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Is it too much to ..
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<blockquote data-quote="Josie" data-source="post: 55492" data-attributes="member: 1792"><p>I don't think you are expecting too much but I also think it's possible he can't help it. In many ways, he reminds me of the way my difficult child used to be and I believe she couldn't help it. Now that we have figured out what her problem is, she doesn't do that any more. All of the behaviour management, consequences, therapy, etc. didn't help until we figured out what caused it.</p><p></p><p>I also would be afraid to leave him alone. I would never be able to pull off having my difficult child come to the pool and not swim because it would just be too miserable for me. I think you should do whichever would make you the happiest. If you would prefer to stay home, do that and enforce his consequence. If you would rather go, find a way to make it work for him, too. But based on my own experience, keeping him home is unlikely to change his future behaviour.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Josie, post: 55492, member: 1792"] I don't think you are expecting too much but I also think it's possible he can't help it. In many ways, he reminds me of the way my difficult child used to be and I believe she couldn't help it. Now that we have figured out what her problem is, she doesn't do that any more. All of the behaviour management, consequences, therapy, etc. didn't help until we figured out what caused it. I also would be afraid to leave him alone. I would never be able to pull off having my difficult child come to the pool and not swim because it would just be too miserable for me. I think you should do whichever would make you the happiest. If you would prefer to stay home, do that and enforce his consequence. If you would rather go, find a way to make it work for him, too. But based on my own experience, keeping him home is unlikely to change his future behaviour. [/QUOTE]
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