16 answers

10 Year Old Violent

Hi to all the moms out there, im in dispair so im hoping you all can help me :( first let me say that over the last 6 months things have just gotten worse and im not sure if i should seek help for her or if its hormonal and if so what do i do? she has been having issues with food lately and we are very strict with eating all your veggies and trying new foods, she literaly throws a temper tantrum (she has a 2 year old sister, who behaves better than my 10 year old) she screams, throws punches, hits things, has tried to run away and im at my wits end. we have taken everything away (social activities, events,parties)and still the behavior continues we have sat down with her and talked, cried and talked more and it seems to get through until a day or so later and we are right back to the beginning, im terrififed for my 2 year old who sees this, luckliy hasnt done any of it yet but i need to nip it in the bud before she learns to copy.
Please any help would be appricated, thank you
A.

1 mom found this helpful

What can I do next?

More Answers

Hi A.! Oh boy! Sounds like you have quite a situation on your hands. I want to start with saying that anything I write comes from love..so don't take anything in any way otherwise. My daughter is only 2, so I don't have personal experience with a 10 year old of my own..but I still have vivid memories of growing up with VERY controlling parents. I think that this goes WAY beyond food. This is about control. My advice...cut her some slack. She is coming of age...she wants to make her own decisions. If food choices are causing this much stress, I would just drop it. And this is coming from a very healthy eater. Ask her what veggies she will agree to eat, and just serve her those. I know health from food is SO important, but not more than mental health. You could be starting a path of a daughter with an eating disorder, just so that she can have back some control. Without knowing your situation, I can only speculate..but I really bet that there is control going on in other areas. Some is healthy..boundaries are great..but just know that she is growing up and needs to make her own decisions. I think your thoughts on seeking therapy are awesome. I think family therapy would be the best idea. I think that you would learn a lot about what is going on within your daughter. Just know, too much control will have the opposite effect that you are after, so try to ease up on her a bit. Good luck, and again, this was all said out of love, so please don't take offense.
A. :)

2 moms found this helpful

It's not really clear what the issue is. Does she have these outbursts at meal time? Is it over food? Did she try to run away after an issue over food? Or is this more generalized anger/outbursts at different times of day not exclusive to meals/food? I just am not clear, since you mentioned "she's been having issues with food and we are very strict..." but did not say that she has issues with anything else or at other times. If the behaviors you are seeing only happen in correlation with food, then I'd say that you need to back off on food issues and give her some space and/or pursue professional help. Does she not want to eat at all? Does she not like what is served? Does she have any choices about the meals? Have you tried including her in the meal planning and preparation? It just seems that, absent an eating disorder that will require professional help, there must be a lot more going on than just "issues with food". Can you give more information, or an example of something specific that happened?

1 mom found this helpful

You don't make it clear here if her tantrums are just about the food issues or generalized to other situations that frustrate her. As a profesional counselor, I am inclined to consider that perhaps someone with expertise from outside the family might be needed to help work with you and your child to help her deal with her feelings and find a way for the family to work through and resolve this issue. To really assess that, however, a fuller picture of the situation would be needed.

1 mom found this helpful

You MUST get control! If requires outside help then DO IT! This is not healthy or acceptable behavior for her hormones or not! And you're RIGHT your 2 yr. old is watching! Please get some help--where's her dad? Maybe there is something happening at school, or with a friend, or anything like that....? If this is sudden, I would suspect a triggering issue. God bless you as you figure this out.

1 mom found this helpful

Wow, obviously she has a behavior problem, but I think you need to not let food be the battleground. Ultimately, you can't force a kid to eat, and if she starts not eating at all just to control something, you lose that way too. You have to admit that you can't win with the food thing, so you need to back off. Yes, her behavior is wrong, but you need to focus on that instead of the eating. Make her a healthy dinner, and let her eat what she wants of it. If she doesn't like it, or doesn't eat all of it, fine. She's old enough to make herself a different healthy dinner if she washes all the dishes for it. If what she wants is a little bit of control over her own life, let her have it to a reasonable extent. As long as they are healthy choices, let her make them for herself. She's also old enough to take one night as her own responsibility to make dinner for everyone. You will help and buy the food, but she has to decide and prepare the menu for everyone. I would explain all this to her before starting this new rule, at a time when everyone is calm. Maybe some more control and more responsibility will help.
If she is like this about everything, and physically violent every time she doesn't get her way, then I think it's time to see a family counselor. Her trying to run away indicates that something else is wrong too, and you should get to the bottom of that. Good luck.

1 mom found this helpful

A.,

Contact her school and get a professional evaluation. If she is in public school, it is free. If she isn't, then contact the public school office in your area and request an evaluation.

You need help now, this is NOT normal behavior. If you don't want to contact the school, then call your pediatrician. Tell your daughter that you are going to the doctor so that the doctor and her parents can help her get well. Do NOT make her feel bad about being ill.

You don't say if your husband is your daughter's father or not, but do whatever you have to do to get everyone on the same page towards treatment.

C.

1 mom found this helpful

What words rang out loud and clear, "We are very Strict about eating all the veggies and trying new foods". You are setting yourself up for falure eveytime, when you put these stringent demands on your child. Please, please seek the advice of a specialist. You are heading for serious problems. Ten years old is a defining age for girls. In the long run, it is your relationship with your daughter that is most important, not that she eats right. A parent's responsibility is to present healthy chioces to their children, not to force them to eat it. Your loving undersatnding and good example is all your child needs. Stop what you are doing. It is clearly not working.

1 mom found this helpful

Get help. A good family therapist, psychologist, psychiatrist, someone, but get help now because it's only going to get worse. Don't just take her, take the whole family because everyone needs to learn his or her role, and how to cope with the problems. You need to find out if it's behavioral or if there is a medical problem and act accordingly. Many psychological problems start to show symptoms during puberty (bi-polar, depression, eating disorders, etc...) Like I said GET HELP. Good luck.

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