Well after my son's initial Speech and Language assessment, the SALT (who works for an Early Years Outreach unit) actually 'deployed' if you like, a Specialist Early Years Teaching Assistant to come to our home every week for eight weeks, (for 30 minutes,) to deliver a block of 'play therapy'!
This consisted of us all taking it in turns on the floor to build towers, and then my son would have to wait for 'ready, steady go' before he was able to knock it down; put pegs into a board IN TURNS to make simple patterns; take turns to choose coloured cars to race down ramp and again take turns to cut up wooden fruits of choice.
These same games then progressed as the weeks went on to include more vocabulary (ie colour of cars/ size of blocks etc) until finally my son may have been specifically asked to 'cut up the 'banana' THEN put it on the 'big' plate.)
I know it all sounds so simple...but in October my son couldn't even wait for 'go' before knocking down a small tower (and didn't even want to share he blocks in the first place) getting cross and kicking out, now obviously April (with the therapy, me mirroring at home AND using other strategies given) my son takes turns nicely WITH ME, uses some of the vocab targeted and CAN wait for 'go'.)
(I put 'with me' in bold as he still can't particularly turn take with other children or even his own siblings very well yet, but hey it's progress!)
In the past six months I have constantly mentioned ASD to the SALT and even got a paed appointment for a referral for assessment because although my son has received AMAZING outreach support, my son's behaviour/development has always seemed 'different' to that of my other two children (or nieces/nephews etc.)
It's easy to write this today as I wrote all of this out last week for the permission letter for assessment...
As soon as my son could move he was full on/never stopped. (So climbing everything, pulling things out of cupboards etc. not particularly interested in toys.) 7-18 months but just put it down to 'boisterous boy' stereotype.
Still full on, sometimes doing 'dangerous' things (ie would climb everything, jump from a height etc.) No interest in books or nursey rhymes. No words. 18-24 months. Again just a boy?
Very few, 'strange sounding' words and still very boisterous behaviour to the point that we were struggling as a family and it was super hard work taking him anywhere. Hated the singing/reading I was doing to encourage speech. 24-30 months. Boy?
Sought support/advice and started learning Makaton but then realised my son wasn't particularly 'looking' to actually see the Makaton signs and with the intervention I saw just how poor he was at turn taking. 30-35 months. Brain started tying things together.
Knew thing weren't right so saw the paed even though he was having SALT intervention and this point my son was being VERY SPECIFIC about things (ie the way things were placed at bed time, the way he went to the toilet etc.) 36 months.
Other things that 'along the way' haven't 'sat right' with me but I didn't 'think about' at the time...
My son has been through lots of odd phases (ie not liking dirt on his hands, not liking tiny spillages on the table cloth, hating having his teeth brushed, hating having his hair washed, turning lights on and off etc.) and in the last 4-5 months my son has taken to walking on his tip toes and covering his ears to specific noises (ie the toilet cistern filling, water running in the bath, the hairdryer etc.)
Whatever the outcome (as my son does contradict some traits and as I said LOVES company and IS affectionate,) I am grateful to have been listened to and him have been referred.
(How silly, he's only young and most of that is in the past tense when actually we are still smack bang in the thick of it (though he has calmed down.)! It's not like he now magically loves singing and is a breeze to take out haha.)
xx