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General Parenting
Anyone else's child argue/ say the opposite of EVERYTHING, like a compulsion?
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<blockquote data-quote="InsaneCdn" data-source="post: 458059" data-attributes="member: 11791"><p>At his age, I'd be more leaning toward Marg's line of thought.</p><p></p><p>Ours went <strong>back </strong>to this stage later - grade 2 or 3. </p><p>We didn't know at the time - but given all the various issues he was(is) dealing with, he couldn't handle ANYTHING anymore, so one of his coping strategies was to be negative about everything... it was a way of pushing back, of trying to gain some small sliver of control over something in his life - because the rest of it was unbelievably off-the-rails.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="InsaneCdn, post: 458059, member: 11791"] At his age, I'd be more leaning toward Marg's line of thought. Ours went [B]back [/B]to this stage later - grade 2 or 3. We didn't know at the time - but given all the various issues he was(is) dealing with, he couldn't handle ANYTHING anymore, so one of his coping strategies was to be negative about everything... it was a way of pushing back, of trying to gain some small sliver of control over something in his life - because the rest of it was unbelievably off-the-rails. [/QUOTE]
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Anyone else's child argue/ say the opposite of EVERYTHING, like a compulsion?
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