Guest guest Posted December 8, 2009 Report Share Posted December 8, 2009 You are doing everything right with the speech. It takes time. As for the tantrums try giving him omega 3 and look into food allergies. Does he have dark circles under his eyes? Our son had the same kind of sensory and temper he has an intolerance to potatoes. Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device from U.S. Cellular [ ] Sensory issue? Hi all...I've posted on here before regarding tantrums, my next question is, my son HATES to get his hair washed, combed, cut, anything to his head unless his attention is extremely diverted to something else. He gets through haircuts w/ a very patient hairdresser and suckers. Baths are no fun, neither is combing his hair afterwards. Any other mothers have this problem? He's 3 yrs, 3 months w/ apraxia. He only says yeah, mama, dada, baby, & bubby. He's in EI at our local school district working w/ an SLP 2Xs/WK for 20 mins then a private one 2Xs/wk for 30 mins. He's improved his attention span and social skills greatly. We are waiting for a developmental pediatrician appt in April 2010 (first we could get in in our area, appt made in October this year). Any advice, opinions, encouragement would be great! Thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 8, 2009 Report Share Posted December 8, 2009 Sensory issues are just part of the so called " neurological soft signs " common in apraxia. One more reason to believe these issues are metabolic in nature since sensory processing improves considerably with appropriate nutrient supplementation--but this varies with each child sometimes so it's NOT a one size fits all even when the symptoms appear to be the same. My daughter had and still has some of these things--face washing, hair washing, tooth brushing were a BIG problem. Got better with OT--desensitization---but particularly with the fatty acid supplementation--the right way for her--with Vit. E and carnitine, and especially with the B12 shots. The OT said she was hypersensitive in some areas and underresponsive in others. Her mouth was interestingly enough a combination of both, some areas--upper jaw overresponsive and the lower jaw and roof of her mouth underresponsive. She also had some texture issues --hard was OK very soft creamy was OK, but mushy in between NOT OK. She also toe walked on and off and had a hypotonic tongue during concentrated play. Also nail biter, hair twirler, scab puller--signs of anxiety, sensory seeking behavior and again--some metabolic processing gone astray. Therapy helped but it wasn't cutting it before the supplements when we saw an almost immediate improvement. These are chemical unbalances--nutrients are missing--VITAL BRAIN NUTRIENTS, and doctors already know how certain missing nutrients affect behavior and sensations etc.--but for some reason they do not apply this knowledge to kids with neurological disorders, not until these problems are unbearable and classic text book problems. Anything in between they ignore or wait until they are as severe as the text book says they should be and then throw drugs at them I am sorry to be so cynical, but this has been our experience and I feel so fortunate that the diet/supplements we've been providing to deal with her autoimmune skin conditions, permeable intestines and food intolerances, bacterial overgrowth and parasitic infections as well as impaired absorption at both gut and cellular levels, impaired detoxification and methylation--have4 all been helping her overall health and also her speech, attention , focus, language processing. She's a completely different child than before the diet/supplements and we know these are responsible becuase we stopped them and she regressed. Again, she had no real digestive problems I was aware of, --just scalp psoriasis and eczemas were our complaint and the speech/neurological soft signs. but all these were connected. it stands to reason, the brain is not in a vacuum. Therapy helps, we've been doing 4 speech and 1 OT for over 2 years now---but before the diet supplements her metabolic processing was too far gone to really enable her to make any great gains with therapy alone. And she was diagnosed only with apraxia--but it is all aneurological disorder continuum. The exact diagnoses mattes less, --what matters is that the symptoms are addressed and the root causes identified and eliminated as best as possible Good luck! Elena. From: volybal_2 <volybal_2@...> Subject: [ ] Sensory issue? Date: Tuesday, December 8, 2009, 8:12 PM Hi all...I've posted on here before regarding tantrums, my next question is, my son HATES to get his hair washed, combed, cut, anything to his head unless his attention is extremely diverted to something else. He gets through haircuts w/ a very patient hairdresser and suckers. Baths are no fun, neither is combing his hair afterwards. Any other mothers have this problem? He's 3 yrs, 3 months w/ apraxia. He only says yeah, mama, dada, baby, & bubby. He's in EI at our local school district working w/ an SLP 2Xs/WK for 20 mins then a private one 2Xs/wk for 30 mins. He's improved his attention span and social skills greatly. We are waiting for a developmental pediatrician appt in April 2010 (first we could get in in our area, appt made in October this year). Any advice, opinions, encouragement would be great! Thanks! ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 Maybe you should try some of those Crayola bath products that are fun where he can draw on the tub or his body with color? Just a thought because I believe that there is one that is like a soap/shampoo. Maybe you could get him to wash his own hair if it was a fun color? My son doesn't particularly like me washing his hair out either, but he does like to swim so when we are ready to rinse his hair I just ask me to " Show me your float " and he lies back in the water. This usually gets out about 75% of the soap and I use a little cup to gently rinse the front while he is lieing that way. Just some suggestions......Nothing to do with apraxia so maybe someone else can help you more as it sounds pretty sensory. [ ] Sensory issue? Hi all...I've posted on here before regarding tantrums, my next question is, my son HATES to get his hair washed, combed, cut, anything to his head unless his attention is extremely diverted to something else. He gets through haircuts w/ a very patient hairdresser and suckers. Baths are no fun, neither is combing his hair afterwards. Any other mothers have this problem? He's 3 yrs, 3 months w/ apraxia. He only says yeah, mama, dada, baby, & bubby. He's in EI at our local school district working w/ an SLP 2Xs/WK for 20 mins then a private one 2Xs/wk for 30 mins. He's improved his attention span and social skills greatly. We are waiting for a developmental pediatrician appt in April 2010 (first we could get in in our area, appt made in October this year). Any advice, opinions, encouragement would be great! Thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 I know that this is going to sound mean-- but it's the only way for us to survive here in our house since we have at least 6 sensory kids, and otherwise, it would probably kill me-- When it comes to bathtimes, and washing the hair, I just do it FAST and get it over and done with ASAP. And I mean I do it FAAASSSSST! I take a pitcher and cover the eyes as much as I can with a washcloth and then just dump the pitcher of water and have a second one ready in case the soap doesn't come out quickly with the first. I use a natural shampoo product that DOES come out super easily though, and that helps immensely. It's really the only way we can get through a bathtime here-- mean or not. you know? I also don't give baths often. I try to do a lot of sponge bath or location cleaning, because they can tolerate this better, and also because it can almost be like the " brushing technique " if you do it the same way as a brush but with the washcloth. Their skin is healthier when you bathe it less often anyway-- so it works for us. becky Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 I agree with Sue about the bath suggestions but if all else fails it's probably sensory and just like the child that can write cat but can't say it -you have to appreciate that if is sensory it's an impairment. With sensory what is benign to us can actually be PAINFUL to them. It can affect any sense -touch, sight, hearing, etc. and just like apraxia it can be very frustrating for all involved. Sensory issues hands down best book is the now classic (gasp I can’t believe it’s that old now!) Out of Sync Child book and series of books. In addition to occupational therapies (more on that below) we have learned in this group that there are nutritional strategies that appear to help as well. LOW dosages of vitamin e for example helped my son Tanner which was amazing � " but it was a one to one formula of alpha to gamma and only 200 IU/200 mg. You can check the archives but pretty remarkable in that some of Tanner’s sensory issue affect his ability to feel pain like the rest of us. The vitamin e if anything took it from not even noticing he just broke his finger and he’ll continue to play football and swim at the sleepover party (yes in the archives) to after this small amount of vitamin e on the floor in hysterical pain because he stubbed his toe � " where there is no bruising or anything. If anything he went from one extreme to another on the vitamin e. So clearly dietary does affect sensory…and motor planning etc. But for those who’ve read the recent posts from me about Tanner and now Robin’s posts about on the ayurvedic product. And PS -Tanner is no longer able to take ANY vitamin e supplement -even low dosage since his horrific regressions on that product speak -last we tried which was a few months ago and the few times prior to that -even low dosage vitamin e gives him a headache. I thank GOD for his recent surges and good health on ayurveda- thank you to whomever came up with ayurveda 5000 years ago!!!! From: " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 PSS -DON'T go to http://www.apraxia.cc the website I had posted in my last archive message which was our old website for Cherab We haven't used that domain for almost a decade and I just checked it now as we haven't used it for years and now clearly it's being used as a spam site to sell things but being marketed with all our info as if it's connected to us and with porn stuff too..creepy people!!!!...and one of the ads on it was for the product with mega vitamin e in it that I write about below that Tanner had horrific regressions on it after taking it and so many other parents here reported their kids had seizures after taking it within a few days and a link comes up for it all the time on this page with the porn and all!!! To me that company advertising is like having a bruise and having someone push on it! Look at the huge list of domains below and click on any of them -and soon http://www.bigtent.com will be added to this list too. We are going to be moving over there as there seems to be much more in the way of options to make it so much easier and fun for all of us to learn more. We won't give up this group -but we can all just become members there and our webmaster has already moved over all the archives! Yay!!! ===== Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 when my son was just a wee little baby, baths were horrible. Working with OT we found that if we put a wet bath towel on him in the tub, and just lifted a small area at a time to wash a body part, that helped alot as he needed the weight of the towel to feel more grounded. He is 10 now and i still can't comb his hair without him getting upset. We found that for hair cuts, those places that cater to kids really helped. It was expensive, but the only thing we could survive! They had little planes and trains to sit in as well as videos. We made a big deal of picking which video he wanted to watch (even though to this day, he never sits to watch tv for more than a few minutes at a time!)and he knew that he would get a sucker at the end. And of course, a hairdresser that works at the speed of light was a must!!! He's alot better now that he is older, so it will come. But if you have lots of other sensory issues, you might want to look into working with an OT as they will give you tons of strategies to get you through most situations. ________________________________ From: volybal_2 <volybal_2@...> Sent: Tue, December 8, 2009 8:12:18 PM Subject: [ ] Sensory issue?  Hi all...I've posted on here before regarding tantrums, my next question is, my son HATES to get his hair washed, combed, cut, anything to his head unless his attention is extremely diverted to something else. He gets through haircuts w/ a very patient hairdresser and suckers. Baths are no fun, neither is combing his hair afterwards. Any other mothers have this problem? He's 3 yrs, 3 months w/ apraxia. He only says yeah, mama, dada, baby, & bubby. He's in EI at our local school district working w/ an SLP 2Xs/WK for 20 mins then a private one 2Xs/wk for 30 mins. He's improved his attention span and social skills greatly. We are waiting for a developmental pediatrician appt in April 2010 (first we could get in in our area, appt made in October this year). Any advice, opinions, encouragement would be great! Thanks! __________________________________________________________________ Connect with friends from any web browser - no download required. Try the new Canada Messenger for the Web BETA at http://ca.messenger./webmessengerpromo.php Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 Hi,  my son when he was little was terrified of the bathtub this was sensory issue. He would scream bloody murder if you got him anywhere near the bathtub. He was petrified of the shower running also. He at 11 yo still will not go in the bathroom with the shower running. What I did was this when he was a baby I bathed him a flat round baby bathtub on the table. When he was a toddler I put the baby bathtub inside the big one and bathed my son in this baby bathtub until he was almost 5. He was a tiny child very small for his age. I tried tons of different toys even kitchen measuring cups, spoons,funnels,squirt bottles and even soap crayons ( what a mess they made the dye in them ran and made the tub a permanent blue greenish color). I never understood why he hated baths because he would spend hours in the pool. Well I discovered two things one he was wearing swim trunks and the other was that the pool water was always cold to luke warm temp. I one day decided to tell my son lets go swimming in the bathtub. i put on a pair of swim trunks and made the water luke warm . My son got in and had a fit. I put in cold water and he got int he tub and had a ball. He love dto atke a bath but only with swim trunks on and cold water no hot. ( had a hard time sneaking hot into the tub) water was just warm enough to say it was not cold.  So for my son it was sensory. He did not want to be naked below the waist in the tub and he had a hrd time telling the difference between hot and cold till this day at 11 yo he still has an extremely hard time with temperature. When it is hot outside he will be cold. When it is cold out he will be hot he says. He has a hard time regulating body temp also.  By the way he does hate his hair washed and combed never liked either from the day he was born. My trick to wash hair is this . He is 11 so I tell him he has no choice first to wash hair. Then I do it for him and I agree the fatsest way to get it done is with a sand bucket for us. it holds more water. The hair combing is this way for us . I keep his hair cut short not crew but a boys short hair cut. We wash his hair every night for 5 days (sun-Thurs) school nights. He has very thick hair. He wiull not let em near his head witha comb or brush. I very rarely get a comb or brush near his head. Seneory issue,So keeping his hair cut short all the time makes it so that it pretty much falls into place on its own and washing with very mild shampoo and a little not a lot keeps his hair looking shiny and clean both. We egt his hair cut very often every 2 to 3 months or when it need sit.  Hair cuts were a huge issue for my son. i just took him to a beauty shop when he age 2 for his very first hair cut. I asked around for awhile about beauticians you were good with children. When i found a women I liked I took my son to the salon with mom to watch her geta hair cut then the beautician talked to my son standing beside her explaining word for word what she was doing to grammy she even showed him her comb what its job was and ven showed my son her scissors job and explained its job was to cut hair so people would look handsome. He was fascinated the whole time. Then after she cut mys ons hair and the whole time he was screaming bloody murder, She did a great job cutting his hair though with his head bobbing all around. We have used the same women for every time for a hair cut. My son still goe sto her. She is awesome. It helped for my son to get to know the step by step process and routine of getting a hair cut. After a while he knew what to expect, Now my son loves to go get his hair cut. But he still at 11 does not hold his head still. She just does the best job she can with me keeping in mind it might not be perfect but it looks good.  Jeanne and NH From: NotefrmSue@... <NotefrmSue@...> Subject: Re: [ ] Sensory issue? Date: Wednesday, December 9, 2009, 4:04 AM  Maybe you should try some of those Crayola bath products that are fun where he can draw on the tub or his body with color? Just a thought because I believe that there is one that is like a soap/shampoo. Maybe you could get him to wash his own hair if it was a fun color? My son doesn't particularly like me washing his hair out either, but he does like to swim so when we are ready to rinse his hair I just ask me to " Show me your float " and he lies back in the water. This usually gets out about 75% of the soap and I use a little cup to gently rinse the front while he is lieing that way. Just some suggestions. .....Nothing to do with apraxia so maybe someone else can help you more as it sounds pretty sensory. [childrensapraxiane t] Sensory issue? Hi all...I've posted on here before regarding tantrums, my next question is, my son HATES to get his hair washed, combed, cut, anything to his head unless his attention is extremely diverted to something else. He gets through haircuts w/ a very patient hairdresser and suckers. Baths are no fun, neither is combing his hair afterwards. Any other mothers have this problem? He's 3 yrs, 3 months w/ apraxia. He only says yeah, mama, dada, baby, & bubby. He's in EI at our local school district working w/ an SLP 2Xs/WK for 20 mins then a private one 2Xs/wk for 30 mins. He's improved his attention span and social skills greatly. We are waiting for a developmental pediatrician appt in April 2010 (first we could get in in our area, appt made in October this year). Any advice, opinions, encouragement would be great! Thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 good gosh Jeanne, your son really sounds just like mine(even the age!) I just get the hairdresser to shave his head using the longest blade possible so that it looks like a boy hair cut and not an army guy cut. I've found that the quickest thing possible and sooo much easier on the girl doing it as my son is doing everything except sitting still. (We give her a big tip!) Once he got older, the swimsuit in the tub worked very well too. Now he thinks he's " swimming "  I have to say it's too funny, and i don't care how he takes it, as long as he takes a bath. He has sensory difficulties, so this is why he has so much trouble as a baby and why the wet bath towel worked wonders for him then. Even now at 10, i get him to wear weighted vests and carry heavy things to get that proprioceptive stuff going. At least now that he's older i find it easier to spot sensory behavior vs him just being a 10 year old with attitude! But boy, just once, i'd like him to have his picture taken with nicely brushed hair! ________________________________ From: Jeanne <jamie199866@...> Sent: Wed, December 9, 2009 1:37:29 PM Subject: Re: [ ] Sensory issue?  Hi,  my son when he was little was terrified of the bathtub this was sensory issue. He would scream bloody murder if you got him anywhere near the bathtub. He was petrified of the shower running also. He at 11 yo still will not go in the bathroom with the shower running. What I did was this when he was a baby I bathed him a flat round baby bathtub on the table. When he was a toddler I put the baby bathtub inside the big one and bathed my son in this baby bathtub until he was almost 5. He was a tiny child very small for his age. I tried tons of different toys even kitchen measuring cups, spoons,funnels, squirt bottles and even soap crayons ( what a mess they made the dye in them ran and made the tub a permanent blue greenish color). I never understood why he hated baths because he would spend hours in the pool. Well I discovered two things one he was wearing swim trunks and the other was that the pool water was always cold to luke warm temp. I one day decided to tell my son lets go swimming in the bathtub. i put on a pair of swim trunks and made the water luke warm . My son got in and had a fit. I put in cold water and he got int he tub and had a ball. He love dto atke a bath but only with swim trunks on and cold water no hot. ( had a hard time sneaking hot into the tub) water was just warm enough to say it was not cold.  So for my son it was sensory. He did not want to be naked below the waist in the tub and he had a hrd time telling the difference between hot and cold till this day at 11 yo he still has an extremely hard time with temperature. When it is hot outside he will be cold. When it is cold out he will be hot he says. He has a hard time regulating body temp also.  By the way he does hate his hair washed and combed never liked either from the day he was born. My trick to wash hair is this . He is 11 so I tell him he has no choice first to wash hair. Then I do it for him and I agree the fatsest way to get it done is with a sand bucket for us. it holds more water. The hair combing is this way for us . I keep his hair cut short not crew but a boys short hair cut. We wash his hair every night for 5 days (sun-Thurs) school nights. He has very thick hair. He wiull not let em near his head witha comb or brush. I very rarely get a comb or brush near his head. Seneory issue,So keeping his hair cut short all the time makes it so that it pretty much falls into place on its own and washing with very mild shampoo and a little not a lot keeps his hair looking shiny and clean both. We egt his hair cut very often every 2 to 3 months or when it need sit.  Hair cuts were a huge issue for my son. i just took him to a beauty shop when he age 2 for his very first hair cut. I asked around for awhile about beauticians you were good with children. When i found a women I liked I took my son to the salon with mom to watch her geta hair cut then the beautician talked to my son standing beside her explaining word for word what she was doing to grammy she even showed him her comb what its job was and ven showed my son her scissors job and explained its job was to cut hair so people would look handsome. He was fascinated the whole time. Then after she cut mys ons hair and the whole time he was screaming bloody murder, She did a great job cutting his hair though with his head bobbing all around. We have used the same women for every time for a hair cut. My son still goe sto her. She is awesome. It helped for my son to get to know the step by step process and routine of getting a hair cut. After a while he knew what to expect, Now my son loves to go get his hair cut. But he still at 11 does not hold his head still. She just does the best job she can with me keeping in mind it might not be perfect but it looks good.  Jeanne and NH Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2009 Report Share Posted December 10, 2009 Hi,  This is funny how similar are boys are even age wise. My son though has not worn anything to bathe in since age 5 ish. The hair cuts are so much better though. He loves hair cuts now lol. He just can not hold still for very long ata time. He wants to be able to see in the mirror the hairdressers every move so therefore his head moves constantly. She just laughs it off and makes jokes about the ants in pants have to hold still. Which my son thinks is just so funny. Yes the sensory issues are also coming out into the 11 yo behavioir/attitude stuff for us also. Yes I agree it would be so nice to have one nice picture of my sons hair flat and combed for once. Oh well maybe next year. For now I just tell myself my son has the cleanest hair of the whole school lol. (due it being frequently washed due he does not a comb/brush near his head. So we compromised if we don't comb our hair then we have to take a bath every school night to keep his hair looking nice.) There si aplus isde to this. I have  been told by his hairdresser that he has the healthiest hair she has ever seen and the healthiest looking scalp to. Which I think is quite funny sounding since a comb/brush is hardly ever let near his head ( sometimes though he will let me do it or doe sit himself).  You just have to love this age though. LOL. Not!  Jeanne and NH From: sandy lehmann <mommie2chris@...> Subject: Re: [ ] Sensory issue? Date: Wednesday, December 9, 2009, 2:20 PM  good gosh Jeanne, your son really sounds just like mine(even the age!) I just get the hairdresser to shave his head using the longest blade possible so that it looks like a boy hair cut and not an army guy cut. I've found that the quickest thing possible and sooo much easier on the girl doing it as my son is doing everything except sitting still. (We give her a big tip!) Once he got older, the swimsuit in the tub worked very well too. Now he thinks he's " swimming "  I have to say it's too funny, and i don't care how he takes it, as long as he takes a bath. He has sensory difficulties, so this is why he has so much trouble as a baby and why the wet bath towel worked wonders for him then. Even now at 10, i get him to wear weighted vests and carry heavy things to get that proprioceptive stuff going. At least now that he's older i find it easier to spot sensory behavior vs him just being a 10 year old with attitude! But boy, just once, i'd like him to have his picture taken with nicely brushed hair! ____________ _________ _________ __ From: Jeanne <jamie199866> @groups. com Sent: Wed, December 9, 2009 1:37:29 PM Subject: Re: [childrensapraxiane t] Sensory issue?  Hi,  my son when he was little was terrified of the bathtub this was sensory issue. He would scream bloody murder if you got him anywhere near the bathtub. He was petrified of the shower running also. He at 11 yo still will not go in the bathroom with the shower running. What I did was this when he was a baby I bathed him a flat round baby bathtub on the table. When he was a toddler I put the baby bathtub inside the big one and bathed my son in this baby bathtub until he was almost 5. He was a tiny child very small for his age. I tried tons of different toys even kitchen measuring cups, spoons,funnels, squirt bottles and even soap crayons ( what a mess they made the dye in them ran and made the tub a permanent blue greenish color). I never understood why he hated baths because he would spend hours in the pool. Well I discovered two things one he was wearing swim trunks and the other was that the pool water was always cold to luke warm temp. I one day decided to tell my son lets go swimming in the bathtub. i put on a pair of swim trunks and made the water luke warm . My son got in and had a fit. I put in cold water and he got int he tub and had a ball. He love dto atke a bath but only with swim trunks on and cold water no hot. ( had a hard time sneaking hot into the tub) water was just warm enough to say it was not cold.  So for my son it was sensory. He did not want to be naked below the waist in the tub and he had a hrd time telling the difference between hot and cold till this day at 11 yo he still has an extremely hard time with temperature. When it is hot outside he will be cold. When it is cold out he will be hot he says. He has a hard time regulating body temp also.  By the way he does hate his hair washed and combed never liked either from the day he was born. My trick to wash hair is this . He is 11 so I tell him he has no choice first to wash hair. Then I do it for him and I agree the fatsest way to get it done is with a sand bucket for us. it holds more water. The hair combing is this way for us . I keep his hair cut short not crew but a boys short hair cut. We wash his hair every night for 5 days (sun-Thurs) school nights. He has very thick hair. He wiull not let em near his head witha comb or brush. I very rarely get a comb or brush near his head. Seneory issue,So keeping his hair cut short all the time makes it so that it pretty much falls into place on its own and washing with very mild shampoo and a little not a lot keeps his hair looking shiny and clean both. We egt his hair cut very often every 2 to 3 months or when it need sit.  Hair cuts were a huge issue for my son. i just took him to a beauty shop when he age 2 for his very first hair cut. I asked around for awhile about beauticians you were good with children. When i found a women I liked I took my son to the salon with mom to watch her geta hair cut then the beautician talked to my son standing beside her explaining word for word what she was doing to grammy she even showed him her comb what its job was and ven showed my son her scissors job and explained its job was to cut hair so people would look handsome. He was fascinated the whole time. Then after she cut mys ons hair and the whole time he was screaming bloody murder, She did a great job cutting his hair though with his head bobbing all around. We have used the same women for every time for a hair cut. My son still goe sto her. She is awesome. It helped for my son to get to know the step by step process and routine of getting a hair cut. After a while he knew what to expect, Now my son loves to go get his hair cut. But he still at 11 does not hold his head still. She just does the best job she can with me keeping in mind it might not be perfect but it looks good.  Jeanne and NH Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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