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Parent Support Forums
General Parenting
Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD)-not otherwise specified
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<blockquote data-quote="Christy" data-source="post: 190328" data-attributes="member: 225"><p>Sorry you are facing this. First, protect the kitten. Set him up with his litterbox and food in a locked area like your bedroom. Allow difficult child only supervised access to the kitten and model appropriate petting and other behaviors. Let him feed the kitten and praise the right behaviors but don't expect this behavior to carry over right away so do not leave your son alone with the cat. When our son was younger, he never intentionally hurt the cats but tried to control them by dragging them around, forcing them to stay in one spot, pulling on them,etc.. We had to keep them seperate from him. Now, several years later, they are the bset of friends. The cats seek him out-LOL</p><p></p><p>Good Luck</p><p>Christy</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Christy, post: 190328, member: 225"] Sorry you are facing this. First, protect the kitten. Set him up with his litterbox and food in a locked area like your bedroom. Allow difficult child only supervised access to the kitten and model appropriate petting and other behaviors. Let him feed the kitten and praise the right behaviors but don't expect this behavior to carry over right away so do not leave your son alone with the cat. When our son was younger, he never intentionally hurt the cats but tried to control them by dragging them around, forcing them to stay in one spot, pulling on them,etc.. We had to keep them seperate from him. Now, several years later, they are the bset of friends. The cats seek him out-LOL Good Luck Christy [/QUOTE]
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