Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "How to determine if a child has special needs?"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous]Hi All, I want to ask your advice. I also want to say in advance that what I am dealing with pales in comparison to much of what I read here. I read the posts here and wonder how all the parents are coping so well. It is quite remarkable. I am struggling with how you know when a child needs some level of intervention or help and I thought the folks here would be more equipped to answer than on the general parenting board. Here is my situation. We have almost 4 year old boy/girl twins. They are healthy, bright, charming, well-socialized (though not yet in preschool), generally happy kids. My daughter makes us look like fantastic parents. She is highly verbal, was easily potty trained, adapts well to change/transitions, has minimal tantrums, and is generally an extremely easy kid (and was as a baby also.) My son makes us feel like failures as parents. He is also smart, funny, etc... (and they're both great sleepers and eaters) but he is MUCH harder in terms of all behavior around emotional regulation - temper tantrums, screaming, hitting, scratching, etc... In the past couple of weeks we have had significantly increased battles around transitions, bedtime, some meals, etc... These battles and rages always happen when time we try (or have to) exert control over him. (I don't mean that he goes into a rage every single time we have to exert control, often he is quite compliant. But when he has a tantrum/rage it is always triggered by him feeling that he's not in control.) I use the word rage because he goes to a serious red zone sometimes - screaming at the top of his lungs, banging doors if he's closed in his room,hitting at us if we don't separate ourselves from him somehow, etc... And he can continue that for quite a while. He has also recently, just a couple of times, visibly regulated himself - taking himself off to sit alone until he was calmer, and then coming back and being sweet and gentle. I saw that and thought maybe we had turned a corner but then we had a week of daily rages that undermined the progress I thought he had made. I can (and perhaps do) make lots of excuses for him - he's 3-4 and this kind of thing is developmentally normal, he has a twin sister who is dedicated to provoking him and is constantly needling him, both kids are in competition for parental attention (these behaviors are often worse when only one parent is home/available), there has been a fair amount of stress in our house this month (high stress guests, home repair nightmares, parental stress from life/work/etc...) and he tends to be quite emotionally sensitive, we changed nannies 6 weeks ago (though that transition seemed to go quite well and wasn't the result of any trauma or ill will), and so on... My husband thinks he needs professional help. I think we're not doing a good enough job as parents. But we are at the point, after a particularly difficult week, where I'm really on the fence. I don't want to be so defensive or blind that we fail to get him (or us) professional help if it is appropriate. But I also don't want to overreact and make more of this than it needs to be - especially if the real issue is a lack of skill or information on our part. I'm not sure it's possible to give advice on something like this when you don't know us and there is such limited information. But if any of you have any wisdom on how to work through these decisions, any expertise on the kinds of specific behaviors that are markers for needing intervention, or any strategies you would recommend we try, I would really welcome the advice. Thanks so much. I really hesitated to post here because I am aware that many kids and families have much greater struggles, and I can only begin to imagine the pain and stress of that. I am in awe of the strength I see here routinely. [/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics