Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Ear Slapping | Head Banging | Behavior Characteristics Of Autism

By Jean Genet


Autistic people can hear high pitch sounds and frequencies the average or non autistic person can't. As a researcher and autistic survivor, I can state this for a fact, as having lived with this intense inner ear pain personally.

How do autistic kids cope with this intense pain? Covering or slapping their ears or in extreme cases, banging their head against the wall in an effort to knock the pain out.

This inner ear pain was virtually unknown to Genet's parents.

This intense pain existed and he was totally trapped and isolated within his own body, not being able to express to his parents what he was experiencing. " I was isolated in my own world where this pain existed. I saw the world from the inside out. I was not able to cross over to a proper reality" says Genet.

Genet furthers explains, "My brain's inability to ground to its physical body didn't allow me to complete the pathway or circuit into a normal reality. In the world I lived in, I spoke properly, maintained mental focus, emotional balance and occasionally felt this inner ear pain.

I wasn't able to travel back and forth between a normal reality and the only reality I knew, due to this lack of grounding. I wasn't able to create any mental, emotional or physical filters that would protect me from these high pitch sounds. In a normal reality, people can filter out these sounds, protecting them from this intense inner ear pain. I could not."

"There are two causes why his brain could not ground to his physical body" states Genet

1) The chemical reaction caused by vaccination preservative's that seem to distort the brain's ability to form proper brain wave frequencies needed for this grounding to occur.

2) Things at home, out in a mall, florescent lighting, microwave ovens, TV's, computers, electronic equipment, flying in airplanes and driving in a car. The electro magnetic fields of energy interferes with the brain's circuitry.

Most autistic behavior is usually diagnosed as acting out or being rebellious. As you have learned here, when a child does act in this way, slapping his ears or banging the head against a wall, it's a 98% chance your child is in intense pain.

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