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General Parenting
Is he just being a "Pre-teen"?
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<blockquote data-quote="'Chelle" data-source="post: 168577" data-attributes="member: 1161"><p>Marg & MWM have said it all pretty well. Until we got our diagnosis for our difficult child he was in trouble a lot, yeah even with husband and I. With the diagnosis and the right therapy and learning how to parent him better, our difficult child has improved leaps. I've found that talking with him and finding ways to explain things in ways he gets it (even if you have to try several different ways) has been the best approach. Our difficult children on the spectrum have a hard time getting the differences in how to treat people. My difficult child would think if adults say things to one another, he could say the same things as well. Took time for him to learn the difference in situations.</p><p></p><p>And it takes time and a lot of explanations for even family to understand, and I don't know if they ever really do since they don't live with it all the time.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="'Chelle, post: 168577, member: 1161"] Marg & MWM have said it all pretty well. Until we got our diagnosis for our difficult child he was in trouble a lot, yeah even with husband and I. With the diagnosis and the right therapy and learning how to parent him better, our difficult child has improved leaps. I've found that talking with him and finding ways to explain things in ways he gets it (even if you have to try several different ways) has been the best approach. Our difficult children on the spectrum have a hard time getting the differences in how to treat people. My difficult child would think if adults say things to one another, he could say the same things as well. Took time for him to learn the difference in situations. And it takes time and a lot of explanations for even family to understand, and I don't know if they ever really do since they don't live with it all the time. [/QUOTE]
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Is he just being a "Pre-teen"?
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