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General Parenting
And he's in his happy place...
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<blockquote data-quote="JJJ" data-source="post: 439349" data-attributes="member: 1169"><p>I'm glad he found his happy place. Long before we had our difficult children, I had a friend who had a mild difficult child who reacted poorly to medications but she noticed that when he was physically worn out, he did better. She would wake him up every morning and they'd run 10 miles together, then she'd go to his school every day at lunch and they'd run another few miles on the school track. She was able to adjust her work schedule so she could manage this, and she had the bonus of being in incredible shape. Best of all, her difficult child finished high school with honors through the AP program. </p><p></p><p>Is there anyway you can create physically exhausting but fun things for him to do so he gets worn out more often?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JJJ, post: 439349, member: 1169"] I'm glad he found his happy place. Long before we had our difficult children, I had a friend who had a mild difficult child who reacted poorly to medications but she noticed that when he was physically worn out, he did better. She would wake him up every morning and they'd run 10 miles together, then she'd go to his school every day at lunch and they'd run another few miles on the school track. She was able to adjust her work schedule so she could manage this, and she had the bonus of being in incredible shape. Best of all, her difficult child finished high school with honors through the AP program. Is there anyway you can create physically exhausting but fun things for him to do so he gets worn out more often? [/QUOTE]
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And he's in his happy place...
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