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Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 199
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Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 199 |
It's been a long week. Miss 4 (nearly 5) has been such a drama queen. Every little thing has turned into such a power struggle. Even gymnastics, which she adores, turned into a drama yesterday with 10-15 minutes worth of drama, catastrophising, whinging before she eventually joined in... ugh! It's so exhausting. I do try not to participate in the power game, but I'm out of ideas. Anyone have a drama queen? What strategies have you tried?
jojo (exasperated!)
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Joined: Sep 2007
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I have no suggestions, but I have a 4 nearly 5 major drama queen at my house. I feel your pain. She is driving me nuts.
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Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 7,207
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Have you read
Mary Sheedy Kurcinka > Home Best selling author, speaker, and licenced parent educator. Books: Raising Your Spirited Child. Love and more love, grinity
Coaching available, at SchoolSuccessSolutions.com
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Joined: Jun 2008
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Yes, we have quite a bit of drama...when it really reaches a fever pitch it's usually because something else is up such as an oncoming illness. We were just participating in a ballet thing with the kids and one of the moms said her boy was out due to strep throat. I was like 'Oh.' Only one other mom there said 'We need to know, I need to know - when my daughter gets sick it's like...it's like...psycho or something!' I had to totally agree, my kids usually loose a lot of emotional control just before an illness. I also read several books in a series called 'Your x year old', such as 'Your 4 Year Old', 'Your 5 Year Old', and so on. They are older books but seemed to have some good advice. One thing they mention is that when approaching the turn of a new year children's psychological development tends to be moving quickly, more tumultuous, harder to understand and difficult for both parents and kids. Approaching mid-year things smooth out, a child gets used to recent changes in body/mind and is able to be more cooperative, etc. Don't know if other moms here would agree, but it did seem to jibe with what I saw with my ds. (Also don't know if I'm describing that well) Good luck to you, give it a week or two, or a couple of months...should see some change, right?
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Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 199
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Thanks for the reminder Grinity. Raising a spirited child used to be my bible with my first daughter, but I haven't read it in years. But I started re-reading it tonight and I can't believe how relevant it is. Thanks! And thanks for your observations Chris. It's Miss 4's birthday this week and I think there's a lot going on inside of her. I just hope it settles soon... jojo
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Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 604
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Chris, It is the same with dd6. When she is getting sick she is all out of sorts emotionally. And it is always after she's gotten sick that we think back and say "duh, we should have seen this one coming." We also find that we have a drama queen when she is really bored with her life. By this I mean that she isn't being challenged at school, and we've not been doing any activities at home. Then anything can set her off, and it is usually at the strangest times.
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Joined: Nov 2008
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this might be a bit old for her, but maybe worth a try? my 7 year old has been seeing a counselor for a few months now for school-caused misery superimposed on a major drama personality (loved Kurcinka myself!) She's teaching him cognitive therapy principles outright, and taught him recently about catastrophizing. Now that he knows it's a mental error, he doesn't want to do it and we can quiet fits quite often by just asking if he's catastrophizing.
My 3 yo, though, isn't old enough to have that help. With him, it's more about trying to avoid his triggers and give him space and language for it all. Some kids are just difficult to ease into the world! I wish I were doing a better job with my middle kid. I can avoid triggers, but I'm not doing very well at teaching him (and his dad) to smooth the volcanic emotions. With him, for what it's worth, his pride often gets caught up in it. If I can interpret him to him as having a reasonable feeling, then we can discuss what will actually happen. But if you act angry, frustrated, in any way add energy to the system, he blows. And once he blows, it takes a while to come down. 15 minutes sounds to me like she's doing very well, honestly. Hard for parents, of course, but doing well and going to be fine. A few months ago, my 7yo sulked at a party for a full half hour b/c he was convinced someone pushed him on purpose. He missed a quarter of the party refusing to join in!
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Joined: Dec 2005
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Montana - for the 3 year old, why not try:
Raising a Thinking Child, By Dr. Myrna B. Shure
I was fasinated by this book, but my only was a bit too old to get much benifit from it by the time I read it. I've been wondering what age of gifted kid 'wouldn't' be too young for this, so if it does or doesnt' help, please let me know, ok?
Best Wishes, Grinity
Coaching available, at SchoolSuccessSolutions.com
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Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 137
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This sounds so exactly like DS6! And based on the reviews of Raising Your Spirited Child I've ordered the book - I have a feeling it'll turn out to be something we should have had a couple of years ago.
I agree re the 15 minutes - DS6 missed most of a birthday party last year when he tantrummed (is that a word?) for over an hour after a request to put on sunscreen. Admittedly that was during a very bad phase for us.
DS5 asked me why I have "that purple colour skin" under my eyes (aren't they sweet) - I said "BECAUSE OF YOU MY DARLINGS!!!"
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Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 137
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And yesterday DS6 tells me it's the worst thing that's ever happened to him, he hates me, he'll kill me, he wishes he wasn't even alive. The cause of so much distress? - DS5 was sick/vomiting, so DS6 couldn't go to soccer practice.
Montana, I think we could benefit from some cognitive therapy here too - catastrophising features far too much.
And really, don't you think that if anyone should get to feel sorry for themselves it should be the mother whose face was vomitted on! Bleugh - while checking seat belt straps - point blank.
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