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Dealing with tantrums, particularly with a special needs child,
is never an easy task for a parent, and can stretch your patience
and parenting skills to the extreme. The best way to deal with a
child tantrum is to prevent it from happening, so here are some
tips and suggestions.
Stages
The three stages of the tantrum are:
1. Pre-tantrum build up (escalation)
2. Full blown Meltdown
3. Post-tantrum cool down
All kids go through each of these stages in different ways, but if
you can re-direct, distract, or calm them down during the
pre-tantrum escalation stage, you can avoid the tantrum and begin
to teach your child other ways of expressing anger, frustration, or
disappointment.
Prevention
The old expression an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure
fits this very nicely. Your goal, as a parent, is to teach your
children how to handle emotions, frustrations, and disappointments
is a positive and constructive way. The tantrum is a child's
natural expression of need or desire and started at a time when
they were unable to communicate at all. Some kids with special
needs are still at that stage, so learning effective ways to
re-direct is very important.
Behavior Serves a Purpose
You need to remember that behavior serves a purpose. You child is
throwing a tantrum for a reason, so if you can figure out what the
child really needs or wants as a result, you will be able to figure
out how to teach your child a better way of asking! If you give in,
even occasionally, to your child's tantrum you have just taught
them it is an acceptable way of getting what they want. And
children repeat successful behavior. You may keep the peace for the
moment, but you aren't doing your child or yourself any favors. And
embarrassing as a public tantrum is, keep in mind that yours isn't
the only child in the whole wide world that does it, in fact,
despite the looks you get from others, I would propose that it is
rare indeed, the child who has never thrown a full-fledged tantrum
out in public.
Public Tantrum Solution?
And the solution to the public tantrum? Well, yes, it can be
embarrassing and even humiliating for you as the parent, but only
if you CHOOSE it to be. Say what? Yes you heard me only
if you choose to be embarrassed. No one can make you feel inferior
without your consent.- Eleanor Roosevelt. And likewise, no one can
make you embarrassed or humiliated without your permission. So
don't let them.
You decide that teaching your child socially acceptable behavior in
a positive and supporting manner is MUCH more
important than the stares of a people with nothing better to
do.
You do not have to explain yourself, nor are you required to
explain or make excuses for your child. She's autistic, or He
didn't get his medication, or She has bipolar disorder is not
necessary, required, or even recommended. It is truly none of their
business!
A Caveat
Now I must mention the caveat to the above paragraph. You must be
using, teaching, and coaching your child using positive behavior
techniques, and not the 1950's Dr. Spock version of spare the rod
and spoil the child. Using those types of approaches in public
these days will get you sent to the slammer! There are plenty of
people out there with NO lives of their own, so they feel they must
involve themselves in yours. Well meaning? Usually. Productive?
Not. Helpful? Rarely.
Intermittently Reinforced Behavior
The hardest behavior to correct is the one that has been rewarded,
or allowed, on an inconsistent or intermittent basis. Think about
it. The child threw a fit because they wanted a piece of candy in
the store and to keep the peace you gave in. The next three or four
times you did not give in to the child, but were probably forced to
leave the store! So the 5th time you give in once more vowing never
to do it again. However, you have reinforced that behavior more
than once, so to the child, they figure all they have to do is keep
it up and eventually you will cave in to what they want. And so
they do. It will take you at least twice as long to break that one,
than if you had just given all the time.
Give In?
So you should just give in all the time and keep the peace right?
NO. Absolutely not. You could solve a current situation with that
approach, but you are not doing the child, yourself, or anyone
around the child any favors. You are reinforcing bad behavior. You
are telling your child it is OK to act this way to get what they
want. So, you should be consistent, and firm to teach your child
the way you want them to behave.
Behavior serves a purpose, a function and is done for a reason. If
you do not allow improper behavior to work (i.e. giving in) they
will eventually (please note this word) stop and find another way
to get what they want. If it worked, even once, they will use the
hope and apply principle and keep trying it over and over
again.
Summary
So to wrap up this section before we get into preventative tips we
learned:
1. Your child (and you!) are more important than
what others around you think. No one can make you feel ANYTHING
without your permission so don't let them
2. Be Consistent (the number one tip for
every parent!)
3. Reinforce the behavior you want the
child to have, not the bad behavior. (Don't give in even
once!)
4. Behavior serves a purpose.
Next time, we will talk about some ideas, tips and suggestions for
preventing a meltdown and redirecting your child away from the
escalation stage to something else.
Judson Greenman, author, webmaster, advocate and father of four
very special girls and started these websites as a way of sharing
the things that he has learned, experienced and discovered about
Raising Special Kids one parent to another. To find out more,
please visit http://www.raising-special-kids.com
and http://www.anieleirose.org
Article Source: http://www.articlecafe.com
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Comment by Evening Dresses on May 10, 2010 at 8:56pm © 2012 Created by Mommys Friends Online.
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