Friday, February 12, 2010

Setback

I want to blog about the setback Jade has had in the past week. I am sure we will get past it in due course, but it might help me in future, and others, to know that setbacks do happen in the ordinary course of things and can be overcome.

Last Friday morning, we all walked to school together as normal, and Jade was quite happy about it. Since the beginning of February she has been in school full-time without any classroom support, and just a few sessions with her TA for specific therapy purposes to try and continue moving forward.

While Jade lined up with her class ready to go in, I stopped for a few words with her teacher, just in passing conversation. I was about to leave when Jade beckoned me over to where she was standing in line, and said that everybody was supposed to take £1 in to school that day to take part in the bring-and-buy sale in aid of Haiti. She had not mentioned it to me before, so I guess she had forgotten, or maybe she'd already decided she didn't want to take part so hadn't told me. Unusually, I had a couple of loose pound coins in my pocket, so I said "Oh, don't worry, you can have one of these" and gave it to her. She shoved it back at me and said she didn't want it. I slipped it straight into her coat pocket and said "Oh go on, just have it in your pocket and then it's there if you do decide you want to buy something." By this time the class was starting to go into school, and she hung back and started to look all weepy. I didn't realise that the whole bring-and-buy situation was too much for her to cope with because she has on occasion been into a shop to buy something on her own (asking me to stand outside while she did it). She doesn't talk at those times, but manages the transaction silently. She's also been at a festival and a village fete (with friends, admittedly) and bought something with her own money from a stall, so I thought she would be able to do this. She was looking very upset, though, and refused my encouragement to just go in to class, so I gave her a cuddle and persuaded her to come and sit with me in the yard just outside the front door. I gave her lots of cuddles and reassurance, and then attempted to talk to her about something else to take her mind off the upset and get her back to being calm and rational again. It didn't work. We'd been there about 10 minutes when Jade's TA come out of the school, saw us and was greatly relieved. As far as the class teacher was concerned, Jade was in the line about to come into class and I was just about to leave the playground when she last saw us, so she didn't know where Jade had disappeared to. A search had started!

She sat down with us, and I started to tell her what Jade was upset about. This was too much for Jade and she ran off. I didn't think she'd go far, and shouted to her to not go out of sight, but off she went round the corner. The TA said she would go inside and tell the teacher that Jade was found and Ok, and I set off after Jade. She disappeared remarkably quickly, but I found her in the churchyard which is part of our normal route between home and school. I called her to wait for me and she did, and we sat down on a bench. She was upset and didn't want to go back to school, but I told her that they would not know where she was, and whether I had found her, and whether she was safe, so we had to go back at least to tell them that everyone was OK. She agreed to come with me so we walked back to school. The TA met us and we went straight to her office for a chat.

The TA really is very good with Jade. She just 'gets it' with Jade's anxiety. She does not fear to push her a bit harder than I would, but I think that's positive. And she is very warm, affectionate and caring too. She takes no nonsense in school generally (I think all the kids and half the staff are a bit scared of her!) - she is senior TA and the SEN admin co-ordinator and runs the breakfast club and after-school club (phew!) and has a lot of responsibility in the school. She uses humour and silliness to help Jade relax and giggle, and yet can be serious and heartfelt too.

So we spent a bit of time in the office with the TA, and gradually Jade started to relax. The TA said she knew of a horse poster that had been brought in ready for the sale, and she would take Jade off to buy it. All through this, Jade was completely non-verbal, even with me, although she can usually talk to the TA. Even at home, though, when she is feeling strong emotions she can't articulate anything at all and goes all silent. (Hmm, just like her father ....!) However she relaxed enough to agree to go with the TA to look at the horse poster (eventually - to start with she didn't want to let go of me), and I said I would wait outside in the yard, where they could see me from an upstairs window. As they came back downstairs, they both waved to me and I could tell from the movements and body language that Jade knew I was going to go home and she was waving me goodbye. Off home I went.

At lunchtime (about 12.30) I had just decided to have a bit of a nap so that I wouldn't be too tired and grumpy when the girls came home. (I think Shannon had disturbed my sleep quite a bit the night before). I settled down on the sofa, and then after a few minutes heard running feet, the side gate open and the back door. Then Jade ran in, threw herself onto me and tearfully said "I'm not going back there." She had run away from school! She had no bags and no coat. I tried to get her to tell me what had happened, and it was quite hard to get anything out of her, so I simply had no idea whether she'd been in a terrible state all morning or what. I can't now remember exactly what I said, but I think maybe I talked about hard days and things being better as long as she persists and doesn't run away from facing them. I told her I had to ring the school to let them know where she was, and they had no idea she'd gone. It had been lunchtime, and she'd eaten her lunch, but had disappeared fairly shortly afterwards when let out into the playground. There are pedestrian gates that it's easy to get out of, and obviously the playground assistants just hadn't been looking in her direction at the time she took off. I'm glad, really, because I hate to think of the hysteria and panic it would have caused in her if someone had tried to stop her.

Anyway, we cuddled on the sofa together and took the opportunity for her to watch the documentary on selective mutism that had been on earlier in the week that we'd videoed. At the end of it she did say it made her feel better knowing that other children struggled like she did, although she did know that before as she has been to a SMIRA parents' meeting with us and met other children there.

The TA rang me and asked me to try and find out what had made Jade take off, because apparently she'd spent part of the morning with the TA, then gone with her into Jade's usual maths class (different than her normal class teacher), the TA had offered to have lunch with her but she'd said no, she'd be OK having lunch with her friends, and had done so, and had been quite back to normal and happy by then. She did say that the class teacher had spoken to Jade at lunchtime and asked me to find out if that is what had upset her. Sure enough, it was. Her class teacher, not knowing about what had happened between Jade and the TA during the morning, had kindly come to Jade at lunchtime and asked if she had any money for the bring-and-buy sale and offered to lend her £1 if necessary. Jade apparently had just shook her head and not seemed to react in any bad way, but it had obviously really shaken her again and she had got all upset about her inability to do such things and taken off.

The TA came round to our house at 6pm after she'd finished after-school club, and had a chat with Jade and reassured her that she wouldn't be forced to do anything she wasn't ready to do, and that if she needed the TA first thing on Monday morning, she would be ready and prepared to be with Jade during the morning.

Monday morning came, and though Jade was obviously not as happy as normal about school, she didn't refuse to go, and got up and ready as usual. We went and found the TA and told her Jade needed some assistance to get started in school that morning. Off we went to the office again, and after some talk Jade was happy to agree that I would go home and she would stay with her TA rather than go into her classroom. And that's what she did that day. Although happy to be with the TA, she refused to go into her own classroom with her class teacher.

On Tuesday morning, the TA had an unavoidable meeting out of school, so she arranged for me to go in with Jade. I went into class with her as I used to do, and though I sat nearby to start with, I fairly soon moved to the back of the class and stayed out of the way. The agreement had been that I would stay with Jade until 10am and then go home. Jade however was not ready to let me go by 10am, though she seemed OK, but by 10.30 she was happy for me to leave, which I did. I thought the worst was over, and that now that Jade had been able to stay in her own class with her own teacher for 25 minutes on her own (till break, after which it was maths with a different teacher), that she would be OK from now on. The TA came back into school later on and found Jade in her maths lesson, but again Jade didn't want to go with her own class teacher so spent the afternoon with the TA who teaches other classes in the afternoons.

On Wednesday morning, Jade wanted Bill to stay with her in class, despite the TA being with her. In the end, apparently Bill stayed till about 11am and then left. Again Jade spent the afternoon with the TA.

On Thursday I had to work so said I could only stay till 9am. We went straight to the TA's office and played dominoes, and by 9am she was happy for me to leave. Again she refused to go into her own class, and spent most of the day wherever the TA was.

Today, she had swimming, but her TA is the swimming teacher so I thought that would be fine. However she was upset again this morning and did not want me to leave, and in the end I agreed to follow the coach in my car and go to swimming with her. By the time she was half-way through her swimming lesson she agreed that I could go home.

So that is the current situation. With Bill or myself with her, she has been able to be in her own class with her own teacher, but if we're not there she refuses to go in even with the TA by her side all the time. And now it's half-term, so she'll have 9 days for the fears and anxieties to build up in her head again and not be challenged by the reality that nothing bad actually happens.

3 comments:

Merry said...

*exhales* That sounds really difficult. Does make Amelie weeping every time she falls off the bars seem extremely tame in comparison! Hoping it all does eventually settle back down again.

Sarah said...

I'm just very very impressed at your patience, and the TA's support, etc. All credit to you for being so understanding of the setback and managing to go at her pace. I hope half term doesn't do too much extra damage x

HelenHaricot said...

TA sounds fab. hugs for setbacks