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General Parenting
Teacher here looking for help from the experts!!!
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<blockquote data-quote="Hound dog" data-source="post: 25611" data-attributes="member: 84"><p>I think it's wonderful to see a teacher here. :grin: Welcome!</p><p></p><p>With Mom not being very open to communication, I'd try the suggestion of keeping a journal on his behaviors and each time he acts out jot down everything that was going on at the time and make special note of anything out of the ordinary. That might help you identify his triggers more quickly, and may have the added bonus of helping you spot ways to encourage him forward.</p><p></p><p>If you were a parent asking this, I'd be thinking along the lines that the child could really use a mood stabilizer, or medication change.</p><p></p><p>When my N is unstable, it honestly doesn't take anything to "set her off". You can just walk past her and she blows. If she has triggers, other than her brother, I've yet to find them. She'll be 18 in 2 months. :faint:</p><p></p><p>(((Hugs))))</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hound dog, post: 25611, member: 84"] I think it's wonderful to see a teacher here. [img]:grin:[/img] Welcome! With Mom not being very open to communication, I'd try the suggestion of keeping a journal on his behaviors and each time he acts out jot down everything that was going on at the time and make special note of anything out of the ordinary. That might help you identify his triggers more quickly, and may have the added bonus of helping you spot ways to encourage him forward. If you were a parent asking this, I'd be thinking along the lines that the child could really use a mood stabilizer, or medication change. When my N is unstable, it honestly doesn't take anything to "set her off". You can just walk past her and she blows. If she has triggers, other than her brother, I've yet to find them. She'll be 18 in 2 months. [img]:faint:[/img] (((Hugs)))) [/QUOTE]
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