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General Parenting
My 12 year old little boy has autisum and oppositional defience disorder
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<blockquote data-quote="BusynMember" data-source="post: 595961" data-attributes="member: 1550"><p>Personally? The worry man in the head doesn't sound like autism to me. </p><p></p><p>I'd take him to a neuropsychologist for a second opinion. This is NOT a psycvhiatrist and will give you a very intensive look into who and what your son is and why he acts like he does. I mean, he could have autism and other stuff too. I'm wondering if he hears voices that aren't there. Does he ever mention any "imaginery friends" who aren't there? Does he say he sees things that aren't there? Or is it just the worry man? It is hard to talk to autistics because they tend to interpret conversation very literally.</p><p></p><p>At any rate, good luck and I'd definitely get more i</p><p></p><p>I've always felt ODD is what a therapist tells a parent when a child is acting out and the person has no idea why. I don't think it's very useful and it rarely stands alone.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BusynMember, post: 595961, member: 1550"] Personally? The worry man in the head doesn't sound like autism to me. I'd take him to a neuropsychologist for a second opinion. This is NOT a psycvhiatrist and will give you a very intensive look into who and what your son is and why he acts like he does. I mean, he could have autism and other stuff too. I'm wondering if he hears voices that aren't there. Does he ever mention any "imaginery friends" who aren't there? Does he say he sees things that aren't there? Or is it just the worry man? It is hard to talk to autistics because they tend to interpret conversation very literally. At any rate, good luck and I'd definitely get more i I've always felt ODD is what a therapist tells a parent when a child is acting out and the person has no idea why. I don't think it's very useful and it rarely stands alone. [/QUOTE]
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My 12 year old little boy has autisum and oppositional defience disorder
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