ADHD Raising an Explosive Child: The Complete Parent's Guide to Disciplining your Child. Discover Effective Tips and Emotional Control Strategies to Empowering Complex Kids
Are you raising a child who has specific needs linked to their behavior? Do you want to make sure you are doing everything you can to help them thrive?
Raising a child who suffers from ADHD can be tough on any parent, If your child sometimes "explodes" for almost incomprehensible reasons...it's not their fault.
If the teacher at school has complained because your child can't sit for more than 15 minutes...it's not their fault. You may experience frustration, a drain on your patience and even lose your temper when you cannot find a solution to help them. But you will still have to find ways to raise your child to become Emotionally Intelligent if you want them to go on and have a successful adult life.
There are precise techniques and strategies that you can apply right away to curb the discomforts of ADHD and bring out all the wonderful qualities your child holds within.
This book, ADHD Raising an Explosive Child, contains several detailed topics that will help you with a wide range of issues, with chapters that This book will help you to deal with your own shortcomings, build your child’s confidence and stimulate their Emotional Intelligence in ways you may never have imagined.
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Lisa Kennedy is a descendant of the Trawlwoolway people on the coast of Tasmania. Her work is marked by her experiences of both cultural and natural loss and reclamation. She lives in Victoria, Australia.
This book feels like talking to a Dr. Lots of technical, medical/scientific information and every, single, strategy, ever presented in a way that makes managing ADHD seem unattainable due to mental overload and sheer lack of about 75 additional hours each day. And the targets portions about explosive behavior are lost in the deluge of other information about ADHD.
I now how all the information I have gathered about what ADHD is and AAALLLLLLLL the things I should be doing all day, everyday (don’t forget to take a bath if you need a break because self care is also setting an example) over the last 10 years in a single place.
This is the opposite of helpful for parents. Possibly it is meant for academics, psychologists and or human development professionals attending a conference? It’s just overwhelmingly.