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New Here: Are we gonna survive 1st grade???
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<blockquote data-quote="bystander" data-source="post: 33287" data-attributes="member: 3614"><p>OMG - my son does <em>*exactly*</em> the same thing! He asks that A LOT - "What will happen?" If he's doing something and I ask him to stop. The tac I've been taking is - "It doesn't matter - STOP IT because I told you to". Explanations have not helped either - because he started expecting an explanation for *everything* practically. Some things, you know, you just want them to stop because you asked him to. He's a limit tester for sure.</p><p></p><p>He's a skilled negotiator too - but he doesn't usually negotiate about discipline. He takes his medicine after it gets presented so to speak. He negotiates more often about like how many cookies he can have; or, bed-time on the weekends. These encounters can get annoying.</p><p></p><p>SRL: Does that book have good advice for this consequence-kind of stuff even if your kid is not explosive?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bystander, post: 33287, member: 3614"] OMG - my son does [i]*exactly*[/i] the same thing! He asks that A LOT - "What will happen?" If he's doing something and I ask him to stop. The tac I've been taking is - "It doesn't matter - STOP IT because I told you to". Explanations have not helped either - because he started expecting an explanation for *everything* practically. Some things, you know, you just want them to stop because you asked him to. He's a limit tester for sure. He's a skilled negotiator too - but he doesn't usually negotiate about discipline. He takes his medicine after it gets presented so to speak. He negotiates more often about like how many cookies he can have; or, bed-time on the weekends. These encounters can get annoying. SRL: Does that book have good advice for this consequence-kind of stuff even if your kid is not explosive? [/QUOTE]
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