2016年9月10日 星期六

[轉貼文章] Bill-Engagement overpowers Opposition

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=1133454616734037&id=123708701041972

Engagement overpowers Opposition

Recently I had a chance to do an assessment for an eight year old boy, diagnosed with autism and ODD.  Supposedly very oppositional, throwing fits whenever asked to do anything and demanding to have what he wants, whenever he wants it.   The poor mother was at her wits end, totally exhausted and overwhelmed.   She is used to being hit, scratched, kicked, etc if she doesn’t give him his way.  Sure enough as soon as we got there, the child was throwing fits (screaming, hitting, etc.)  over every simple snags in his expectation; demanding he play his video game, having juice, etc.  

Apparently the only activity he will do at home is playing electronic games.   Mom and I sat down at the dining room table and mom wanted him to sit at the table with us.  He refused and wanted to play his little hand held electronic game, so she let him sit down with the game.  He played his game for a few minutes while we talked.  Then he was told that in a few minutes he would need to put the game down and talk with us.  Of course he didn’t like this option and resisted.   We had been discussing with mom about using his preferred activity (electronics) as reinforcement for participating in other daily activity; what we call “first, then” (First we do ___, then you can play your game).  

Once it was time for him to put the game down, I simplied the task to “let’s color for two minutes, then you can play your game for five minutes” (he can tell time and mom is used to using the clock on her phone as a timer).   The young boy refused to give mom the game and kept resisting.  Mom kept coaxing and counseling but did not take the game.  I again clarified what the expectations were, (first we were going to color , then he can play the game for five minutes.)  He still screamed no and refused to give mom the game.  I requested mom to take the game from him, and as expected, when she did he hit her and screamed some more, demanding to get the game back.  Staying calm, I just said again, “when you are ready, we can color for two minutes then you can play the game for five minutes…let me know when you are ready.”   He screamed for about 10-20 seconds, then realized I was not going to feed into it (I said nothing; waiting patiently) and he calmed right down and was ready to color.  

 When collaborating over what to draw and color, he decided he wanted to color one of his action figures in his favorite games.  The other therapist drew the figure as the boy colored it in.   Once the two minutes were up I told him his two minutes were up and he could play the game now (mom wanted to say nothing and just let keep coloring…but I wanted him to make that choice and trust that we would follow our word.)  The young boy wanted to finish coloring the figure first.  He was having a good time discussing what he knew about the action figure and collaborating with the therapist what colors to use.  You could tell he felt very competent knowing all about the action figures and telling us about them.   He gleamed!

Once it was done, we gave him the game and again told him that he could play for five minutes and then we would color again for two minutes.   Mom and I went back to talking about using preferred activity to reinforce other activity, start short and simple and gradually expanding his engagement in other activity.  We also talked about how to expand his interests into other activity, like drawing the action figures that he loves so much (building activity around his preferences).  Once the five minutes was done, as expected he wanted to continue the electronic game; although he was much more cooperative giving it up since he knew ahead of time that he would get the game back again after coloring for two minutes.  

This time he wanted mom to draw a different action figure.  Mom googled it on her phone and the two together looked at which picture of the figure they wanted to draw and color.  The young boy was excited about that.  As mom copied the figure he was required to put his hand on the top of the marker as mom drew the figure.  He we impressed on how she could do that so well.   During this exchange there was good collaboration, with mom putting some boundaries on what he said and did.  He handled it well and was following her lead.  Together they were having fun engaging in a “we-do” activity together.  You could tell he felt competent and enjoyed the engagement.  After the two minutes I gave him a choice, “do you want to stop and go play your video game, or stay doing this with mom?”  He didn’t hesitate, he wanted to stay coloring with mom.  Once that figure was done, he wanted to draw and color another one.   At that moment he was enjoying this “we-do” engagement with mom more fun than playing his electronic game.  

In this one short session we were trying to show mom and the therapist (1) how to gradually shape greater engagement and cooperation by reinforcing engagement with the preferred activity, (2) how to use “’we-do” activity to teach relating skills, and (3) how to build other activity around his major preferences (video game figures).    The oppositional behavior decreased substantially and he was gleaming with confidence when talking about and coloring his action figures.  

From there we discussed with mom how to build a structured routine around using the electronic games to reinforce simple engagement in other daily activity (first this, than the game) by starting out with short and simple activities and then slowing expanding on the engagement.  By focusing on his strengths and preferences she could build cooperation and collaboration with her son, as long as she was clear and consistent with him.  He is a bright boy and picks up on the consistency without difficulty.  Clear, fair and consistent expectations followed by warm interaction during the we-do activities.    No punishment needed,  just clear expectations and boundaries around playing the electronics.  Of course, this along with not stop all the tantrums and resistance; however, it was a starting point for building cooperation and engagement which is the foundation to reducing the automatic resistant opposition they were experiencing.   Once this is established, we can expand from there.

2016年9月1日 星期四

[Anan原創文章] 轉變心態-問題是問題,人不是問題

[Anan原創文章] 轉變心態-問題是問題,人不是問題
-孩子本身不是“問題”,“自閉症”和我們如何看待“自閉症”,才是問題

與一位(甚至多於一位)被診斷或被懷疑有自閉症的孩子生活,絕對不是一件簡單容易的事。日常生活大大小小的問題接二連三,還甭說外出於社區,學校,社群,甚至親屬朋友圈子,也會遇到相當大的困難和壓力。

不過把自閉症的問題和孩子本身劃上等號,似乎幫助不大! 即是說,我們家長很可能被潛移默化,因太頭痛太辛苦,眼中就只看到孩子不妥的地方,甚至-認為孩子只有不妥的地方。

我記得幾年前有一次,一位導師主持一個小組,想各家長寫下孩子的優點和長處。結果許多人苦苦思索都難以寫出來,反而,說到頭痛之處,就能寫出一頁長長的清單。好像,孩子就是一堆問題,孩子就等於問題。

對家長來說,把“孩子等同問題”的壞處,是失去希望了。試想日復一日已要對著許多問題,還要覺得這些問題都沒出路,那家長還能保持正能量嗎?而且,當有新狀況出現,家長也很易把它歸因於老問題,又是問題了!這樣以圍著問題負向思維的壞處,比問題本身更具殺傷力! 難怪不少家長會被負面情緒折磨,越鑽越負面,甚至造成情緒困擾,沒有動力,越想越灰暗。

要打破這僵局,其中一個可以做的,是把問題和孩子分開。之前有一篇文章講擬人法的,我們也可把自閉症擬人法起來,例如,就當“自閉症”是一隻大怪獸吧!我們來訪問一下牠:

我: “大怪獸,你如何影響著孩子啊?”
大(大怪獸): “我令到他不想和人玩,只想自己一個! 我令他晚上睡不著,早上起不來! 我令他很固著什麼都跟他固定的規則! 我令他挑食,只食某些東西! 我令他情緒失控,大吵大鬧!......”

我: “那你最終的目標是什麼啊?”
大: “我要破壞他的成長! 我要令別人都排斥他,都不喜歡他! 我要令他封閉自己! 我要令他不能在社會中! 我要令他和父母的關係破裂! 我要令他成為一個失敗者!”

我: “ 看起來你真的很強大! 但是我相信你一定有弱點的! 你的弱點是什麼? 什麼時候你的影響比較少?”
大: “ 我最怕阿慢! 每當阿慢出現的時候,孩子就有機會思考和慢慢反應。這時我就影響不了他!而且父母對他也變得接納和包容。當父母思想改變 我就影響不了他們!
另外我最怕他們變得積極。當他們集中火力只處理能夠應付的難題時,並且他們很有計劃地,逐步逐步幫助孩子。我的力量就會變少!
我也害怕父母互相交流和學習,把他們應付我的心得互相傳播,讓我的計謀不能成功! 本來我希望分化他們,怎料他們卻因此變得團結起來,令我非常害怕!

我: “ 那麼父母怎樣才能做到以上的事呢?”
大: “ 我想他們首先要相信,然後要不斷嘗試不怕失敗,在看起來沒有出路的時候,也要懷抱希望,這樣我也不能常常影響他們了!”

我: “ 謝謝你回答我這麼多問題。最後一個問題是,其實你有沒有好的影響呢?”
大:“ 這個問題真的很有意思。大家都非常集中在我的壞影響上,居然有人會思考我的好影響,那我就告訴你吧!
其實,我有很多才能和天賦,只不過經常被人忽略及貶低吧! 例如我能夠做一些很重複的工作而不覺得沉悶,所以有一些孩子長大後能夠擔任一些品質管理方面的工作。
另外有時我讓孩子的計算技能相當出色。外國還有一位家長,開設了一間資訊科技公司,專門聘請受我影響的人仕作為員工呢! 據說他們都非常熱衷工作並且做得很出色。
當然我令到他們有很多困難,並且每個人都不一樣。不是每個孩子都能夠擁有許多才能,甚至有些孩子真的長大後仍需要很多照顧,但是他們總有一些能力,等待能夠懂得他們的人來發掘。而最懂他們的人通常是他們的父母和主要照顧者。 所以我說過我最怕他們積極和有希望!
我: “謝謝你接受我的訪問。你真的提供了很多有用的資訊。希望我能夠像你說的一樣啦!我也要和阿慢做朋友,並多作分享,多學習,多嘗試,不放棄。因為,我真的很想幫助我的孩子啊!再見!”

希望文中的“我”和“大怪獸”的對話能帶給讀者一些新角度和思維。每個家長面對的大怪獸也可能有所不同,不知你想像中的大怪獸會給你怎樣的答案呢?

[文中擬人法的方法取材自敘事治療的外化問題,有興趣未來有機會我再多作介紹,希望對大家有所助益。共勉之!]

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