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General Parenting
difficult child 2 continues to struggle with his social skills
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<blockquote data-quote="Californiablonde" data-source="post: 533029" data-attributes="member: 2196"><p>I agree that there's nothing wrong with being a loner if that is what makes my son happy. He very much enjoys his alone time and it's like pulling teeth to try and get him to go outside and socialize, so I've finally given up trying. If my son is happier by himself then that's okay. I'm just worried that number one: he is going to say the wrong thing to the wrong person one of these days and there is going to be heavy consequences, and number two: how is he going to function at a job when he will be expected to communicate with other people on an every day basis. I'm afraid his career choices may be limited if he doesn't learn the proper way to communicate with others. Sooner or later he is going to be thrown out in the real world with nobody to help him along the way and I'm very concerned that he won't be able to function well on his own.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Californiablonde, post: 533029, member: 2196"] I agree that there's nothing wrong with being a loner if that is what makes my son happy. He very much enjoys his alone time and it's like pulling teeth to try and get him to go outside and socialize, so I've finally given up trying. If my son is happier by himself then that's okay. I'm just worried that number one: he is going to say the wrong thing to the wrong person one of these days and there is going to be heavy consequences, and number two: how is he going to function at a job when he will be expected to communicate with other people on an every day basis. I'm afraid his career choices may be limited if he doesn't learn the proper way to communicate with others. Sooner or later he is going to be thrown out in the real world with nobody to help him along the way and I'm very concerned that he won't be able to function well on his own. [/QUOTE]
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difficult child 2 continues to struggle with his social skills
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