Anonymous wrote:What would you do if he taunted another person that way? Ask them to ignore and move away from him? Hell no and neither should you! I'd tell him in no uncertain terms that he is rude and you won't stand for it. At the pool we'd be out the gate so fast his head would spin - at home he'd be marched off away from me since he can't be trusted to behave appropriately
Why are so many parents so afraid to correct children with any degree of firmness?! You're job is not to coddle him; your job is to train him to be a civil human being!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child with ADHD. She's also six. She calls me stupid, I haul her out of whatever situation she's in or she experiences some other logical consequence. She's not stupid - she knows what she's doing and that it's not acceptable. The adhd has nothing to do with that particular example of bad behavior.
What if you physically cannot pick up and remove your child? What if your child is too big or gets aggressive/fights back/doesn't cooperate, like in OP's case of leaving the pool? I am petite person and both of my elementary age children are way too heavy for me to carry anywhere. I have tried to take them to their room or have them leave a place when they misbehaved, and I have myself gotten hurt. So if you cannot pick them up and they won't come, what do you do (I ask in all seriousness, because I really have this issue)?
You're an adult with a car and a checkbook. Punish by taking away all they care about.
That doesn't answer my questions whatsoever and is completely not helpful. Do I drive away with my checkbook when my child will not come and I am trying to remove that child from the situation but they are physically too large to do so? I am not the OP but am the poster with this question you posted but didn't answer. I am asking for sincere replies, because I have ended up in the hospital three times.
If attempting to discipline your child ends in physical harm to you I would call the police on him. I'm being absolutely serious. Let him go to juvenile detention for a day if he beats his mom for telling him to get out of the pool.
+1 it is ridiculous that an adult would end up in the hospital for implementing rules or requests to a child.
I concur with whomever said this thread needs to be moved to the Special Needs forum. Enough with the attacks from the clueless bitches.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child with ADHD. She's also six. She calls me stupid, I haul her out of whatever situation she's in or she experiences some other logical consequence. She's not stupid - she knows what she's doing and that it's not acceptable. The adhd has nothing to do with that particular example of bad behavior.
What if you physically cannot pick up and remove your child? What if your child is too big or gets aggressive/fights back/doesn't cooperate, like in OP's case of leaving the pool? I am petite person and both of my elementary age children are way too heavy for me to carry anywhere. I have tried to take them to their room or have them leave a place when they misbehaved, and I have myself gotten hurt. So if you cannot pick them up and they won't come, what do you do (I ask in all seriousness, because I really have this issue)?
You're an adult with a car and a checkbook. Punish by taking away all they care about.
That doesn't answer my questions whatsoever and is completely not helpful. Do I drive away with my checkbook when my child will not come and I am trying to remove that child from the situation but they are physically too large to do so? I am not the OP but am the poster with this question you posted but didn't answer. I am asking for sincere replies, because I have ended up in the hospital three times.
If attempting to discipline your child ends in physical harm to you I would call the police on him. I'm being absolutely serious. Let him go to juvenile detention for a day if he beats his mom for telling him to get out of the pool.
+1 it is ridiculous that an adult would end up in the hospital for implementing rules or requests to a child.
I concur with whomever said this thread needs to be moved to the Special Needs forum. Enough with the attacks from the clueless bitches.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From the OP's description now it sounds more like coprolalia than misbehavior... And that is a totally different story..
Say what now?
Anonymous wrote:From the OP's description now it sounds more like coprolalia than misbehavior... And that is a totally different story..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child with ADHD. She's also six. She calls me stupid, I haul her out of whatever situation she's in or she experiences some other logical consequence. She's not stupid - she knows what she's doing and that it's not acceptable. The adhd has nothing to do with that particular example of bad behavior.
What if you physically cannot pick up and remove your child? What if your child is too big or gets aggressive/fights back/doesn't cooperate, like in OP's case of leaving the pool? I am petite person and both of my elementary age children are way too heavy for me to carry anywhere. I have tried to take them to their room or have them leave a place when they misbehaved, and I have myself gotten hurt. So if you cannot pick them up and they won't come, what do you do (I ask in all seriousness, because I really have this issue)?
You're an adult with a car and a checkbook. Punish by taking away all they care about.
That doesn't answer my questions whatsoever and is completely not helpful. Do I drive away with my checkbook when my child will not come and I am trying to remove that child from the situation but they are physically too large to do so? I am not the OP but am the poster with this question you posted but didn't answer. I am asking for sincere replies, because I have ended up in the hospital three times.
If attempting to discipline your child ends in physical harm to you I would call the police on him. I'm being absolutely serious. Let him go to juvenile detention for a day if he beats his mom for telling him to get out of the pool.
+1 it is ridiculous that an adult would end up in the hospital for implementing rules or requests to a child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child with ADHD. She's also six. She calls me stupid, I haul her out of whatever situation she's in or she experiences some other logical consequence. She's not stupid - she knows what she's doing and that it's not acceptable. The adhd has nothing to do with that particular example of bad behavior.
What if you physically cannot pick up and remove your child? What if your child is too big or gets aggressive/fights back/doesn't cooperate, like in OP's case of leaving the pool? I am petite person and both of my elementary age children are way too heavy for me to carry anywhere. I have tried to take them to their room or have them leave a place when they misbehaved, and I have myself gotten hurt. So if you cannot pick them up and they won't come, what do you do (I ask in all seriousness, because I really have this issue)?
You're an adult with a car and a checkbook. Punish by taking away all they care about.
That doesn't answer my questions whatsoever and is completely not helpful. Do I drive away with my checkbook when my child will not come and I am trying to remove that child from the situation but they are physically too large to do so? I am not the OP but am the poster with this question you posted but didn't answer. I am asking for sincere replies, because I have ended up in the hospital three times.
If attempting to discipline your child ends in physical harm to you I would call the police on him. I'm being absolutely serious. Let him go to juvenile detention for a day if he beats his mom for telling him to get out of the pool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I should say that he has ADHD and traditional punishments like taking things away aren't a good strategy. As for the pool situation, I'm not sure how you woul envision removing a 6 year old boy from a swimming pool in a way that is t violent or at least physically domineering and aggressive. I'm not going to physically drag him from the pool. I left. I can control my behavior not his. But I would like a positive discipline method to help get rid of what has become a habit.
Your excuses for why you "can't" discipline explain why your son is acting like this. You refuse to be the parent. Deal with it then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child with ADHD. She's also six. She calls me stupid, I haul her out of whatever situation she's in or she experiences some other logical consequence. She's not stupid - she knows what she's doing and that it's not acceptable. The adhd has nothing to do with that particular example of bad behavior.
What if you physically cannot pick up and remove your child? What if your child is too big or gets aggressive/fights back/doesn't cooperate, like in OP's case of leaving the pool? I am petite person and both of my elementary age children are way too heavy for me to carry anywhere. I have tried to take them to their room or have them leave a place when they misbehaved, and I have myself gotten hurt. So if you cannot pick them up and they won't come, what do you do (I ask in all seriousness, because I really have this issue)?
You're an adult with a car and a checkbook. Punish by taking away all they care about.
That doesn't answer my questions whatsoever and is completely not helpful. Do I drive away with my checkbook when my child will not come and I am trying to remove that child from the situation but they are physically too large to do so? I am not the OP but am the poster with this question you posted but didn't answer. I am asking for sincere replies, because I have ended up in the hospital three times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a child with ADHD. She's also six. She calls me stupid, I haul her out of whatever situation she's in or she experiences some other logical consequence. She's not stupid - she knows what she's doing and that it's not acceptable. The adhd has nothing to do with that particular example of bad behavior.
What if you physically cannot pick up and remove your child? What if your child is too big or gets aggressive/fights back/doesn't cooperate, like in OP's case of leaving the pool? I am petite person and both of my elementary age children are way too heavy for me to carry anywhere. I have tried to take them to their room or have them leave a place when they misbehaved, and I have myself gotten hurt. So if you cannot pick them up and they won't come, what do you do (I ask in all seriousness, because I really have this issue)?
You're an adult with a car and a checkbook. Punish by taking away all they care about.