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General Parenting
Questioning my soon to be 4 year old sons behavior
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<blockquote data-quote="InsaneCdn" data-source="post: 539861" data-attributes="member: 11791"><p>Be <em>expecially </em>careful not to do that. Complex kids come in layers, usually develop unevenly, and often don't fit in "neat little boxes". </p><p></p><p>Some kids DO have a single "killer" diagnosis, one that really covers the bases. More often than not, there is more. Some kids have more than one "killer" diagnosis - like autism plus Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) (there's more than one of those around this board). Others have a long list of "lesser" dxes, but taken together, it's huge.</p><p></p><p>And then... keep your eyes and mind open, because even if you get accurate dxes "now", things may change in 2 years or 5 years or at puberty...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="InsaneCdn, post: 539861, member: 11791"] Be [I]expecially [/I]careful not to do that. Complex kids come in layers, usually develop unevenly, and often don't fit in "neat little boxes". Some kids DO have a single "killer" diagnosis, one that really covers the bases. More often than not, there is more. Some kids have more than one "killer" diagnosis - like autism plus Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) (there's more than one of those around this board). Others have a long list of "lesser" dxes, but taken together, it's huge. And then... keep your eyes and mind open, because even if you get accurate dxes "now", things may change in 2 years or 5 years or at puberty... [/QUOTE]
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Questioning my soon to be 4 year old sons behavior
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