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General Parenting
A Safe Place
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<blockquote data-quote="Steely" data-source="post: 154210" data-attributes="member: 3301"><p>A safe place is good in theory - but with a lot of our kids - they get too angry too fast to even make it to a safe place. Furthermore, their rage causes them to want to destroy things, not seek solitude.</p><p></p><p>difficult child used to use his closet in times of more angst rather than rage - but the difficult child rage is a beast all to it's own.</p><p></p><p>One doctor suggested that difficult child break old plates when he got angry. Uh, yea. That worked. It only escalated the anger even more. Old plates, new plates, walls, tvs - suddenly all the cards are off the table. </p><p></p><p>Unfortunately the only thing that has helped quell my difficult children anger, besides maturity, is medications. If he starts to feel that rage, and can take a PRN medication, he is able to calm down. The good news, is that as he has matured, these episodes are farther and fewer between.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Steely, post: 154210, member: 3301"] A safe place is good in theory - but with a lot of our kids - they get too angry too fast to even make it to a safe place. Furthermore, their rage causes them to want to destroy things, not seek solitude. difficult child used to use his closet in times of more angst rather than rage - but the difficult child rage is a beast all to it's own. One doctor suggested that difficult child break old plates when he got angry. Uh, yea. That worked. It only escalated the anger even more. Old plates, new plates, walls, tvs - suddenly all the cards are off the table. Unfortunately the only thing that has helped quell my difficult children anger, besides maturity, is medications. If he starts to feel that rage, and can take a PRN medication, he is able to calm down. The good news, is that as he has matured, these episodes are farther and fewer between. [/QUOTE]
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