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General Parenting
neighborhood kids, teasing and difficult child
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<blockquote data-quote="klmno" data-source="post: 307428" data-attributes="member: 3699"><p>Uhmmmm....I think the best thing for a teenager is to learn appropriate ways to deal with this, without a parent stepping in- unless it turns into a fight or something in which case I'd call the police. Usually, a therapist or someone at school can give good tips to kids on how to handle this, even when it's happening outside of school. Soomeone (some sort of mentor) needs to talk with your son and get to the bottom of why kids are bullying him. I'm not saying it's justified- obviously it's not- but they have clearly singled him out. I think I would start though by having a heart-to-heart with your difficult child, if he's not too old to do that. LOL! If he'll talk, discuss getting him a male mentor to talk this over with and see who'd he be more comfortable with. Tell him you care about him but know that he needs pointers from someone who knows "men ways" of dealing with things. At least, that's the method that worked to get my son to open up to a male administrator at sd and a male therapist.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="klmno, post: 307428, member: 3699"] Uhmmmm....I think the best thing for a teenager is to learn appropriate ways to deal with this, without a parent stepping in- unless it turns into a fight or something in which case I'd call the police. Usually, a therapist or someone at school can give good tips to kids on how to handle this, even when it's happening outside of school. Soomeone (some sort of mentor) needs to talk with your son and get to the bottom of why kids are bullying him. I'm not saying it's justified- obviously it's not- but they have clearly singled him out. I think I would start though by having a heart-to-heart with your difficult child, if he's not too old to do that. LOL! If he'll talk, discuss getting him a male mentor to talk this over with and see who'd he be more comfortable with. Tell him you care about him but know that he needs pointers from someone who knows "men ways" of dealing with things. At least, that's the method that worked to get my son to open up to a male administrator at sd and a male therapist. [/QUOTE]
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