Is your child's behavior confusing you, or frustrating you?
Are you worried that your child is suffering from low self-esteem? Do they "self-attack" or belittle themselves? Or maybe your child is hyper-sensitive, or bullies others, or gets anxious or reactive to smells, tastes, and even their own clothing.
I have seen so many "behavior issues" go away when parents understand sensory-motor processing and are given tools to re-pattern such issues. I have seen that parents who understand birth or attachment trauma find a way to guide their child away from difficult behaviors related to overwhelm.
That's because sensory overwhelm is real, and it can create a "view of the world" that shows up as "identify beliefs" or even as a Sensory Processing Disorder. There could, in the extreme, be a situation where you are seeing Reactive Attachment Behavior(RAD)?
Parents who understand that what happened at birth, or post-birth can start to unravel and help a child to repair the things that may have appeared overwhelming from their child's long ago "infant" perspective produce maps inside their brain. This happens through the survival part of the brain, which is awake during prenatal time. Under stress, these maps jump to the surface.
The good news is there is treatment that can help. I have spent over 40 years working with children; trying to understand their needs and the needs of parents and families. I have worked over 20 years developing tools that help parents and children.
Going all the way back to early experiences, your child may have birth trauma or post-birth trauma. Infants have a way of "organizing" their early experience into inaccurate identity beliefs, or a distorted sense of the world as safe or unsafe. And, their inner world view may be ineffective for healthy development, and need to be put into perspective.
The good news is we can work with early experience. Our therapists know how at The Brook Institute. They are trained in effective body-based methods. We can help you. Scroll down for further questions to see how this treatment works.
Children's struggles can be exhausting and can relate to Sensory Processing Disorder or Trauma
Take this simple quiz:
- Do you feel controlled by your child?
- Are you exhausted trying to get it right?
- Is your child hypersensitive?
- Does your child struggle with sensory-processing issues
- Are they on the Asperger’s or Autism Spectrum?
- No matter what you do, does your child complain, act out, or have melt-downs?
- Are you pulled into emotional drama or power struggles with your child?
- Is your relationship with your spouse suffering?