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General Parenting
Games and behaviour??
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<blockquote data-quote="InsaneCdn" data-source="post: 602509" data-attributes="member: 11791"><p>That is a very common belief. Some professionals even tried to tell us that because we didn't let difficult child do these things, that THAT was the cause of his social problems. It isn't.</p><p> </p><p>We found that you cannot just "take away". You have to "replace". And with a kid on the spectrum (or anywhere near it...), they really get stuck on whatever they had. It's HARD to get them out of the rut. We avoided part of it, because we never allowed violent games to start with, so I can't tell you how to switch now. But I can tell you that when there is a predisposition to violence or an Aspie/Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD)-type obsession with it (whether they act it out or not)... you do not want to feed it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="InsaneCdn, post: 602509, member: 11791"] That is a very common belief. Some professionals even tried to tell us that because we didn't let difficult child do these things, that THAT was the cause of his social problems. It isn't. We found that you cannot just "take away". You have to "replace". And with a kid on the spectrum (or anywhere near it...), they really get stuck on whatever they had. It's HARD to get them out of the rut. We avoided part of it, because we never allowed violent games to start with, so I can't tell you how to switch now. But I can tell you that when there is a predisposition to violence or an Aspie/Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD)-type obsession with it (whether they act it out or not)... you do not want to feed it. [/QUOTE]
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