Anonymous wrote:Irrespective of the other advice (punishment, therapy, etc) next time no dragging the 12 year old around with the Nanny to do the younger child’s activity.
The younger kid goes with the Nanny and the 12 year old goes to some kind of camp activity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom of a ADHD, borderline ASP 12 year old boy here. This behavior would definitely within the rhelm of possibly for my kid. I’d be really disappointed, but not shocked.
Not sure why everyone is suggesting that electronics be taken away. How is that at all related to what he did and how will it teach him anything about what to do when he’s feeling out of control???
The solution is going to be a combination of looking at how the nanny is handling him and what her role was in triggering him (maybe she should have just left him home to be cranky and cool down); having a calm discussion with him about what happened and what he thinks should be done; and possibly including the therapist or looking at meditation management. Unless he’s new to meds, he should should have some sense about how well its working.
Also suggest Ross Greene if you don’t know him.
I agree with you. My son, age 12, also with a mood disorder, hit me on multiple occasions. My first reaction, of course, was to double down on the punishment but that just made him more and more uncontrollable. With the help of a good family therapist we were able to take steps like above and improve our relationship, with the understanding that violence is never an acceptable response. (Therapy also brought to light that DS needed more attention from his father.) I can happily report that at age 20, he is a high functioning college student, a good employee, and a kind boyfriend and friend. This doesn't need to end badly --at age 12, I could only imagine a bad future. Call in the professionals, you cannot figure out all of this on your own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:19:16 and 19:17, I’m so glad you called that poster out. It is completely inexcusable to defend this child’s actions and blame the nanny. If OP still has a nanny, she’s lucky.
OP's job is to help her kid. Not to be law enforcement, punish her child, or vindicate other people. Generally harsh punishment is not the medically recommended way to deal with aggressive behavior.
yep that is how you end up with serial killers and psychopaths.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:19:16 and 19:17, I’m so glad you called that poster out. It is completely inexcusable to defend this child’s actions and blame the nanny. If OP still has a nanny, she’s lucky.
OP's job is to help her kid. Not to be law enforcement, punish her child, or vindicate other people. Generally harsh punishment is not the medically recommended way to deal with aggressive behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should cross post this on the s/n board. Striking a nanny or babysitter is OTT for a tween/teen (even with ADHD - my tween & teen both have that) but being on the spectrum makes it different.
My gut reaction is that the relationship is not salvageable and I would look for another nanny. Some teachers/nannies/caregivers/grandparents etc have a hard time with middle school aged kids with s/n. It is a difficult age and the nanny may be great but the fit is not good between your 12 yr old and her.
Maybe, but the child will likely have problems with future caregivers as well. So even if you do change nannies, OP, make sure to discipline child and tell child it was physical assault, with potential serious consequences. We all make mistakes but slapping an adult is something quite serious. Also, alongside discipline, bring child closer to you and ask her what she needs. I do worry about children who exhibit depression/anger.
Anonymous wrote:Mom of a ADHD, borderline ASP 12 year old boy here. This behavior would definitely within the rhelm of possibly for my kid. I’d be really disappointed, but not shocked.
Not sure why everyone is suggesting that electronics be taken away. How is that at all related to what he did and how will it teach him anything about what to do when he’s feeling out of control???
The solution is going to be a combination of looking at how the nanny is handling him and what her role was in triggering him (maybe she should have just left him home to be cranky and cool down); having a calm discussion with him about what happened and what he thinks should be done; and possibly including the therapist or looking at meditation management. Unless he’s new to meds, he should should have some sense about how well its working.
Also suggest Ross Greene if you don’t know him.
Anonymous wrote:Nanny was trying to fill kids days with activities. 12 year old chose the first and younger sibling chose the second. 12 year old not happy with the second activity had an attitude all day and proceeded to ignore babysitter and her requests, be rude and disrespectful. 12 year old also tripped and shoved younger sibling. After being reprimanded and told by the nanny that electronics would be banned for the week, 12 year old slaps nanny in the face. Nanny says do not do that. 12 year old slaps her again. Worth to mention that 12 year old is on the very functional end of the autism spectrum, has ADHD and anxiety/depression (is being treated for all the above).
Please don’t be rude with your answers, I’d rather you not answer at all if that’s where you’re going to take it. This is a delicate situation and I just want to get some different perspectives and see how other people would (or think they would) react.
Anonymous wrote:19:16 and 19:17, I’m so glad you called that poster out. It is completely inexcusable to defend this child’s actions and blame the nanny. If OP still has a nanny, she’s lucky.
Anonymous wrote:Mom of a ADHD, borderline ASP 12 year old boy here. This behavior would definitely within the rhelm of possibly for my kid. I’d be really disappointed, but not shocked.
Not sure why everyone is suggesting that electronics be taken away. How is that at all related to what he did and how will it teach him anything about what to do when he’s feeling out of control???
The solution is going to be a combination of looking at how the nanny is handling him and what her role was in triggering him (maybe she should have just left him home to be cranky and cool down); having a calm discussion with him about what happened and what he thinks should be done; and possibly including the therapist or looking at meditation management. Unless he’s new to meds, he should should have some sense about how well its working.
Also suggest Ross Greene if you don’t know him.
Anonymous wrote:Mom of a ADHD, borderline ASP 12 year old boy here. This behavior would definitely within the rhelm of possibly for my kid. I’d be really disappointed, but not shocked.
Not sure why everyone is suggesting that electronics be taken away. How is that at all related to what he did and how will it teach him anything about what to do when he’s feeling out of control???
The solution is going to be a combination of looking at how the nanny is handling him and what her role was in triggering him (maybe she should have just left him home to be cranky and cool down); having a calm discussion with him about what happened and what he thinks should be done; and possibly including the therapist or looking at meditation management. Unless he’s new to meds, he should should have some sense about how well its working.
Also suggest Ross Greene if you don’t know him.