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General Parenting
Do I just accept the lying and ignore it?
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<blockquote data-quote="Josie" data-source="post: 331542" data-attributes="member: 1792"><p>I have a similar problem with difficult child 1. She is not supposed to eat gluten or milk and it affects her mood and school work and makes everyone in the family walk on eggshells when she does. If I ask her if she did eat something, she never admits it. It is so obvious when she does that I don't even ask her any more. Then I impose pretty serious consequences that she doesn't like for the behaviour that results, in hopes that it will not be worth it for her. I admit that sometimes (OK a lot of times) I do say if she hadn't eaten whatever she ate, she wouldn't be facing this consequence.</p><p> </p><p>I can't see asking the school for an IEP for her for this reason because in the end, she is the one that needs to know how it affects her. Better that she learn this lesson now, than later in life when the consequences would be worse.</p><p> </p><p>I have also gone to great effort to make her a girlfriend treat so she wouldn't be tempted to eat something else and have her not eat it so I can relate to your annoyance over him not eating it. But I do feel that I have to do my part for her so she can follow her diet more easily.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Josie, post: 331542, member: 1792"] I have a similar problem with difficult child 1. She is not supposed to eat gluten or milk and it affects her mood and school work and makes everyone in the family walk on eggshells when she does. If I ask her if she did eat something, she never admits it. It is so obvious when she does that I don't even ask her any more. Then I impose pretty serious consequences that she doesn't like for the behaviour that results, in hopes that it will not be worth it for her. I admit that sometimes (OK a lot of times) I do say if she hadn't eaten whatever she ate, she wouldn't be facing this consequence. I can't see asking the school for an IEP for her for this reason because in the end, she is the one that needs to know how it affects her. Better that she learn this lesson now, than later in life when the consequences would be worse. I have also gone to great effort to make her a girlfriend treat so she wouldn't be tempted to eat something else and have her not eat it so I can relate to your annoyance over him not eating it. But I do feel that I have to do my part for her so she can follow her diet more easily. [/QUOTE]
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Do I just accept the lying and ignore it?
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