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General Parenting
I think he believes his own lies?
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<blockquote data-quote="susiestar" data-source="post: 352836" data-attributes="member: 1233"><p>Wiz did this even into his middle teens. He would talk himself into deciding it was true. He also didn't always know where the line was between fantasy and reality. It happened over just about every dang thing. </p><p></p><p>A complete evaluation may be able to pinpoint any problems in distorted thinking. I once had Wiz spend most of a day learning that just saying it doesn't make it true. If he had the tv on I had him say, out loud, this is show X, when it was show Y. Or have him hold a piece of fruit and say it was a vegetable. Then I had him TASTE it to see if it was still the fruit or if his words were so special and magical that they changed an orange into a tomato.</p><p></p><p>On and on we went through this until he got the point. If he seemed to start believing his lies again, we did the experiment again.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="susiestar, post: 352836, member: 1233"] Wiz did this even into his middle teens. He would talk himself into deciding it was true. He also didn't always know where the line was between fantasy and reality. It happened over just about every dang thing. A complete evaluation may be able to pinpoint any problems in distorted thinking. I once had Wiz spend most of a day learning that just saying it doesn't make it true. If he had the tv on I had him say, out loud, this is show X, when it was show Y. Or have him hold a piece of fruit and say it was a vegetable. Then I had him TASTE it to see if it was still the fruit or if his words were so special and magical that they changed an orange into a tomato. On and on we went through this until he got the point. If he seemed to start believing his lies again, we did the experiment again. [/QUOTE]
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I think he believes his own lies?
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