Anonymous wrote:Take her to a psychiatrist STAT. Compulsive lying and willingly hurting family members have nothing to do with ADD. She sounds like she needs PHP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The key is to determine how she behaves outside of the house. If the same - it's her. If not, it's your parenting.
That’s a weird take.
It’s kind of true. I lied a lot as a tween and teen to my parents, but not friends or teachers.
My parents weren’t good parents at all. I lied whenever I could to avoid their scorn and frequent disapproval.
Anonymous wrote:My mother’s reaction to anything I did she disapproved of was terrible. I lied whenever I could to avoid it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The key is to determine how she behaves outside of the house. If the same - it's her. If not, it's your parenting.
That’s a weird take.
Anonymous wrote:Neuropsych= it's a brain issue
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you'd get very different answers from special needs parents than some of these responses saying you just need to change your disciplinary approach.
A neuropsych evaluation and parent behavior therapy are good ideas.
In the meantime, read Ross Greene and maybe Kazdin.
+1
OP, you are going to get much better feedback on the special needs board. The reason you are not getting anywhere with typical punishments is because it simply doesn't work with kids of a certain profile. Start with your pediatrician because that will get the ball rolling the fastest, but I agree that a neuropsych is in order.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your 11 year old BIT you?! That’s not normal misbehavior.
Right? this is where gentle parenting gets you.
Anonymous wrote:I think you'd get very different answers from special needs parents than some of these responses saying you just need to change your disciplinary approach.
A neuropsych evaluation and parent behavior therapy are good ideas.
In the meantime, read Ross Greene and maybe Kazdin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other than reprimands, what kind of consequences does she get for the aggressive behavior? That seems to me to be the number one place to start because an 11 year old biting is alarming.
The lying is bad and needs correcting, but I don't think it is as out of the range of normal as the aggression. Kids are going to deny culpability and try to shift responsibility when they are caught in bad behavior. In the cases you mention, don't ask her why she did or didn't do something- just call her out on what you know she did and go from there.
Agree about the lying. It’s stemming from OP’s highly dysfunctional approach, which is to react verbally and spar with her, instead of calmly imposing pre-determined consequences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you. I'll try to answer questions.
I read your answers OP. Start here.
ADHD: The 30 Essential Ideas Every Parent Needs to Know
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SCAGc-rkIfo
Parent Child Journey Class
https://www.parentchildjourney.com
Unstuck and On Target program (for Autism or ADHD)
https://www.unstuckandontarget.com