The Explosive Child: A New Approach for Understanding and Parenting Easily Frustrated, Chronically I

(sharon) #1
244 The Explosive Child


  • The embarrassment factor: They’d be embarrassed if
    they exploded in front of their peers. Since the em-
    barrassment factor can’t be replicated at home, em-
    barrassment doesn’t prevent the child from blowing
    up at home.

  • The tightly wrapped factor: The child has put so much
    energy into holding it together at school that he be-
    comes unraveled the minute he gets home, fueled
    further by normal late-afternoon fatigue and hunger.

  • The herd-mentality factor: Because the school day tends
    to be relatively structured and predictable, it can actu-
    ally be user-friendlier than unstructured downtime at
    home. For instance, if a child becomes confused about
    where he’s supposed to be or what he’s supposed to be
    doing while he’s at school, he need look no further
    than his classmates for cues. The herd-mentality factor
    can’t be replicated at home either.

  • The chemical factor: Teachers and peers often are the
    primary beneficiaries of pharmacotherapy, but the
    medications may have worn off by late afternoon or
    early evening.


There are probably other possibilities. But just be-
cause a child isn’t exploding at school doesn’t mean that

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