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General Parenting
A difficult child's version of "Do to Get"
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<blockquote data-quote="Josie" data-source="post: 210239" data-attributes="member: 1792"><p>The gluten free/casein free diet eliminates all gluten (wheat, rye, oats, and barley) and casein (milk) from the diet. I found out about it because my younger daughter had stomach problems from gluten. It led to all of us trying the diet and it has made a dramatic difference for us. A lot of people who do it find it improves their mood and/or their children's behaviour. It is not a very popular approach here, but in gluten free circles, it is widely accepted as true.</p><p> </p><p>I don't really have a good site to read about it. <a href="http://www.glutenfreeforum" target="_blank">www.glutenfreeforum</a> will tell you how to do the gluten free part but it might look overwhelming to try. Here are some success stories for it: <a href="http://www.gfcfdiet.com/Successstories.htm" target="_blank">http://www.gfcfdiet.com/Successstories.htm</a></p><p> </p><p>If you are interested in reading it, I can pm you a recent posting on the national celiac listserve about how gluten affects various people who responded.</p><p> </p><p>We do not really ask our child to do a lot of chores but she is almost 13 and should be able to do more, especially since we do a lot for her. She is enough of a easy child that she should do some basic chores like pick up after herself, unload the dishwasher, set the table, and clean out the car (of mostly her stuff). She is probably behind her age in this area because of her many years of difficult child behaviour when it was more trouble than it was worth to get her to even pick up after herself.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Josie, post: 210239, member: 1792"] The gluten free/casein free diet eliminates all gluten (wheat, rye, oats, and barley) and casein (milk) from the diet. I found out about it because my younger daughter had stomach problems from gluten. It led to all of us trying the diet and it has made a dramatic difference for us. A lot of people who do it find it improves their mood and/or their children's behaviour. It is not a very popular approach here, but in gluten free circles, it is widely accepted as true. I don't really have a good site to read about it. [URL="http://www.glutenfreeforum"]www.glutenfreeforum[/URL] will tell you how to do the gluten free part but it might look overwhelming to try. Here are some success stories for it: [URL]http://www.gfcfdiet.com/Successstories.htm[/URL] If you are interested in reading it, I can pm you a recent posting on the national celiac listserve about how gluten affects various people who responded. We do not really ask our child to do a lot of chores but she is almost 13 and should be able to do more, especially since we do a lot for her. She is enough of a easy child that she should do some basic chores like pick up after herself, unload the dishwasher, set the table, and clean out the car (of mostly her stuff). She is probably behind her age in this area because of her many years of difficult child behaviour when it was more trouble than it was worth to get her to even pick up after herself. [/QUOTE]
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A difficult child's version of "Do to Get"
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