drwex: (Whorfin)
drwex ([personal profile] drwex) wrote2010-09-21 01:23 pm

Laying it on the line, parent style

One of the challenges in parenting L is that we cannot trust his self-reports of conditions such as hurting, upset stomach, etc. He doesn't reports his condition, but rather says whatever he thinks will get him the attention he wants.

We're in the car this weekend en route to a party. Pygment is checking to make sure that K has taken his antihistamine.

L: I need an antihistamine too
Me: You haven't been sneezing or sniffling. I don't think you need one.
L: Well, but my throat hurts
Me: If your throat hurts then it's probably the case that you're sick and we shouldn't take you to a party. So if your throat hurts I need to turn the car around and take you back home. Now, does your throat hurt?
L (in a very small, quiet voice): A little.

(L continued to insist that he, too, has allergies, which led Pygment and me to explain in fairly clear detail just what's involved in allergy testing in terms of needles. I also had to explain "white to move and mate in three" which is how I describe the back-scratch version of allergy testing.)

This reminds me of F with meds

[identity profile] tigira.livejournal.com 2010-09-21 07:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Usually he doesn't want them. While potty training, though, he hit a point where he was holding his bowel movements and it was starting to get painful. After several days I gave him a stool softener to help him. It did. He felt accomplished.

A week later he was a little constipated, or as he said, he needed the "yummy medicine that makes the poop move down." (His words, but I had to try not to laugh at the way he worked out how this medicine must work).

*sigh*