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Parent Support Forums
General Parenting
Getting an accurate diagnosis
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<blockquote data-quote="HaoZi" data-source="post: 411577"><p>It sounds like a pretty good little village for you two, can't argue that. And it does sound like frustration triggering him, which brings us back 'round to The Explosive Child. Have you kept a diary of incidents and what goes on before them? Was he already frustrated from something else earlier, anxious about something coming up, ate this that or the other? Look for patterns or anything you can think of, and watch him for small signs of beginning stages of frustration before he has a meltdown, this will help you head him off at the pass.</p><p>With my Kiddo I have to watch/listen for certain things, and I'm sure there are more than I see, but she'll start chewing on her nails or fingers, her tone will change, she'll smile less, her movements become more clumsy (not always easy to tell that one, we're both klutzes), and the cat will make himself scarce.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HaoZi, post: 411577"] It sounds like a pretty good little village for you two, can't argue that. And it does sound like frustration triggering him, which brings us back 'round to The Explosive Child. Have you kept a diary of incidents and what goes on before them? Was he already frustrated from something else earlier, anxious about something coming up, ate this that or the other? Look for patterns or anything you can think of, and watch him for small signs of beginning stages of frustration before he has a meltdown, this will help you head him off at the pass. With my Kiddo I have to watch/listen for certain things, and I'm sure there are more than I see, but she'll start chewing on her nails or fingers, her tone will change, she'll smile less, her movements become more clumsy (not always easy to tell that one, we're both klutzes), and the cat will make himself scarce. [/QUOTE]
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