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My son, too
Quote: pinklisa said:
When I say emotion I mean highs and lows but the lows are the hardest to deal with. He can scream and cry just because say I opened a door he had wanted to open or if I wipe his face when he wanted to. It goes on all day. I am mostly very calm, I talk things through, use time outs and sticker rewards but I just don't know how to carry on with this one. A couple of days ago he just kept crying and saying "I can't take this anymore" which is heart breaking.
Hi Lisa,
My son is ADHD, and 14. (He'll be 15 next month.) He also has had bad melt downs. I'd love to say that they go away but they don't. However, we've done a couple of things that help.
Here's my advice.
1. Get a counselor's help. I remember when my son said he didn't want to live anymore. When your son says, "I can't take this anymore" it just echoes for me. When you're out of ideas, they can help.
2. I think his desperation is based on his inability to control his meltdowns. Here's something weird that works really well for us. (My son hates it, but admits that it works.) When he starts to have a meltdown I have him turn his t-shirt around so that he's wearing it backwards. It so jolts him out of the moment that he's able to regain control.
3. Use a timer to prevent meltdowns. This may be more valuable later on, when he's doing homework and playing computer games. We set a timer for 5 minutes when he was five. (We've added a minute every year as he gets a year older, so now he's up to 15 minutes.) Things that lead to breakdowns get a timer, and when the timer goes off, he gets a break before he melts down. He also gets major rewards if he feels a meltdown coming on, and stops doing what he's doing before it hits.
4. My son recommends letting him wipe his own face, if that's what he wants to do :)
I hope these help.
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Last edited by bookofnights : 26 Nov 2008 @ 6:47 PM.
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