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General Parenting
difficult child 1 had a major meltdown at a friend's
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<blockquote data-quote="keista" data-source="post: 524353" data-attributes="member: 11965"><p>I had the same problem with DD1 - overreaction to others misbehavior. All I can say is that you have to be a broken record telling them that two wrongs don't make a right. Yes the other kid is wrong, but they can only control their own behavior. You as mom can't go grounding the other kid, but you can ground difficult child. The world is full of idiots and unfair situations and our difficult children need to learn to live with that and walk away, or seek help or whatever other coping skills we can teach them.</p><p></p><p>I haven't had this issue this year because DD1's teacher is AMAZING at preempting any issues and when something does go wrong, she handles it swiftly and effectively. Outside of school, DD1 doesn't associate with high conflict kids.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="keista, post: 524353, member: 11965"] I had the same problem with DD1 - overreaction to others misbehavior. All I can say is that you have to be a broken record telling them that two wrongs don't make a right. Yes the other kid is wrong, but they can only control their own behavior. You as mom can't go grounding the other kid, but you can ground difficult child. The world is full of idiots and unfair situations and our difficult children need to learn to live with that and walk away, or seek help or whatever other coping skills we can teach them. I haven't had this issue this year because DD1's teacher is AMAZING at preempting any issues and when something does go wrong, she handles it swiftly and effectively. Outside of school, DD1 doesn't associate with high conflict kids. [/QUOTE]
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difficult child 1 had a major meltdown at a friend's
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