Oct. 21, 2009 :
Miggy: "Mommy, drink medicine."
mom: Why? Who is sick?
Miggy: "Miggy is sick."
mom: What hurts?
Miggy. "My neck hurts. It's hot."
I touched his neck and it was flaming hot. And later I found out that his front tooth had just erupted from his pink swollen gums, which caused his temperature to rise.
Notice his red cheeks in the photo.
- Since birth, Miggy had sensory problems. When he was little, he would hit his head on walls, slap his face, hit his chest, scratch little bumps on his skin (vaccine marks, insect bites, old wounds) until he bled without so much as an "ouch" and not even a single tear. He did not register pain the way typical children do. Why did he not experience the appropriate reaction of pain after injury? Because the beta-endorphins released in the brain can produce an anesthetic effect, which would account for his indifference to pain.
- Through sensory integration techniques (deep pressure, massage, pancake and vestibular ball rocking) integrated in his regular occupational therapies, his sensory problems had lessened. Now, he is able to feel pain and even verbalize his pain and discomfort, unlike before when we would always have to guess what was wrong with him.
I love this one; he's so cute.
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