Anyway, Sybil had her breakfast at Charlotte's as usual - bacon rolls, orange juice, hot chocolate and some chocolate biscuits and Jaffa cakes. She wanted to show her pictures of her Christmas presents, but unfortunately, she didn't have time. My mum won't let me watch Horrid Henry, as it encourages bad behaviour - she even won't let me have chocolate biscuits until after tea, because of current circumstances.
Later, they went out to the forest to leave a present out for Silba, a character from Sybil's original story The Legend Of Old Grandpa - two chocolates. It all went well at first, walking about in the fresh, frosty air, until Sybil started bawling over her booster, which she's going to have tomorrow. She was screaming and shouting about it so much that she even started shouting rude words which I'm not going to talk about because my mum says I'm too young to understand them. Lee-Anne came with them too, I'm not joking. She talked with her mum in the car about her intense panic, because, you know, autistic children get a little jittery when it comes to injections, so Charlotte had a long talk on the phone with her mum. Sybil was puffing and panting and her heart was beating fast. Fortunately, Sybil's mum said she can have her injection in the car. All you have to do is sit still and focus on holding her mum's hand. Autistic people are helpless, I know.At home, she got mega-worried, but it was her mum who reassured her. As for me, I found Bluey crying in the park today. She told me that Sybil will feel pain if she has it done, and terrible thoughts will enter her head, like adverts and loud noises and dreadful stuff like that. She's going to watch that Bing episode to reassure her tomorrow, and earlier she found some fun videos that help calm her down, themed to mindfulness, piano music and pies. Here's some we found earlier, themed to Barbie, Wallace & Gromit and Sybil's favourite Disney film The Lion King.
I must be going because mum's on at me to brush my teeth and get ready for bed. Bye!