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Frustrated!!!
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<blockquote data-quote="'Chelle" data-source="post: 52469" data-attributes="member: 1161"><p>Hi and welcome.</p><p></p><p>I like Sheila's suggestion of breaking it into smaller increments - 3 10-minute reading sessions a day instead of one longer session. I might even be able to get my difficult child to do that with books he doesn't like but has to read for school LOL.</p><p></p><p>As Sharon said, you can't fix our kids- they are who they are I tell my difficult child there's nothing wrong with him, he's not broken and needing to be fixed. He's just different and that doesn't make it bad or anything wrong with him. You just have to come up with different parenting strategies to get them able to function in a world where they're not in step with everyone else. It's what I like about this site, you can get lots of ideas to try and lots of them work. Like Sheila's reading suggestion, it's fairly simple but I never thought of it myself. </p><p></p><p>Hope you find the site helpful.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="'Chelle, post: 52469, member: 1161"] Hi and welcome. I like Sheila's suggestion of breaking it into smaller increments - 3 10-minute reading sessions a day instead of one longer session. I might even be able to get my difficult child to do that with books he doesn't like but has to read for school LOL. As Sharon said, you can't fix our kids- they are who they are I tell my difficult child there's nothing wrong with him, he's not broken and needing to be fixed. He's just different and that doesn't make it bad or anything wrong with him. You just have to come up with different parenting strategies to get them able to function in a world where they're not in step with everyone else. It's what I like about this site, you can get lots of ideas to try and lots of them work. Like Sheila's reading suggestion, it's fairly simple but I never thought of it myself. Hope you find the site helpful. [/QUOTE]
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