Robotic Hugs How A Hug Can Help Your Autistic Child

 





Autistic children and adults often seek pressure in various ways to calm down and cope with sensory overload. Often, hugging and hugging from others can lead to additional distress because autistic children or adults are often unable to communicate their needs by specifying a specific amount or duration of pressure. This is frustrating and ineffective for both the autistic person and the chopper or presser. 


The clothing machine was created to help revive this frustration and put autistics in control of the situation. Both children and adults with autism sometimes want pressure to calm their anxiety. Because of this, a woman with autism developed the clamp machine, also known as a clamp box or clamp. The cushioning machine has two padded sideboards that are connected near the bottom of the tables to form a V. A lever helps to bring the sideboards together to create pressure; The lever also gives the autistic child or adult the opportunity to control the amount and duration of pressure. 


Studies are still being done to find out why people with autism respond to stress and how it can have a calming effect. The clothing machine can affect the increased sensory perceptions of people with autism who often feel disruptive or troublesome behavior. By applying pressure, the autistic child or adult can divert attention to a single emotion, a pressure that in turn provides a calming effect. For many autistic children and adults, anxiety can be completely disabling. Not being able to function with anxiety is frustrating, making appropriate social behavior even more difficult. Sometimes the only solution from such anxiety is through pressure. To this day, various programs and researchers studying autism and therapy programs use the clamping machine. 


Remember that it can not help you to hug or hug an autistic child. In fact, it can increase the senses and cause more anxiety. Although you may not be able to buy a clamping machine, you may be able to make a similar item. Try wrapping the autistic child or adult in a blanket, where they can control how much pressure they will use. You can also consider buying padded boards that more closely simulate the side boards of the clamping machine, and perhaps tie or glue a solid string on each side to let the autistic child or adult control how much pressure to apply and for how long. Contact the child's school to see if there has been any interest in buying a joint hug. This may not be a cure for all the child's problems, but it works well to help many autistics cope with the world. 


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