Pouting, sulking, silent treatment

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Just to clear the air, he has absolutely zero signs of autism or adhd. None as a baby, toddler, or now. I’m not saying he doesn’t need counseling or therapy…but I’ve been around children long enough to know that those two diagnosis aren’t the problem


NP and behavior similar to your DS was actually was prompted us to seek out neuropsych testing when DS was 8. Surprise but not surprise: autism. It doesn’t always look or sound like whatever stereotype you have in mind (and now I know this from experience). Defensiveness, blaming, reflexively playing a victim all are connected to demand avoidance, which is a struggle for a lot of neurodivergent kids. He is using you as part of his demand avoidance and to extract himself from increasingly challenging and mature social situations with which his brain can’t keep up.

It felt surprising and upsetting but ultimately we were relieved to have an explanation and a roadmap for what skills DS needed to build to be more successful as he grows up.
Anonymous
What he’s doing is essentially having a silent tantrum. If you explain it to him like that, he may better understand why it’s not okay. Discuss how a toddler throws themselves on the floor and screams because you cut their sandwich wrong, and we all know that’s an immature coping skill. What he’s doing is the same thing. He’s being very rigid when things don’t go as he expects. It’s the rigidity that he needs help with.
Anonymous
As someone who wishes she could go back to when my son was 10 and get him the help he needed I will agree that professional help is warranted. The worst that can happen is that it turns out to be something a small parenting tweak can fix and it’s over and done. But since it seems pervasive and and an extreme reaction to minor things I would see a good therapist
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Just to clear the air, he has absolutely zero signs of autism or adhd. None as a baby, toddler, or now. I’m not saying he doesn’t need counseling or therapy…but I’ve been around children long enough to know that those two diagnosis aren’t the problem


And that just goes to demonstrate that you know nothing about it, OP. I was the one who suggested autism. My adult son has autism. You'd never know it. My friend's daughter has autism - she can be very social and charming. She can also be absolutely horrid to her own family, very much in the same vein as your child, except she's now 18. I'm not saying your child definitely has that diagnosis! I'm just saying: NEVER assume. You are not the professional. A lot of mental health disorders don't present in certain people the way they're portrayed in the general media. Your child could also have something completely different.

This bears repeating... never make the mistake of thinking you know better than the psychologist. Too many parents have missed their chance at diagnosis that way.


I’m not saying this is your case, but I think that there are too many people out there whose kids are capable of behaving perfectly well in public and are horrible at home and instead of thinking “are the parents doing something to allow this behavior” we are using terms like masking and assigning diagnoses to excuse their behavior. Almost everybody behaves differently at home/alone than out in school/work. It isn’t always “masking,” it’s understanding social norms. I feel like it’s dangerous to tell everyone whose kid is acting out that it must be attributed to some neurodivergence. We have significant numbers of students who are poorly behaved at school, and they aren’t all on the spectrum.
Anonymous
I agree with PP that likely you are getting explanations that are dubious at best because 10 year old boys don’t have a lot of insight, and he is probably irritated that you are grilling him for a reason.

My guess that he would benefit from better social skills and better self regulation skills. He needs to bond with other kids so that he feels more relaxed in social situations. He also needs to learn to identify when he is frustrated, angry, disappointed or sad and learn how to reset and deescalate on his own.

Being active can also help with stress. Make sure he is getting as much exercise as possible.
Anonymous
Suggest Rational Emotive therapy resources for ideas on how to address—anything from this perspective https://albertellis.org/product/rational-stories-for-children/
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Just to clear the air, he has absolutely zero signs of autism or adhd. None as a baby, toddler, or now. I’m not saying he doesn’t need counseling or therapy…but I’ve been around children long enough to know that those two diagnosis aren’t the problem


A kid his age who does not care about having friends is not typical, OP.
Anonymous
I would literally just ignore and spend zero time cajoling him. If he wants to pout at the park we are matter-of-factly just leaving, and next time he wants to go to the park the answer is no.

If he complains about the food served the answer is calmly "well I hope you find something you like to eat because this is the dinner that is served." then ignore and move on.

It will take months of doing this consistently to see good results.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:He's manipulating you and doing it because he's getting what he wants/a reaction. It's not great that he is capable of doing this as it's emotionally abusive and dysfunctional. I think that's where a therapist comes in.

Two of your stories are situations where you don't need to be present...a field trip and a 10 year old birthday party. I would try to really just dis-engage and pull back from anything other than basic needs and see what happens. Stop telling him to stop or talking about it at all. Why are you even finding out the reason hours later? Are you probing? Who cares. If he sulks and is silent, his loss. Carry on with your life and ignore him.


OP here, and I appreciate this advice. But what do I do in the moment? He absolutely looks like a brat for sitting things out or moping along when it’s unnecessary.


Let him experience that. You are acting like the behavior makes sense somehow and keeping the cycle going.

I would get on a neuropsych list for him. He should care more about peers even if he lacks skills and self regulation. Check out the book unstuck and on target and consider a social skills based class or camp. The social worker at school may do a lunch bunch where they work on skills.

Focus on DH, regular date nights and time with peers like a book club for you. If his behavior gives you social anxiety, do CBT or DBT for yourself. You can let a disordered kid have so much control over your emotions, not good for either of you. Get your cup filled by adults and work to stop reacting to him, walk away. Take the power back and regulate your own response.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I would literally just ignore and spend zero time cajoling him. If he wants to pout at the park we are matter-of-factly just leaving, and next time he wants to go to the park the answer is no.

If he complains about the food served the answer is calmly "well I hope you find something you like to eat because this is the dinner that is served." then ignore and move on.

It will take months of doing this consistently to see good results.


This!!!
Anonymous
Is there a social worker or psychologist at the school who might be able to provide some guidance?
Anonymous

As others have shared. Your son is manipulative.

You and your husband need to be firm and on the same page with punishment and maybe even therapy.
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