Anonymous wrote:If you can't handle loosing, don't play the game. I would drop all sports and get rid of all games,, gaming systems.
How is that going to help the kid practice emotional regulation and sportsmanship?
Anonymous wrote:This behavior in my DS was due to anxiety. Feeling always on the edges makes the little things seem like big things. Therapy helped a lot. (He was later also diagnosed with inattentive ADHD and some language processing issues, which were not really evident until older grades in school, but I'm sure also played a part in the anxiety/feeling out of control.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When DC is CALM, we practice scenarios that can make DC have a meltdown. We talk about it, practice with puppets, practice strategies to help calm down. We also contrive the situations at home and right before DC got anxious, I would say "Now, this is when you should pause and (walk away or drink water or ask for a break or tell that person how you feel, etc)." The key when DC is having a meltdown is to stay calm and try to coach DC to calm down.
OP here. We've been trying this and it is just so hard. He gets so swept up in his emotions and he just loses it, but when it comes to an end it's like he's exiting a trance and he will softly apologize of make an overture to me that shows he's back to his old self. When we discuss it afterwards he is very level-headed about it and we discuss strategies, but we have had very little success getting him to apply those strategies in real life. He also doesn't like talking about what happened, I assume because he's embarassed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child is similar (different triggers, but also gets really, really upset over seemingly small problems and has a hair-trigger temper). At school, they did a lot of talking about big problem/little problem, which teachers claimed was successful in the classroom, but didn't work for us at home. At home, the only thing that has helped (not made it perfect, but helped) was medicating for ADHD. The doctor described emotional dysregulation as an impulse control issue, which explains why it works. We also tried a tiny dose of an SSRI in case the dysregulation was connected to anxiety, but that made less of a difference than the ADHD meds.
did you decide to medicate after consulting with your pediatrician, or did you go to a pediatric psychologist/psychiatrist to get a diagnosis and treatment plan?
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like rigidity related to anxiety. It doesn't necessarily mean it's clinical-- if it were me, I would try therapy first--especially as you say that there aren't other issues.
Yes, you might discover through the process that it is ADHD, but I wouldn't conclude that without a full neuropsych if it becomes necessary.
My DS10 has ADHD but there were more symptoms than emotional self regulation. The ADHD became extremely apparent around the second grade when he moved out of the bell curve for social issues and distractibility in school
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like rigidity related to anxiety. It doesn't necessarily mean it's clinical-- if it were me, I would try therapy first--especially as you say that there aren't other issues.
Yes, you might discover through the process that it is ADHD, but I wouldn't conclude that without a full neuropsych if it becomes necessary.
My DS10 has ADHD but there were more symptoms than emotional self regulation. The ADHD became extremely apparent around the second grade when he moved out of the bell curve for social issues and distractibility in school
Anonymous wrote:When DC is CALM, we practice scenarios that can make DC have a meltdown. We talk about it, practice with puppets, practice strategies to help calm down. We also contrive the situations at home and right before DC got anxious, I would say "Now, this is when you should pause and (walk away or drink water or ask for a break or tell that person how you feel, etc)." The key when DC is having a meltdown is to stay calm and try to coach DC to calm down.
Anonymous wrote:My child is similar (different triggers, but also gets really, really upset over seemingly small problems and has a hair-trigger temper). At school, they did a lot of talking about big problem/little problem, which teachers claimed was successful in the classroom, but didn't work for us at home. At home, the only thing that has helped (not made it perfect, but helped) was medicating for ADHD. The doctor described emotional dysregulation as an impulse control issue, which explains why it works. We also tried a tiny dose of an SSRI in case the dysregulation was connected to anxiety, but that made less of a difference than the ADHD meds.