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Parent Support Forums
General Parenting
The squashing technique
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<blockquote data-quote="welcometowitsend" data-source="post: 543459" data-attributes="member: 14356"><p>Love that the technique worked for you whether it was the sensory feeling of being 'hugged tightly' or the humour. It worked! </p><p></p><p>Great idea to try humour without touching to see if it helps or if it was the sensory part that turned things around for J. </p><p></p><p>Reminded me of something my brother and I used to do with my mother when we were teenagers. She would go off the rails and to diffuse the situation my brother and I would start laughing - then she would too. Well, most of the time - sometimes it would make things worse.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="welcometowitsend, post: 543459, member: 14356"] Love that the technique worked for you whether it was the sensory feeling of being 'hugged tightly' or the humour. It worked! Great idea to try humour without touching to see if it helps or if it was the sensory part that turned things around for J. Reminded me of something my brother and I used to do with my mother when we were teenagers. She would go off the rails and to diffuse the situation my brother and I would start laughing - then she would too. Well, most of the time - sometimes it would make things worse. [/QUOTE]
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The squashing technique
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