Photo by: Laurie Vain

It Will Get Better: Sensory Processing Disorder

Photo by: Laurie Vain

Before I ever got a diagnosis of any sort for my son Gabriel, I think everyone I knew had told me some version of the line, “It will get better”. I knew they all meant well, but I wasn’t dealing with your run-of-the-mill toddler tantrums with Gabe. Not even close. My son had meltdowns. Big, long, scary and excruciatingly loud, meltdowns. Gabe would cry for hours on end, for no apparent reason and crashed into walls for fun; this wasn’t typical development in my book, and I couldn’t understand why people were so quick to dismiss it with any of the old standbys (“He’s just a boy” or “He’ll grow out of it” or the non-committal, “It will get better”). How could people think that it would just get better? I wanted to believe them, I really wanted to, but I had lived with the ‘out of sync’ behavior for years, with no sign of it letting up, so I wasn’t convinced that my son would just magically ‘get better’ one day.

When Gabriel’s diagnosis came in at age 4 as Sensory Processing Disorder, I was so relieved that I finally knew what was going on, that I steamed forward – full speed – through OT and implementing a sensory diet at home and school without so much as taking a breath. If that was what my son needed then that was what I would do for him. After all, this is what would finally make things ‘get better’, right?

But you know what? It wasn’t easy and it didn’t just ‘get better’ as quickly as I was hoping. I was tired of being told by family, friends and therapists that things would ‘get better’. Did these people really understand what I went through every single day? Did they understand how upset my son was over the smallest things? How hard school was for him? How hard having play dates was? How difficult it appeared for him to enjoy the simplest pleasures of being a child? If things were really going to get better, could they PLEASE hurry?

Then one day, about a year after Gabriel’s diagnosis, I was just exhausted – the kind of exhausted that only a special needs mom can relate to. This particular day was not really all that different from the hundreds before it; Gabriel, at almost 5 years old, was having the umpteenth meltdown of the day over some perceived infraction on the part his two year old brother, Nick, who sat statue still watching him yell and throw things while I held my 3 month old tightly to my chest shushing and pacing with him because he hates loud noises. That was my breaking point. I needed things to ‘get better’ and I needed them to do so immediately.

I flashed on meeting a fellow SPD mom at the OT’s office the week before and decided I needed to talk to someone who understood my life in a very real way and could provide testimony that the elusive ‘it gets better’ truly existed.

I riffled through my purse in the garage to find her name and phone number scribbled on the back of a deposit slip. She said I could call her any time. What did I have to lose?

I dialed the number and was beyond relieved when she answered the phone. We ended up talking for over an hour – OK, I did most of the talking and all of the crying, but it felt great. At the end of the conversation, she quieted her voice, and in a tone so genuine and true, calmly said, “Keep doing what you are doing; it gets better.” And I actually believed her.

I believed that if she had survived this journey of Sensory Processing Disorder that somehow, some way, I would too. That my life wouldn’t always be chaos and meltdowns, that somewhere in my future there would be a family meal that we all sat through (not to mention ate), that there would be fun family vacations and maybe even a day I didn’t plan down to the minute. I was optimistic.

As shocking as it is, she turned out to be right. Today Gabriel is 9 years old. He self regulates and self advocates at school, he pushes on the walls without being told, he willingly takes the trash out for heavy work, and often volunteers to take ‘quiet’ time when he is overwhelmed – both at home and at school. He has an arsenal of chew toys and fidgets to keep him focused and calm him when needed. And perhaps most impressive, Gabriel has generalized those skills and can choose to do virtually anything he wants – wear special clothing for special occasions, including ‘cleats’ for football and a tie for holidays. He can tolerate gel in his hair for ‘crazy hair day’ and wear makeup on his face for Halloween. He can attend a jump party without covering his ears and even takes his heavy blanket with him to the movie theater, ‘just in case’ he needs it. Trust me when I say that this is LEAPS and BOUNDS from where we were just a few short years ago.

So today, as many of you are reading this, and are probably living that same sense of crisis between diagnosis and “It gets better”, I want to assure you that your dedication to your child’s sensory diet, to their continued therapy appointments and to all of the millions of things you do every day to help teach your child to live in this often overwhelming sensory world of ours, will pay off, in spades.

Or to put it simply: It will get better.

Hartley Steiner lives in the Seattle area with her husband Jeff and their three sons: Gabriel, Nicholas and Matthew. Gabriel struggles with Sensory Processing Disorder, High Functioning Autism, Bipolar and Learning Disabilities. Hartley is the author of SPD children’s book This is Gabriel Making Sense of School. Hartley chronicles the never ending chaos that is her life on the blog Hartley’s Life With 3 Boys. When she isn’t writing, or dealing with a meltdown, she enjoys spending time in the company of other adults preferably with good food and even better wine.

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97 Comments

The doctors and therapists can't seem to make up their minds in diagnosing our three year old son. Though he has signs of SPD with extreme sensitivity to noises and crave for physical input, the doctors didn't say this is what he has. They determined after a 15 minute observation that he's on the autism spectrum...

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love this article. I used to have moms to connct with and we moved therapy groups. It was so nice to have others understand. We have a TON of food issues and need to learn how to self regulate. It is so hard, espically with "normal" parents..they look at himm at times and roll their eyes, so hard because he wants friends so badly.. he is 5. We are working hard!

The only way I got rid of my daughters meltdown was to treat her on a biochemical level. All of the labels our children are being given is coming from the same source - Heavy Metal Toxicity. The labels my daughter has received began in 2nd grade -adhd then at age 11 - autism-ppd-nos, spd, vision processing disorder, auditory processing disorder, hypotonia and then a year later the cause of all this. She was off the charts in copper, magnesium, and manganese.

My eldest is 11 and though things are certainly not perfect, they are so much better than when he was about 3-7. SO much.

It does get better. With every ounce of your patience and love, they grow into their emotions and learn to understand the world and its unknowns. That's the hardest for a kid like mine: the unknowns. Having to prepare him for every potential situation and all of the variables was tiring, to put it mildly...

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I understand, two kids who have gone through the sensory intergration therapy. My oldest who also has Aspergers is now in middle school and now self-regulates, does well, handles pep rallies, loud hallways, and all those horrible little triggers that used to change his life. It does get better, sometimes much better!

It does get better with the right therapy and sensory diet. I have twin boys who were diagnosed SPD/PPDNOS. It has been 4 years of therapy, special diets, supplements, you name it, I've done it. The sensory diet is key and it helps rid or at least keep at bay the behaviors that are unacceptable to society. I can happily say that it does get better even though you can't even fathom that it will! My boys are happy, heatlhy 1st graders and have adjusted very well...

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Your are right it does get better. My now 17 year old is thinking about college. He was diadose when he was 4 like you I was let's do what it takes to help him. He stall rocks when in a moving car, but give him a computer that needs repair and he can do it. Need the shirt off his back he'll give it to you. Always has a smile on his face unless you made him mad.

Bless you and all the mothers who deal with this and other issues every day. I am fortunate to have healthy children with no issues and I take it for granted. Reading stories such as yours helps to remind me all the difficulties a child may be living with and helps keep me from ever being judgemental of other children if they misbehave.

Hartley, My child has some bad tantrums but they are not related to food-usually. She is obviously a very sensitive child and mostly she wakes up screaming, crying, hyperventilating in the middle of the night. It scares me a lot and a few times I have almost taken her to the hospital because she couldn't seem to catch her breath and was shaking uncontrollably. When she calms down she tells me about something that happened during the day that upset her-something that hurt her feelings...

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What a great article. I am a mother of a LD child...and the LD daughter of an LD father. As an adult that struggles with learning differences, and understanding how difficult it was as a child I find I want to tear my hair out when someone tells me that my son will "get better." It isn't that I don't believe that he will, since as an adult I have learned many ways to compensate and be successful...

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Awesome story. As the mom of 3 autistic kids, the oldest who also has sensory processing disorder I can totally relate. We still have our issues but she's right - it does get better. I'm still going thru that with my 4 year old & keep looking into the horizon. Thanks for posting!

You have my sympathy on what you had to go to and I'm so glad to hear that it got better.

It makes me so glad that, so far at least, the worst we've had to deal with is possible ADD from my oldest. Nothing so terribly difficult to deal with like you. It makes me feel very lucky.

Thanks for sharing. My days are not as challenging as yours have been in reality, however in my eyes I felt you as you did. I have a son with severe ADHD and a daughter with ADD. My oldest so far has neither. I understand you when you say that only a Mom with special needs children will relate to you.

Thank you for this...my little guy is 3 ( Pdd-nos), we were getting therapy through First Steps for a year but when he turned 3 he transitioned out...Alex is in preschool now, but we are still dealing with "melt downs" and tantrums that are painful to watch. I know I do not have it as bad as some moms, but even I lose hope some days. I read this with tears in my eyes, and it does give me hope. Thank you for sharing.

My now 8 year old daughter was the same way. Exhasuted isn't even a strong enough word for what we go through. Add to it that I'm a single mom and even with help from a live in mother of my own, there was no energy at the end of the day.

She's much better now because she has learned many of the things your son has. More importantly, we've learned about what sets her off and what sets us over the edge so we can avoid both...

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