first what Anya thought, other than she didn’t hate it. She didn’t get
upset or avoid the spoon, and allowed Carla to give her a few more spoonfuls, smacking
her lips.
At one point Carla put the bowl down while we were
discussing details. Suddenly Anya started vocalizing, in a kind of complaining insistent
way. ‘More? You want more?’ Carla said. Anya took several more spoonfuls! Needless
to say Carla and I were impressed, this has been the first time I have seen
Anya so interested in eating or drinking. Thank God for professionals skilled
in feeding issues, I had no idea she was that ready. She didn’t take a significant
amount, but at this point we are working on getting her used to eating, not
getting any nutrition that way. That will take some time. Carla was excited
because she rarely sees kids come out of the hospital doing better than when
they went in.
So today was a small victory! My joy is dampened however by
the murders at the school in Connecticut. Having come so close to losing a
child from illness I can only imagine the pain these families are going
through. May they find peace. Please God may we work together to stop these
senseless killings that are becoming more and more frequent, and not be torn
apart by politics and pride.
Love it! Don't know what we would have done without First Steps. So happy for you!
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