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how over reactive is your difficult child wihen not feeling welll or
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<blockquote data-quote="AnnieO" data-source="post: 515972" data-attributes="member: 6705"><p>Onyxx still did this up until she took off last year. Toe stubbed? Must be broken, and the screaming and carrying on was incredible. Of course we weren't allowed to TOUCH it, to look or even determine if it was bad enough to take her to the ER. So mostly we ignored her, told her until we were allowed to help, we couldn't do anything. Splinters were a NIGHTMARE for a while.</p><p></p><p>Jett... Not so much, just exaggerating. You know when you burp and you get a little stomach acid with the air? And it's nasty? Jett would stop dead in his tracks, lean over and spit that on the ground (preferably carpet) and announce he'd thrown up. Um. One day when he was actually sick (fever, nothing else), my Dad stayed with him - and he "threw up" something like 25 times. My Dad called to ask how I didn't strangle him. Once we started making him clean it up, he quit spitting it on the carpet. The night he felt bad and climbed into bed with us, then puked <em>all over husband</em> - we didn't make him clean up, but he and husband moved to the floor and I moved to the sofa. (When he was actually sick, he wouldn't run for the bathroom or sink, he'd stop dead in his tracks. Not any more, after watching the DOG - who licked people in the FACE, especially JETT - clean it up...)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AnnieO, post: 515972, member: 6705"] Onyxx still did this up until she took off last year. Toe stubbed? Must be broken, and the screaming and carrying on was incredible. Of course we weren't allowed to TOUCH it, to look or even determine if it was bad enough to take her to the ER. So mostly we ignored her, told her until we were allowed to help, we couldn't do anything. Splinters were a NIGHTMARE for a while. Jett... Not so much, just exaggerating. You know when you burp and you get a little stomach acid with the air? And it's nasty? Jett would stop dead in his tracks, lean over and spit that on the ground (preferably carpet) and announce he'd thrown up. Um. One day when he was actually sick (fever, nothing else), my Dad stayed with him - and he "threw up" something like 25 times. My Dad called to ask how I didn't strangle him. Once we started making him clean it up, he quit spitting it on the carpet. The night he felt bad and climbed into bed with us, then puked [I]all over husband[/I] - we didn't make him clean up, but he and husband moved to the floor and I moved to the sofa. (When he was actually sick, he wouldn't run for the bathroom or sink, he'd stop dead in his tracks. Not any more, after watching the DOG - who licked people in the FACE, especially JETT - clean it up...) [/QUOTE]
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