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<blockquote data-quote="HMBgal" data-source="post: 633064" data-attributes="member: 13260"><p>Oooooh you are not alone! My 8 year old grandson and your boy sound so much alike. The Explosive Child book really helped us look at things in a different way and we do things differently. It has gone better--less frequent melt-downs--but he is still atypical. We shared that book and worksheets from the website with everyone who works with him at school because everyone needs to be on the same page. But he is definitely better. When he was five, we thought he would end up in a special day class because he was doing so poorly. Not academically poorly; he started kindergarten being able to read, but socially he was (and still is to some degree) a mess. Simple maturing has helped, along with all the other stuff, but we still worry about what will happen when puberty hits. Oy. Yep, as others have said: lace up your tennis shoes!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HMBgal, post: 633064, member: 13260"] Oooooh you are not alone! My 8 year old grandson and your boy sound so much alike. The Explosive Child book really helped us look at things in a different way and we do things differently. It has gone better--less frequent melt-downs--but he is still atypical. We shared that book and worksheets from the website with everyone who works with him at school because everyone needs to be on the same page. But he is definitely better. When he was five, we thought he would end up in a special day class because he was doing so poorly. Not academically poorly; he started kindergarten being able to read, but socially he was (and still is to some degree) a mess. Simple maturing has helped, along with all the other stuff, but we still worry about what will happen when puberty hits. Oy. Yep, as others have said: lace up your tennis shoes! [/QUOTE]
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