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Parent Support Forums
General Parenting
We defined typical teen. Why not define traits of a difficult child?
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<blockquote data-quote="HaoZi" data-source="post: 590010" data-attributes="member: 15793"><p>And that works, too. All our difficult children are different. Some can't do the schoolwork, some just won't do it, some rigidly apply themselves to doing it perfectly and aren't happy with anything under an A. Some are verbally abusive, some physically, some are passive aggressive, many are a combination of two or three depending on the situation. But all have issues that are individual to them and don't respond to others or the world as PCs do.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HaoZi, post: 590010, member: 15793"] And that works, too. All our difficult children are different. Some can't do the schoolwork, some just won't do it, some rigidly apply themselves to doing it perfectly and aren't happy with anything under an A. Some are verbally abusive, some physically, some are passive aggressive, many are a combination of two or three depending on the situation. But all have issues that are individual to them and don't respond to others or the world as PCs do. [/QUOTE]
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We defined typical teen. Why not define traits of a difficult child?
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