projector lamps

My Son who's 7. has sensory differences,  a mixture of under and oversensitive,  He puts his face up to close to the tv,  would a projector lamp help?  He can be hyperactive at bedtime and I wondered if it could help with that too? 

Parents
  • I used to love the static I could feel on the screen of my grandparents old analogue TV.

    It's hard to understand what he enjoys about the TV, is it warm? Is it a big flat screen and it seems he also really enjoys bright sunlight?  Or, does he like to see with a magnification, would he enjoy a magnifying glass and a microscope to see the detail.

    I'm making the assumption he doesn't need glasses. But on the off he might, when I take mine off, I have magnified vision.

    What would a projector lamp do for him do you think? 

    I have light sensitivity, so LEDs and a computer screen at night without sufficient Infrared - full -spectrum lights - will give me a headache. LightAware.org is an organisation helping us keep halogens for those who are epileptic or with these sensitivities. But Blue Light at night will wake us back up and a narrow band of LED can be stressful, so I have a rock salt lamp which disperses light better and a halogen lamp for night in my room. 

    Over the years, we can expand our sensory awareness, we don't desensitise or dull our senses like our peers, so it's actually good to become more acute with our senses - and able to recognise nuances of differences. Depending on our inclinations and abilities, when coupled with biology and/or physics, chemistry and such, we might be excellent at foraging, light or sound design, crafting chocolate and so on. 

    The hyperactivity at bedtime might be mental, sometimes helping to focus a wild imagination and ability to make all kinds of connexions into stories or non-fiction will help him sleep. 

Reply
  • I used to love the static I could feel on the screen of my grandparents old analogue TV.

    It's hard to understand what he enjoys about the TV, is it warm? Is it a big flat screen and it seems he also really enjoys bright sunlight?  Or, does he like to see with a magnification, would he enjoy a magnifying glass and a microscope to see the detail.

    I'm making the assumption he doesn't need glasses. But on the off he might, when I take mine off, I have magnified vision.

    What would a projector lamp do for him do you think? 

    I have light sensitivity, so LEDs and a computer screen at night without sufficient Infrared - full -spectrum lights - will give me a headache. LightAware.org is an organisation helping us keep halogens for those who are epileptic or with these sensitivities. But Blue Light at night will wake us back up and a narrow band of LED can be stressful, so I have a rock salt lamp which disperses light better and a halogen lamp for night in my room. 

    Over the years, we can expand our sensory awareness, we don't desensitise or dull our senses like our peers, so it's actually good to become more acute with our senses - and able to recognise nuances of differences. Depending on our inclinations and abilities, when coupled with biology and/or physics, chemistry and such, we might be excellent at foraging, light or sound design, crafting chocolate and so on. 

    The hyperactivity at bedtime might be mental, sometimes helping to focus a wild imagination and ability to make all kinds of connexions into stories or non-fiction will help him sleep. 

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