It’s not stupid. My friends father had to call the police 4-5x a year for the schizophrenic mothers rages. Growing up. She’s been in Therapy for years as an adult but doing well now, married a a kid. Same for my current friend married to an ASD / bipolar II spouse when he has an abusive meltdown. They are divorcing and he’s playing the victim, no way it will work as he’s delusional. |
Call it on the younger son who provokes and gets physical. Older son should call. Can any of you imagine any of these sons married??? Fix this $hite! |
But you can punish for the sake of the victim. The older son is obviously feeling neglected, because he is. |
| Punishing or natural consequences do not work for anyone on the spectrum. They will blame you for everything they do or say. It’s insanity. |
Because in this case according to OP her younger son has been angry for years taking it out on the other one. Learned in their house. This will not be a one off. Older son will hit his GF and or wife. OP get your family help now. |
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Medication.
Neuropsychs and targeting therapies for the Dx. Everyone needs positive coping methods. Not negative ones like arguing, pushing, yelling, lying. Leave the house during the violent temper tantrums. Put unhealthy kid in a different environment, school, center. Put healthy kid with relative or friends house to live. |
I am the PP who also experienced violence from my son. Here’s the thing. Normal parenting techniques don’t work for mentally ill kids. A mentally ill family member creates dynamics and challenges that you can’t imagine. The other kids in the family have to grow up and learn to live with their mentally ill family member - not fair but it’s the reality. Sometimes the reality of that is over their heads and they do stupid things - but there is a lot on their plates. And there are so few resources for help and guidance. The criticism I see here reminds me how few people get it. I am glad to see that PP reminded people to be kind. OP I hope you’ve gotten some advice that is helpful. In the future you might want to post on special needs board. |
| Good luck OP. Sounds like a tough situation. You need to sit and have a heart to heart with your older son. And show some compassion to yourself. You are going through a lot. Teenagers can be incredibly hard to handle at times. Some of the posters on this thread seem unhinged. A few people have given you good advice though. Hang in there! |
I agree with this. But he needs to understand he can never do that again |
Don't be ridiculous. |
Nope, neither am I. Privileges... what are those? No phone, games.... NOTHING. He wouldn't have to worry about his social life, it would be non existent. Your younger son doesn't appear to be the only one with anger issues. |
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For those of you saying that you would have hit the son back (or your husband would have), I'm curious. Are you saying that the violence is a sound parenting strategy, or that it would be instinct? If sound parenting strategy, how do you think it will help resolve the situation moving forward?
Seems one of the issues in this family is that people tend to react to violence with violence. How does perpetuating that help? |
This. And My husband would have thrown him to the ground. |
Same. |
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I have two boys and one is “impulsive’ like you describe. He has ADHD and has been getting help for it for years. When little, this one was physically aggressive with people, so we had to work hard to teach him that he couldn’t do this without getting in trouble both at home and at school. It was tough on my other son who often bore the brunt of his hitting as they were growing up.
If you haven’t had your younger son evaluated to see what is behind his “impulsiveness”, please do so immediately so he can get the help he needs (maybe medication and cousling). Your older son does need counseling immediately both individually and as a family to address his anger. It is never OK for a son to hit a woman and that needs to be made crystal clear so he doesn’t do it to anyone ever again. It sounds like he was at his breaking point and hit you out of desperation to be heard. If there is a way to separate the living arrangements of the kids until things settle down, I would look into it. I’m surprised your DH only talked to your son after he slapped you. I admire his restraint. There’s no telling what mine would have done if either kid did that to me. |