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General Parenting
What to do during meltdowns
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<blockquote data-quote="TerryJ2" data-source="post: 559572" data-attributes="member: 3419"><p>Oh, yeah, I remember the sweat! I happened upon the blanket by accident, just to avoid the slippery skin effect.</p><p></p><p>Also, in regard to the difficult child stopping head banging or door kicking when it hurts, don't count on it. When my easy child daughter did that in her crib, I asked the pediatrician about it. He said, "She'll stop when it hurts." Then my difficult child came along. I let him hit his head way more than I should have, assuming that the pediatrician was right. No, g'sfg will not stop. They are wire differently. They are neurologically different. They'll stop if they are bored or no longer raging, but not because they're in pain. Just saying ...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TerryJ2, post: 559572, member: 3419"] Oh, yeah, I remember the sweat! I happened upon the blanket by accident, just to avoid the slippery skin effect. Also, in regard to the difficult child stopping head banging or door kicking when it hurts, don't count on it. When my easy child daughter did that in her crib, I asked the pediatrician about it. He said, "She'll stop when it hurts." Then my difficult child came along. I let him hit his head way more than I should have, assuming that the pediatrician was right. No, g'sfg will not stop. They are wire differently. They are neurologically different. They'll stop if they are bored or no longer raging, but not because they're in pain. Just saying ... [/QUOTE]
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What to do during meltdowns
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