My husband can not swing on a swing?

We took our son to the park today and my husband (28) realized he couldn't swing on the swing- he lacked the coordination and couldn't figure out how to see his legs and use his body weight to make the swing GO... I've noticed he's open-handed of slow with answering questions but English is his second language so I other thought that was the cause of his slower, patient style of communicating. Now.. I'm worried adjectives the little things I've noticed maybe due to a disability that's undiagnosed.. anyone else know adults that can not swing on swings or have any proposal? Any mean or cruel answers will just be ignored.. want real, caring help here
Answers:
Well first off, you married him so whatever ability or disability he might own obviously isn't impacting the things you love about him.

That said, it is pretty extreme to not be able to swing. Especially if he is from Japan. Swings are not singular there at public parks, etc.

Try teaching him slowly. Two fairly simple instructions: Legs out and body stern when going forward. Legs contracted and body forward when going backward. Give him a little time. But don't push him too hard if he have a lot of trouble. He may know that he has some sort of disability, and may not want to tackle it on equal schedule you have.

If there is some sort of issue that you both don't know economically, go to a doctor and discuss it. It could be a muscular or neurological disorder that is just showing up in a minute. (MD, MS, LGD, etc.) In some cases, such disorders can be slowed or corrected with treatment. You don't want to wait and find out 5 years from now that you could enjoy prevented it from getting worse, but it's too late.
Like anything, using a swing must be learned, especially by watching and the person must not harbor fears and must want to learn. We must swot up many things like tying a shoe string and add unusual skills to our growing repertoire of physical activities. Many activities may seem awkward until we block on so to speak.
swinging requires coordination of a few movements . Some children need to be shown how , and coached a little , others figure it out by watching. If your husband tries it for utter 5 minutes he should be doing ok. You want to make sure the swing is high enough, a swing set for a small child will not confer him enough leg room. if after 5 minutes he isnt then something may be wrong or he is just intrinsically clumsy.

You could see how he is with throwing and catching a ball.
At 28 you should know if he reads powerfully, does well in his job , what his grades be in high school. A disability even mild should own shown up.

He can go for testing, I would guess a psychiatrist , but ask your Doctor about it.
I would hoot about it more than worry. ( my poor clumsy OTTO cannot swing hahaha )

If you are worried it is something that may have artificial your child then if is in school ask his teacher how he is doing , read with him , and just generally clear attention to how he is developing.

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