The anxiety appears when she's asked to do a certain task or when she doesn't sense a person is going to unconditionally support her.
I know reading aloud is a huge trigger in any setting of any material. She doesn't even like to read aloud when it's just her and I alone. And we learned when my daughter's beloved tutor was reassigned, the new tutor caused a lot of anxiety. Mainly because it was all new and he tackled some things differently. It was a setback for my daughter and took some time for her to establish a relationship with him and settle in to the new set up. She doesn't perform well when she doesn't think people have her back. She is very guarded and shuts down with any display of a lack of support. (her perception of lack of support is a little off as well)
Once she's convinced a person will unconditionally support her, she will try. And try hard. As I've mentioned before, she trusts her diving coach and it shows by the stunts she attempts. She loves to meet and connect with people and really doesn't have any fear of strangers. (As long as they don't ask her to read aloud ;-)
A lot of the challenge is reassigning her anxiety and fear... reading aloud for a trained, licensed tutor in a safe environment who wants to help her succeed should not be scary, but interacting with strangers in an unknown environment should be. I love that my daughter has an eye for marginal people and a heart to connect and help them. I certainly don't want to change that. But a good dose of caution goes a long way in personal safety.
My daughter also struggles with bad dreams... Dyslexics have often been described as seeing in three dimensions and being very visual therefore, it seems to me (and again, I'm not an expert) visual images must really burn into her brain. When she sees a scary image it really sticks with her and it must be vivid since it seems so hard for her to forget. For this reason, we try to guard what she sees knowing it brings bad dreams and it takes a lot of sleep loss, prayers, and reassurance from mom and dad to recover. And all those distract from the things she needs her brain to power through.
For now, we've decided not to seek medication therapy, but want to help her to learn ways to cope and manage with the anxiety.
Any tips you can share? I'd love to know what else we can try (or avoid)...
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