In Defense of Fidgets and Fidgeting: Tangle

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In Defense of Fidgets and Fidgeting

The Canadian Oxford Dictionary defines fidget as a verb


meaning “to move or act restlessly or nervously, usually while
maintaining basically the same posture” or “to be uneasy, to
worry”. The word is also described as a noun referring to “a
person who fidgets”, the underlying “bodily uneasiness”, or the
movements that arise from this uneasiness.

We all fidget sometimes, and this increases when we are stressed or


when we have to be still for too long. Fidgeting also provides the
brain with movement input to process, and in active learners this can
increase attention and language processing, if the person is not
distracted by the fidget.

Fidgeters often start by stroking


mom’s hair or skin, or rubbing the
smooth edge of a blanket, and this
promotes self soothing.

Some people need more movement than others, and when required
to be still, start to move somewhere or other (fingers, toes,
tongue or nose) to satisfy their own nervous system’s need for
tangle
movement. Similarly, with touch, some people
seem to need a lot more touch and input to their
hands. When people’s behaviours lead to the sensory needs of the nervous
system being met, then that person is truly his or her most ready to learn.

People who need more movement or touch than others often seek out this input
when trying to be focused and available for learning. The basic role of fidgeting
is to help the nervous system be both calm and alert. We seek to keep ourselves
awake, to soothe ourselves, and to keep our bodies busy so our minds can process
auditory information more efficiently. As we learn to calm and focus ourselves,
hand grip
we may need to fidget less, but this is gradual learning that can span a lifetime.
For the most part, we are who we are, and most of us fidget to a fairly
consistent degree depending on how constrained, agitated or worried we are and how we are
feeling.

Fidgeting is not the same as playing with a toy, though some fidget items
can be toys. It is a toy if it engages the imagination or attention of the
child. A fidget supports sitting still and listening.

I am most likely to fidget when I am stressed out, forced to be still,


lethargic, bored, nervous, angry, upset, or challenged with complex or
stretchy bugs demanding situations. A person who fidgets may be a genius, a thinker, a
worrier, or all of these.
For some people, we fidget when we can’t move our bodies or our hands, others fidget more when
they want something to keep their mouths busy. Some of us fidget to
help us think, others do it to help listen, others do it to feel calm and
reduce agitation, anxiety, worry. To fidget is appropriate for one who
is over-aroused, frazzled, anxious, worried. To pace in worry or bite
our nails in nervousness is easy to understand, and from that premise,
all kind of fidgeting and doodling begin to make sense. To fidget is
also very appropriate for someone who is under-aroused, who is
lethargic, bored, drifting, dreaming. To doodle in the columns, change
postures, or tug at hair, eyebrows, mouth are all easy to spot when you
sit in a room of people who are too calm and have been sitting too long. fidget ball

By now you should see that we all fidget at some time or other. Some of us seem to need it more
than others. Understanding how our behaviour helps with self regulation can help us to be pro-
active and use attention enhancing behaviours before our performance is significantly impaired.
For example, I learn to take a brief washroom break or pop a mint in my mouth when I begin to
drift during a boring afternoon meeting. I might take a brisk walk before a challenging activity.
So, I can learn to give myself more of what I need to be ready for life. Hand fidgeting is very
common.

When we need to fidget, notice what kinds of things we seek out, and expand
on that. For example, if I like rubber bands and squishy things, a soft
stretchy lizard might be just the thing for my hands. If I like hard things
like paper clips, find little fidgets like rings and worry stones. I might just
need an occasional Altoid, Listerine strip, or sip of hot, cold, or bubbly. For
stress pucks people who fidget a lot, help us learn what qualities we seek, and help us to
find a greater variety of things to fidget with.

Holding something heavy in the lap, like a weighted lizard, can


help to calm and focus the nervous system, and can reduce the
need to fidget. These weighted products also have nice tactile
qualities that can give the fingers something to do, enhancing
attention and listening.

If a child engages with a fidget in a way that takes the weighted items
attention away from circle time (or whatever is going on), then
it is not a good fidget item for that person, at that time.
Switch it up for something else less meaningful. Helping a child to use a fidget is an important
life skill that can help the child to attend and learn more in a world that requires a lot of sitting,
waiting, listening. It is true that any new fidget will be attended to, and so may be distracting.
As the person becomes comfortable with the item, it should not absorb attention, but make it
easier for the person to attend to what is “important”.

The day will come when fidget items will be routinely supplied to people when it is time to think,
sit still, or listen. The world will know to “Let them fidget!” In the meantime, let’s help fidgeters
fidget safely and understand themselves better and let’s allow them to be who they are.

Marc Landry occupational therapist [email protected] www.marclandry.ca

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