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My nine year old step son has been throwing temper tantrums since the day I met him 5 1/2 years ago. He is now having trouble in school- with his learning abilities only- and he NEVER acts out at school. His mom and my husband and I have tried just about everything we can think of and nothing has stopped the behavior. If he was just verbally angry it wouldn't be so bad, but he throws, hits, kicks, and destroys things along with the screaming. What do we do?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My husband is forty years the senior of your stepson but still has temper rages (shouts, throws things, storms off suddenly etc). In his case it is due to a brain injury sustained in a car crash as a teenager, although he believes he would have had a bad temper anyway. He is also an only child who is very aware of his own needs, i.e something of the self-centred brat remains.
In times of a temper rage I remove myself to another room until he calms down. There is no reasoning with him until that point, and I don't want to inflame the situation. When he is sufficiently calm I point out that he is behaving like an ********. Rarely does he have a genuine grievance. Most of the time he feels embarrassed afterwards, and can even summon up an apology.
Perhaps ignoring your stepson until he calms down could work. He might feel quite silly afterwards, particularly if his rage has not achieved what he wanted. Making sure he is safe, is of course a requisite; in my case I make sure I am safe, but I would behave differently with a child.
Your stepson's behaviour is likely to have a different cause, although it might be worth checking out the physical aspects. Could it be dietary, or an indicator of an underlying disorder? Worth checking out with a health care professional. Stress could also be a factor. His parents have obviously split up, has that been recent, or is there something else bothering him?
It could also be an attention-seeking ruse. My husband's outbursts are often preceded by arguments of a "what about me?" nature.
He could be frustrated at school, maybe is dyslexic or is being bullied etc. and takes it out on you when he gets home. He needs to have boundaries beyond which very bad behaviour is not tolerated. This has become a habit.
I have a grandson who behaved like this when he stayed with us. I took his hand and squeezed it until I'd got his attention, relaxing the grip further as he calmed down, then I got him to agree that his behaviour was unexceptable and made him promise to behave. After relaxing the grip but still holding his hand I got him to tell me what the problem was and I was able to do something about it. We get on even better now with no repeat bad behaviour.
This may sound cruel but I'm not aware of any lasting effect, I've rarely had to do it and never twice. This does not solve the underlying problems but calms them down, sets the boundaries and encourages the child to talk about their problems to get something done.
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