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General Parenting
advice please - sorry it got very long.
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<blockquote data-quote="TerryJ2" data-source="post: 332320" data-attributes="member: 3419"><p>Welcome, Mydarling and Firstangel.</p><p>You could be talking about my son!</p><p>ODD is, in my humble opinion, a symptom, not a diagnosis. I would, at this point, think that your son(s) is/are in the Aspie category.</p><p>Correcting other people, "Rules are for you but not for me," not seeing the efficacy of social norms and rules is all Aspie.</p><p>It also sounds like, as a baby, Mydarling, your son needed constant stimulation and company, which is exactly what my son is like.</p><p>I used to carry him in a strap-on body carrier/sling, and then wrap my arms around him, as well. Looking back on it, I can see he needed lots of pressure. But just to let go, even when he was attached to me by a fabric sling, to put in a load of wash, would elicit howls of anger and anguish. </p><p>There is a sensory issue that goes along with-all of this--these kids have neurological issues that manifest themselves through things like I just described.</p><p>I would proceed by reading up on Asperger's because the "treatments" aka responses, will help for ODD, ADHD, bipolar, etc.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TerryJ2, post: 332320, member: 3419"] Welcome, Mydarling and Firstangel. You could be talking about my son! ODD is, in my humble opinion, a symptom, not a diagnosis. I would, at this point, think that your son(s) is/are in the Aspie category. Correcting other people, "Rules are for you but not for me," not seeing the efficacy of social norms and rules is all Aspie. It also sounds like, as a baby, Mydarling, your son needed constant stimulation and company, which is exactly what my son is like. I used to carry him in a strap-on body carrier/sling, and then wrap my arms around him, as well. Looking back on it, I can see he needed lots of pressure. But just to let go, even when he was attached to me by a fabric sling, to put in a load of wash, would elicit howls of anger and anguish. There is a sensory issue that goes along with-all of this--these kids have neurological issues that manifest themselves through things like I just described. I would proceed by reading up on Asperger's because the "treatments" aka responses, will help for ODD, ADHD, bipolar, etc. [/QUOTE]
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advice please - sorry it got very long.
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