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General Parenting
difficult child is missing his sister
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<blockquote data-quote="Andy" data-source="post: 169446" data-attributes="member: 5096"><p>I was reaching for a phone book to call out the national guard search and rescue team! What a way to wake me up!</p><p> </p><p>Do you think that along with missing his sister, difficult child is partially scared for what it means for a child to move out of the house? It reminds him that someday he will be grown up and leaving? Does he want her home for the normalcy? One less person in the house does change the dynamics of the day. </p><p> </p><p>Would it be possible to allow him to have a pillow or stuffed animal from her room to keep him company until she returns? </p><p> </p><p>I wish my difficult child loved his sister like that. We have the opposite problem - he is trying everything possible to get her out of the house.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Andy, post: 169446, member: 5096"] I was reaching for a phone book to call out the national guard search and rescue team! What a way to wake me up! Do you think that along with missing his sister, difficult child is partially scared for what it means for a child to move out of the house? It reminds him that someday he will be grown up and leaving? Does he want her home for the normalcy? One less person in the house does change the dynamics of the day. Would it be possible to allow him to have a pillow or stuffed animal from her room to keep him company until she returns? I wish my difficult child loved his sister like that. We have the opposite problem - he is trying everything possible to get her out of the house. [/QUOTE]
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difficult child is missing his sister
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