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<blockquote data-quote="Malika" data-source="post: 543645" data-attributes="member: 11227"><p>You give a more complete picture now. I had started to reply and then I realised no... the things I was saying are appropriate for my son but I think not for your daughter. My son, also five, has a version of this in which he will lock into what he wants and start going into whining/crying when I say no, not now, etc. However, he will not go on for long, certainly not an hour, and there is usually a way to get round it - distracting him, reaching some compromise, sometimes just getting angry with him and he will stop. So... from what you say here, yes I think it is more serious and not just a child being "cussed". I think if an evaluation can tell you something useful, then yes, you should get your daughter evaluated. It does sound as if there is something more going on. But it could all be to do with her history, of course, and not any "disorder" as such.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Malika, post: 543645, member: 11227"] You give a more complete picture now. I had started to reply and then I realised no... the things I was saying are appropriate for my son but I think not for your daughter. My son, also five, has a version of this in which he will lock into what he wants and start going into whining/crying when I say no, not now, etc. However, he will not go on for long, certainly not an hour, and there is usually a way to get round it - distracting him, reaching some compromise, sometimes just getting angry with him and he will stop. So... from what you say here, yes I think it is more serious and not just a child being "cussed". I think if an evaluation can tell you something useful, then yes, you should get your daughter evaluated. It does sound as if there is something more going on. But it could all be to do with her history, of course, and not any "disorder" as such. [/QUOTE]
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