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I’m back….raising my granddaughter!
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<blockquote data-quote="Sunlight" data-source="post: 766128" data-attributes="member: 97"><p>Hi there Sue…it’s Antsmom…of course I remember you and all our shared joys and sorrow. It was quite the roller coaster ride! Somehow here we still stand.</p><p></p><p>I am glad your girls are still alive and you’re blessed with grandkids. Your younger daughter should be getting weary of incarceration. Ant was in jails and one prison until age 25. He’s 41 now and no more arrests since age 23 when he had his fourth DUI. He’s doing really well and is active in church, sponsors others in AA. He was the guy who always ran away. Lol he bought a house on my street.</p><p></p><p>Ant has four kids to three moms and is a good dad. I get along with all the moms. He was only married to the mom of the last two.</p><p></p><p>His oldest child is 20 and diagnosed with severe adhd. He’s had a rough time but graduated high school. His mom abandoned him about age 4. I helped raise him all along. He was on ADDERALL XR for school hours until tenth grade when he refused to take it anymore. He was always on the school hockey team. He had an IEP at school and saw a therapist until he refused that too. He’s had some drug, alcohol abuse and issues with the wrong crowd. He’s now recently working in a trial basis at a good union job and seems calmer. He’s walked out of countless jobs since he was 16. I paid for a driver training program and he does drive. His mom straightened out and is in his life now too. He’s slowed down. Things can get better in time. We are older and patience wears thin. <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="😉" title="Winking face :wink:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/6.6/png/unicode/64/1f609.png" data-shortname=":wink:" /></p><p></p><p>I’m glad your granddaughter is having early intervention and you could also benefit from counseling in handling how to respond to her outbursts. She shouldn’t be told over and over. She knows you will do that so she pushes the limit. Tell her once and walk away. Don’t give her an audience. She’s not your equal in authority so doesn’t get to be in the position of arguing with you.</p><p></p><p>The swearing…tell her calmly that it’s inappropriate language. Then quietly stop communicating with her. Always de-escalate by using a slow calm voice and very few firm words.</p><p></p><p>Digging nails in? Stop that immediately before she thinks that others will tolerate it too. Lay a hand on top of hers, rub softly. Look her in the eyes. Hand her a pillow and tell her when she feels that frustrated, she’s to hit or squeeze the pillow.</p><p></p><p>These kids are better handled with calm firmness. Plan lots of activities. It can be easy stuff. Outdoors does wonders. Walk and observe. Take chairs out to watch the clouds. Go on a smooth rock hunt and paint them. Play meditation music in the home-soft spa sounds. Burn a lavender candle. Have her draw how she feels and save her pictures in a binder for later viewing. Make cookies. It’s exhausting and I am sure you’re not getting much down time.</p><p></p><p>I do believe this is genetic. Ant’s other three kids are all in gifted programs at school-straight As who play instruments, play in sports, never in trouble and ages 12, 14, and 16. Only his first has had problems. He’s outgrown some behaviors and sometimes, as with Ant, the pain of consequences has taught him. </p><p></p><p>I don’t check here much at all. Life with my guy is much more sedate these days. I did read many of the old posts of the joy we all had with fun times here as well as shared tears. May God give you peace in your world and bless your family. Hugs.<img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="😘" title="Face blowing a kiss :kissing_heart:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/6.6/png/unicode/64/1f618.png" data-shortname=":kissing_heart:" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sunlight, post: 766128, member: 97"] Hi there Sue…it’s Antsmom…of course I remember you and all our shared joys and sorrow. It was quite the roller coaster ride! Somehow here we still stand. I am glad your girls are still alive and you’re blessed with grandkids. Your younger daughter should be getting weary of incarceration. Ant was in jails and one prison until age 25. He’s 41 now and no more arrests since age 23 when he had his fourth DUI. He’s doing really well and is active in church, sponsors others in AA. He was the guy who always ran away. Lol he bought a house on my street. Ant has four kids to three moms and is a good dad. I get along with all the moms. He was only married to the mom of the last two. His oldest child is 20 and diagnosed with severe adhd. He’s had a rough time but graduated high school. His mom abandoned him about age 4. I helped raise him all along. He was on ADDERALL XR for school hours until tenth grade when he refused to take it anymore. He was always on the school hockey team. He had an IEP at school and saw a therapist until he refused that too. He’s had some drug, alcohol abuse and issues with the wrong crowd. He’s now recently working in a trial basis at a good union job and seems calmer. He’s walked out of countless jobs since he was 16. I paid for a driver training program and he does drive. His mom straightened out and is in his life now too. He’s slowed down. Things can get better in time. We are older and patience wears thin. 😉 I’m glad your granddaughter is having early intervention and you could also benefit from counseling in handling how to respond to her outbursts. She shouldn’t be told over and over. She knows you will do that so she pushes the limit. Tell her once and walk away. Don’t give her an audience. She’s not your equal in authority so doesn’t get to be in the position of arguing with you. The swearing…tell her calmly that it’s inappropriate language. Then quietly stop communicating with her. Always de-escalate by using a slow calm voice and very few firm words. Digging nails in? Stop that immediately before she thinks that others will tolerate it too. Lay a hand on top of hers, rub softly. Look her in the eyes. Hand her a pillow and tell her when she feels that frustrated, she’s to hit or squeeze the pillow. These kids are better handled with calm firmness. Plan lots of activities. It can be easy stuff. Outdoors does wonders. Walk and observe. Take chairs out to watch the clouds. Go on a smooth rock hunt and paint them. Play meditation music in the home-soft spa sounds. Burn a lavender candle. Have her draw how she feels and save her pictures in a binder for later viewing. Make cookies. It’s exhausting and I am sure you’re not getting much down time. I do believe this is genetic. Ant’s other three kids are all in gifted programs at school-straight As who play instruments, play in sports, never in trouble and ages 12, 14, and 16. Only his first has had problems. He’s outgrown some behaviors and sometimes, as with Ant, the pain of consequences has taught him. I don’t check here much at all. Life with my guy is much more sedate these days. I did read many of the old posts of the joy we all had with fun times here as well as shared tears. May God give you peace in your world and bless your family. Hugs.😘 [/QUOTE]
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