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<blockquote data-quote="DaisyFace" data-source="post: 517732" data-attributes="member: 6546"><p>BigBear--</p><p></p><p>After reading your post, my impression is that your daughter is suffering from some "emotional dysregulation"....IOW - there is not necessarily an external trigger that is causing her to rage. She may have some wiring in her brain that causes her emotions to bubble up, uncontrolled, until they eventually boil over and explode. This is probably not something that she is able to control at this point - so rewards or consequences will have no effect on the raging. Also, there probably will not be any rational explanation - other than her brain is not regulating itself properly.</p><p></p><p>If that is the case, you are probably best off having a safe place she can rage (at least until medications can help her get these emotions under control). Remove glass, breakables, sharp objects, etc...and as long as she is not injuring herself - let her be. Otherwise, you become another target at which to vent her rage...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DaisyFace, post: 517732, member: 6546"] BigBear-- After reading your post, my impression is that your daughter is suffering from some "emotional dysregulation"....IOW - there is not necessarily an external trigger that is causing her to rage. She may have some wiring in her brain that causes her emotions to bubble up, uncontrolled, until they eventually boil over and explode. This is probably not something that she is able to control at this point - so rewards or consequences will have no effect on the raging. Also, there probably will not be any rational explanation - other than her brain is not regulating itself properly. If that is the case, you are probably best off having a safe place she can rage (at least until medications can help her get these emotions under control). Remove glass, breakables, sharp objects, etc...and as long as she is not injuring herself - let her be. Otherwise, you become another target at which to vent her rage... [/QUOTE]
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