Asperger Syndrome Behaviour - 4 Tips How To Cope With The Aggression and Violent Behaviour

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Asperger Syndrome Behaviour - How You And Your Aspergers Child Can Survive Home Life, School Life and Neighbourhood Life

Do you want to understand how you can cope with your child aggression and violent asperger syndrome behavior?

Feeling embarrassed in public, coping with explosive situations and worrying endlessly about your child and the rest of the family can put an unbearable strain on you.

There are times that you think that you can just no longer carry on as a parent.

And that's without even mentioning the major headaches and problems that arise when your Aspergers child attends school.

How you and your aspergers child can survive home life, school life and neighbourhood life?

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Asperger Syndrome and Violent Behaviour 

You are not the only parent to have observed violent behavior in your child. Whether it is due to Asperger Syndrome or is a co-existing psychiatric disorder remains to be seen.

When a child acts inappropriately, he needs:

* Avoid something that needs to be done, such as going to school or obeying a parent.

* Get something like his or her own way or attention.

* Manage pain and reduce feelings of psychological hurt or physical discomfort

* Fulfill a sensory need, perhaps feelings of hot, cold, thirst, or hunger.

Reasoning or debating an issue with your child to justify your expectations will not change her behaviour. She wants to satisfy her needs, not satisfy your wants. She is not likely to empathize with you or acknowledge anyone's objections to her behaviour.

 

4 Tips How To Deal With Your Child's Aggression and Violent Behaviour 

1. You need to be "concrete" with her.

Tell her that the inappropriate thing she wants or the unacceptable behaviour that she is demonstrating is not allowed.

She needs to follow structured, consistent rules which will assist in modifying her behaviour.

Don't give in to hitting, throwing things, or yelling, no matter how hard it is not to.

2. Behaviour modification.

You must determine what need the aggression is fulfilling, and then teach her a replacement behaviour that will satisfy the need.

For example, if your child wants a glass of water, she can be taught to ask for or point to the source of water. Also, you can design an emotion card which shows a glass of water, and she can point to it.

3. Establish a daily routine

Consistent behaviours, obligations, etc. will help reduce your child's aggressive and violent behaviours. Daily routine creates stability and comfort for Asperger's children; also, it helps to lessen their need to make demands on you. When you establish a routine, you eliminate some of the situations in which your daughter becomes demanding.

For example, by building in regular times to give her attention, she may have less need to show aggression to try to get your attention.

4. Your child must learn to appropriately communicate the cause of her aggression and get her needs met through that communication.

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