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General Parenting
Is there always a reason?
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<blockquote data-quote="BusynMember" data-source="post: 524455" data-attributes="member: 1550"><p>There's always a reason. Here are a few common ones:</p><p></p><p>1/abused at home</p><p>2/inherited mental illness or neurological disorder</p><p>3/fetal alcohol syndrome or effects (Mom drank alcohol while pregnant causing organic brain damage in the child)</p><p>4/Other kinds of brain damage </p><p>5/The child was born with quirks and anger and nobody knows why and there is no really good explanation and may never be. Maybe something happened during birth that nobody knows about???</p><p></p><p>I have a friend who works in a behavioral classroom full time and has for years and years. She says that the teachers tend to blame the parents, but that they fail to take the diagnosis into consideration or the fact that many of the parents seem like involved, loving parents. She says that the talk about parents in the teacher's lounge offends her so much that she makes excuses to go to her car during breaks (she has a 33 year old son with Asperger's who was one of those "problem children." He is a fine, if "different, young adult)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BusynMember, post: 524455, member: 1550"] There's always a reason. Here are a few common ones: 1/abused at home 2/inherited mental illness or neurological disorder 3/fetal alcohol syndrome or effects (Mom drank alcohol while pregnant causing organic brain damage in the child) 4/Other kinds of brain damage 5/The child was born with quirks and anger and nobody knows why and there is no really good explanation and may never be. Maybe something happened during birth that nobody knows about??? I have a friend who works in a behavioral classroom full time and has for years and years. She says that the teachers tend to blame the parents, but that they fail to take the diagnosis into consideration or the fact that many of the parents seem like involved, loving parents. She says that the talk about parents in the teacher's lounge offends her so much that she makes excuses to go to her car during breaks (she has a 33 year old son with Asperger's who was one of those "problem children." He is a fine, if "different, young adult) [/QUOTE]
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Is there always a reason?
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