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General Parenting
Stopping Sassy/Backtalking
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<blockquote data-quote="keista" data-source="post: 437351" data-attributes="member: 11965"><p>If you KNOW he'll be OK, don't let it bother you. Save that energy for when you and he are going to need it again. Unfortunately there may come a time in the future when this changes THAT's when you'll "allow" it to bother you, but hopefully by then you will have found skills of your own to let it go. It's a constant balancing act that always needs readjusting.</p><p></p><p>For my son, some things he can recover from easily, and others just destroy (or can) his day. We know NOT to schedule math first thing in the morning. He can usually get through, BUT if things go bad, and he has other classes after, he won't function in those either. This is a fairly recent development. At elementary age he usually needed no more than 30 minutes of recovery time for anything.</p><p></p><p>More ((((HUGS)))) just because.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="keista, post: 437351, member: 11965"] If you KNOW he'll be OK, don't let it bother you. Save that energy for when you and he are going to need it again. Unfortunately there may come a time in the future when this changes THAT's when you'll "allow" it to bother you, but hopefully by then you will have found skills of your own to let it go. It's a constant balancing act that always needs readjusting. For my son, some things he can recover from easily, and others just destroy (or can) his day. We know NOT to schedule math first thing in the morning. He can usually get through, BUT if things go bad, and he has other classes after, he won't function in those either. This is a fairly recent development. At elementary age he usually needed no more than 30 minutes of recovery time for anything. More ((((HUGS)))) just because. [/QUOTE]
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