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Understanding the difficult child
By Wendy Simons
Is your child difficult to handle?
Is your child difficult to handle? Is he or she extremely strong willed when it comes to behaving properly?
Take six-year-old Kristal for instance. She is very sweet and cooperative one moment, and then all of a sudden turns very angry and defiant the next moment.
The smallest things set her off like unexpected changes, food she doesn't like, having to go somewhere with her parents. She literally throws tamper tantrums every half hour or so. Does this sound like your kid?
Let's look at little Scott as another example. Scott is a nine-year-old bright kid that lives in a great family setting with wonderful parents. The problem with him is that he has a very short fuse and often acts before he thinks.
Anytime things do not go his way he starts yelling loudly, calling people names, and will even hit other kids. This behavior is not limited to any one particular place. In fact, Scott will act wildly like this both at home and in public.
Do any of these kids sound familiar to your own? Does the above behavior scenarios remind you of your own children's strong willed actions? If your child or children resembles any of the above two examples, then fear not because you are certainly not alone.
Having worked in the local school district I have seen hundreds of kids every year whose parents and teachers described them as difficult, stubborn, rude, or just totally impossible altogether. These are all children that had extreme behavioral problems and were frustrating both to the teacher staff and especially to their parents.
You must understand that your child's strong willed behavior is not a conspiracy on his part to make everyone's life difficult. They are simply doing what argumentative strong willed children do. These children tend to push the limits further, test harder, resist longer, use more drama, scream louder, all more than the normal child.
Statistically speaking, school teachers have labeled these children as the small 10% of the students that cause 90% of the school problems. Parents see these same children as their life-long challenge, a pain, an unknown negative force in their lives.
Personally speaking, I view my strong willed child as a challenge. I know he will grow up to be a good person and well behaved. And because of my affection and care for him, I use a lot of tender and patient parenting when dealing with his "difficult" problems.
Author Details:
Wendy Simons, writes for a number of sites about health, beauty and cosmetic surgery, she also makes contributions to the A-Z of.com.
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