A new Approach for Understanding and Parenting Easily Frustrated
An explosive outburst—like other forms of
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The Explosive Child A New Approach for Understanding and Parenting Easily Frustrated, Chronically I ( PDFDrive )
An explosive outburst—like other forms of
maladaptive behavior—occurs when the cognitive demands being placed upon a person outstrip that person’s capacity to respond adaptively. If you throw Plan A at a kid who doesn’t have a Plan A brain, you’ve placed a cognitive demand upon him that outstrips his capacity to respond adaptively. Kaboom. In- deed, when we “rewind the tape” on the vast majority of explosions in children, what do we find? An adult using Plan A. Why doesn’t your child have a Plan A brain? Pathways. Is Plan A going to be an integral part of helping your child overcome his learning disability in the domains of flexibility and frustration tolerance? No, it’s not. Can you maintain your status as an authority figure, 92 The Explosive Child pursue your expectations, and live happily with your child without Plan A? Yes, you most certainly can. PLAN C As you read above, Plan C involves dropping a given ex- pectation completely, at least temporarily. You know you’re using Plan C if you say either nothing at all or OK in response to a problem or unmet expectation. So if your child says, “I’m too tired to do my homework tonight,” a Plan C response would be, “OK.” If you’ve noticed that your child is getting into bed without brushing his teeth, a Plan C response would be to say nothing at all. There’s an up side to Plan C: It helps you prevent an explosion. But there’s also a down side: You’ve dropped your expectation completely, at least for now. Of course, as discussed earlier in this chapter, dropping some of your expectations completely can also be a very good thing, especially in the case of extremely volatile and un- stable explosive kids, for it can help such kids be more available to discuss the frustrations that remain. Some people rely exclusively on medicine to reduce a child’s volatility and instability, and for some children medicine can be indispensable. But many kids can be stabilized and helped to be more available without medicine by tem- porarily reducing expectations through use of Plan C. At first glance, many people come to the quick con- Plan B 93 clusion that Plan C is the equivalent of giving in. Actu- ally, giving in is what happens when you start off using Plan A and end up using Plan C because your child made your life miserable. When you intentionally use Plan C, you are proactively deciding to drop a given expectation, either because you’ve decided it was unrealistic in the first place or because you’ve got bigger fish to fry. For example, one child was remarkably particular about what foods he was willing to eat: certain cereals for breakfast and pizza for dinner. His parents were quite determined—as evidenced by their relentless badgering and nagging (badgering and nagging, by the way, are half- hearted forms of Plan A)—that he have a balanced diet but weren’t able to shove lima beans down their son’s throat. This example of reciprocal inflexibility led to at least two explosions a day (at breakfast and dinner). Except in ex- treme cases, such as bona fide eating disorders, issues asso- ciated with diabetes, and so forth, a Plan C approach to food is probably indicated with these picky-eating explo- sive children. In other words, they won’t starve. And, in- deed, this child wasn’t starving. “Eating a variety of foods” was handled with Plan C, explosions over this issue were eliminated, other more pressing issues were addressed, and the food trigger was eventually addressed without aid of Plan A. The child is now eating a somewhat wider variety of foods, and he actually goes to the supermarket with his mother to make his own selections. Another child, Eduardo, routinely exploded whenever 94 The Explosive Child his mother brought him to the supermarket. Eduardo exploded in other situations as well, of course, but none as predictably as the supermarket. Maybe it was the overstimulation, maybe it was the fact that he had very inflexible ideas about the foods he wanted his mother to buy (most of which were not at the top of his mother’s list). Whatever the reason, no matter what the mother tried—preparing him in advance for trips, rewarding him for good behavior and punishing him for inappropriate behavior, making shorter trips, having Grandma accom- pany them, trying to steer him around the aisles where meltdowns seemed to occur most often, agreeing that he could select one or two of the foods on his list—he still routinely exploded when she brought him to the super- market. The mother finally came to the conclusion that mastery of the demands of the supermarket—staying next to the shopping cart, not demanding the purchase of every high-sugar cereal on the shelves, being patient in the checkout line—simply wasn’t going to improve at that point in her son’s development. She decided he’d be much better off if she eliminated the expectation that her son accompany her to the supermarket (Plan C). Download 0.7 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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