Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would stop taking her to restaurants or stores for the time being.
Agree... if the only way to stop the behavior is to stay home, then she stays home. It sounds like she has meltdowns in public and you are trying to negotiate your way out of them, and it isn't working.
Yes. Accommodate the dysfunction. Pretty soon you and she won’t be doing anything out or inside the house.
Temper tantrum = get your way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would stop taking her to restaurants or stores for the time being.
Agree... if the only way to stop the behavior is to stay home, then she stays home. It sounds like she has meltdowns in public and you are trying to negotiate your way out of them, and it isn't working.
Anonymous wrote:I would stop taking her to restaurants or stores for the time being.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone really find the “motivation” for this type of behavior? My kid never opens up with a therapist, she deems everything too private. Which easily could be code for she didn’t know herself, so throws that out there.
Deflection.
The kid believes it’s easier or in high standing to be argumentative than to address the actual weakness or issue (anxiety, confused, shutdown mode, overwhelm, forgot to do something, failed at something).
I would say that the kid does not have the skills and perhaps awareness to address the actual issue. She isn’t choosing this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone really find the “motivation” for this type of behavior? My kid never opens up with a therapist, she deems everything too private. Which easily could be code for she didn’t know herself, so throws that out there.
Deflection.
The kid believes it’s easier or in high standing to be argumentative than to address the actual weakness or issue (anxiety, confused, shutdown mode, overwhelm, forgot to do something, failed at something).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pick her up and carry her out when she does it in public.
Good luck carrying around a 15 year old. This is why everyone is suggesting medication/medication change.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone really find the “motivation” for this type of behavior? My kid never opens up with a therapist, she deems everything too private. Which easily could be code for she didn’t know herself, so throws that out there.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone really find the “motivation” for this type of behavior? My kid never opens up with a therapist, she deems everything too private. Which easily could be code for she didn’t know herself, so throws that out there.
Anonymous wrote:Pick her up and carry her out when she does it in public.