Monday, November 17, 2008

ABC's and more..

Again, I haven't done this in a while, so sorry about that.

One of our recent discoveries is that Ella can recognize at least half the letters of the alphabet. I've been testing her with the letters from her word whammer, and she's been doing well as long as she can maintain interest in the game. She's had a strong interest in her "alphabet town" toy over the past few months, and it's starting to sink in.

She's also now taking pretty strongly to imitation, which was previously one of our biggest barriers in teaching her.

Other than that, she's got several new signs, including "floss teeth", which she uses often as she actually enjoys having her teeth flossed. (we use a pre-threaded plastic flosser). Why she likes this so much, I don't know, but she actively asks for it. Ahh, the interests of a two year old.

In other news my site has recently gotten a lot hits to older posts from people searching about omega 3's and dyspraxia/DCD. In light of that, I figure I'll refresh my opinions on the matter. If you're not interested in this topic, you can skip the rest of the post. :-)

We've had Ella on 1/4tsp of highly refined Cod liver oil (250mg's of omega-3's, mostly dha) per day since June. After, I really don't think it's directly done much for her motor wise. However, she's had a dramatic change in her motivation levels since we started it, and that's made all the difference. And that dramatic change is still in full force, and that's wonderful for us. In may, Ella was really hitting a deep low in development and was difficult to motivate. About 4 weeks after we started giving her cod liver oil, she really started being motivated to explore and try things.

I still can't say the oil has actually done anything for Ella, as it could all be a coincidence and she was just "ready". However, given the current streak of development, we're not stopping it. If you pressed me, I'd say that it's probably helped her a little bit on an intellectual and behavioral level, which in turn has resulted in motor progress. However, that's really a theory that fits my observations. The scientific evidence to support it exists, but it's a little thin.

There's also a lot of supplemented products with DHA only in them here in the US. Those products didn't seem to do much for Ella. She was on those pretty much since she was 2 months old (formula, then yogurt, and fruit/cereal containers), averaging 40mg a day of DHA. Admittedly the dosage is higher on the fish oil, but it's also got a noticable amount of EPA in it. Givent that going from 40mg DHA alone to 150mg DHA + 100mg EPA made a big difference, I find it hard to believe that DHA alone is the important piece.

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