Anonymous wrote:My child had a friend like this. The kid had erratic behavior and I coached my son to try to distance himself from him. The mom took this to the school and accused my son of bullying her son. Other parents and even the bus driver told me that the school was investigating and everyone said the other boy was at fault. The mom would then try to arrange play dates with me. Then a month later, she sent me long berating texts again about how my son was excluding and bullying her son. I never responded to the mom.
It has been years. The boy is fine but I have not once invited the kid over for a play date or birthday party. It is the kid and the mom. I want nothing to do with either one of them. My son has very occasionally asked if that boy could come over because he asked and I always say no. He is not one of my son’s close friends so he only asked like once every 6 months and it is only because the other boy asks my son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mean this in a cruel way, but he's not THAT emotionally intelligent if he can't connect his hair trigger temper and being mean with not having friends. It sounds like he gets bursts of anger and doesn't know how to calm himself down, so anger management would help him.
OP again - this is the toughest part. He makes the connection between his moodiness and pushing people away, but can only control his responses some of the time. Like the other day he came home from school and told me "It was a hectic morning, and that made me grouchy, and then everyone was yelling and I got really angry and frustrated. But then at recess I realized that my bad mood might make other people have a bad day, so I decided to turn my attitude around." That is a verbatim quote. So clearly he can sometimes rein in his emotions, but other times just loses control of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't mean this in a cruel way, but he's not THAT emotionally intelligent if he can't connect his hair trigger temper and being mean with not having friends. It sounds like he gets bursts of anger and doesn't know how to calm himself down, so anger management would help him.
1. You can start the basics of this at home - getting him to recognize when he's feeling the rush of anger (that's about to come out of his mouth) - does his breathing change? does he make fists with his hands? can he feel his blood pressure go up?
2. Then, what to do in the immediate moment - commit to keeping his mouth shut! "If you can't say anything nice, don't say anything at all." Walk away, if possible.
3. Get the anger out of his body. At home, go shoot baskets in the driveway, get a punching bag, jump on a trampoline - anything physical but with minimal risk (if he goes blind with rage, riding his bike is a bad idea - will be in the mood to take bigger risks). At school, talk with the teacher one on one and ask if when he's upset he can raise his hand with three fingers up (or whatever) to indicate he needs a time out and the teacher says yes, so he's cleared to go for a walk around the halls (there needs to be a specific route/loop). Go to a quiet corner, fiddle with silly putty or fidget spinner or something like that.
My kid has a hair trigger and is very emotionally intelligent. You can be emotionally intelligent and have impulse control challenges. Ultimately he will have to be more emotionally intelligent than kids who have a less sensitive nervous system.
Anonymous wrote: For whatever it's worth, he identifies as male but has never been into typical boy stuff, and has always marched to his own beat (wears rainbow clothes when all the other boys are wearing navy, etc., which we fully support him in).