Hi Everyone, 5 year old, autism,aspergers, confused

Hey,

My name is Lisa Smile My 5 year old daughter recently visited the Doctor and the Doctor believes my daughter Skye has Autism, aspergers.  It will be 2 months till the assessment.  It never entered my mind that she may have autism, even though I asked some questions,  I don't think it hit me until I walked out the door. I was in complete shock and confused in what this means. 

My daughter has been visiting Physiotherapy for low muscle tone in her legs and hands. Speech & Language Therapy, her assessment result were that she has problems retaining information, problems with Language. Occupational Therapy, for low muscle tone, spacial awareness, difficulty with zips, she fine motor skill problems.  When occupational Therapy assessed Skye she was at lowest results. 

Skye is a child that is always in her imaginative world. She loves to be super heros but gets upset when she can't do what they superheros can do. She is a complete tomboy, loves cars.

She very active and her energy levels don't drop at night, Doctor gave Melatonin to help her drift of to sleep. 

I'm  new to this and I am not quite sure what to expect,  what's going to happen. 

Thanks and sorry for babbling on so much lol.

Parents
  • Former Member
    Former Member

    One thing to say, and i'm sorry that i haven't talked about the quation before mow, but a diagnosis of autism can be a good thing. It can mean that there is a lot going on in her head but that she is a bit cut off from the rest of the world. The same can be true if she has hearing problems. Anything that isolates someone can get in the way of learning but she may catch up in her own time. There are lots of people on this forum who have a diagnosis (i.e we're autistic too) but have got degrees and all sorts of other qualifications and skills. It sounds as though she is bright and doing stuff in her imaginative world. It'll probably take an extra special  effort to get through the barriers but i expect that it'll be very rewarding when you get there.

    :-)

Reply
  • Former Member
    Former Member

    One thing to say, and i'm sorry that i haven't talked about the quation before mow, but a diagnosis of autism can be a good thing. It can mean that there is a lot going on in her head but that she is a bit cut off from the rest of the world. The same can be true if she has hearing problems. Anything that isolates someone can get in the way of learning but she may catch up in her own time. There are lots of people on this forum who have a diagnosis (i.e we're autistic too) but have got degrees and all sorts of other qualifications and skills. It sounds as though she is bright and doing stuff in her imaginative world. It'll probably take an extra special  effort to get through the barriers but i expect that it'll be very rewarding when you get there.

    :-)

Children
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