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General Parenting
Not Hard To See The Vacation Is Over
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<blockquote data-quote="Ktllc" data-source="post: 536727" data-attributes="member: 11847"><p>I can't offer much help, but it does remind me of how my brother felt about me: resented me for being almost never in trouble and for simply existing. But to those feeling, you had to add the fact that he was very protective of me (although would never admit it) and had some admiration towards my accomplishments. Those opposite feelings made for an explosive mix.</p><p>I'm guessing it would be a reasonable assumption that difficult child has conflicting feelings toward easy child. To that, add his "issues"... </p><p>In my book, it is no excuse, but a plausible explanation. I would try to talk with him about it and accept that what he feels is HIS truth. </p><p>Having a psychiatrist help in the whole process might very valuable. He or she might have some concrete ideas on how to deal the rivalery.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ktllc, post: 536727, member: 11847"] I can't offer much help, but it does remind me of how my brother felt about me: resented me for being almost never in trouble and for simply existing. But to those feeling, you had to add the fact that he was very protective of me (although would never admit it) and had some admiration towards my accomplishments. Those opposite feelings made for an explosive mix. I'm guessing it would be a reasonable assumption that difficult child has conflicting feelings toward easy child. To that, add his "issues"... In my book, it is no excuse, but a plausible explanation. I would try to talk with him about it and accept that what he feels is HIS truth. Having a psychiatrist help in the whole process might very valuable. He or she might have some concrete ideas on how to deal the rivalery. [/QUOTE]
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Not Hard To See The Vacation Is Over
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