D.H. asks from Portland, OR on June 05, 2008
3 Yo Over-reacting to "Injury
3 times in the last month, my 3 year old has "hurt" one of his arms for one reason or another (wrestling with Daddy, someone accidentally hitting him with a ball, and tonight he was alone and I didn't see him but he started wailing and when arrived, he only said he had been reaching for a puzzle and hurt himself). He shakes, and moans, and asks for an ice pack, and generally milks it all night, and all through the night (waking up a lot and crying out etc). Then in the morning he proudly says, "my arm is all better!"
I've tried everything to get him to take it less seriously -- I won't go through all the examples -- but I'm especially looking for advice on whether this is a common "phase" at this age?
More Answers
P.H. answers from Portland on June 06, 2008
This sounds like a phase both of my boys went through at that age. I just bought a box of cheap band-aids and would just say 'hurt again, huh. go get a band-aid.' Didn't make a big fuss and the phase ended after about 2 weeks.
Good luck.
P.
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J.C. answers from Seattle on June 06, 2008
There seems to be a good mix of advice posted already--I would just add my two cents from a conversation my husband and I had the other day. I have a 10yr old stepdaughter, and sons 5 and 2. When my stepdaughter was little, her mom and my husband's family were always telling her to be tough, she was their "little soldier,"--the idea was not to rush in if she fell or got hurt, just wait and see if she was hurt--they would say,"stop your fake crying." So, today, she is tough--but she is not compassionate, and not remorseful when she hurts others, accidentally or not. When we had our first son, we had a new policy--no hurt is too small for a little acknowledgement and sympathy "oh, that's too bad" or "that must have hurt", a kiss from mommy or daddy or a hug, or whatever is needed according to the injury. My sons want sympathy when they need it and usually if they fall or get hurt they jump up and say "I'm okay!." And they are both compassionate to each other and remorseful when they hurt others. My stepdaughter is having to re-learn how to be compassionate and remorseful, and it is not easy to teach her.
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J.B. answers from Seattle on June 06, 2008
D.,
I have 2 kids-6 and 10 (girl and boy). I'd say if it is the same arm in the same place, you should go see a doc. It could be a sparin or fracture. Try movinf him arm in various positions and squeeze (gently) along the arm to see if there is any pain.
With my kids I try to stay very calm and nuetral when they hurt themselves. I usually wait to see their reaction to a fall, scrape, or bonk. I don't ignore them, but wait to see if they will ride it outand keep playing or melt into a puddle of tears. If it does come to blood and/or tears I will nuetrally attend to the wound, maybe offer a little cuddle (but I don't get all feaked out and gushy)and then be done. If it is an injury that continues to hurt, like a scrape or burn I will tell them that beyond first aid, there is nothing else I can do for them, I am sorry they are hurting, say "yeah, I hate when I have scrapes too", and perhaps try to get them distracted with a toy or game or something. I try not to say "tough it out" or accuse them of faking it, but they certainly don't get all sorts of special fun attention from me. So far I haven't had the overly dramatized injuries. Sometimes if they continue to whine about it I'll suggest that maybe we make a doctor's appt. That usually stops the complaining!
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T.C. answers from Portland on June 06, 2008
Have you had your son's arm x-rayed? It could be that he has an injury that only hurts when he moves his arm a certain way. That is what happened to my little boy and he indeed had a fracture and was in a cast for weeks. Always good to rule out physical, before behavioral.
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M.M. answers from Portland on June 06, 2008
Is it always the same arm? My daughter has a sub-luxating elbow that hurts her whenever it gets hit or twisted a certain way. The first time it happened she was 5 months old and I heard a "pop." It lasts 12-24 hours then she is fine again. The doctors say she will grow out of it. (She is 3 and it is happening less frequently.) If he really is waking up through the night about it, it's probably real. Give him some Tyelenol and put the arm in a little sling if that helps.
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L.S. answers from Portland on June 06, 2008
Have you taken him to the doctor? I think when a kid wakes up in th middle of the night, there's a good chance he's really hurt... Or he might just enjoy the attention. Either way, you'd never forgive yourself if something was really wrong and you didn't check it out.
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A.R. answers from Portland on June 06, 2008
There might actually be something else going on here. Have you tried taking him in to be seen by a doctor? I had horrible pains in my legs when I was young. They came and went. Back then the doctor said it was "growing pains". Now they think it's some kind of neuralgia. Anyway just a thought.
D.J. answers from Seattle on June 06, 2008
About the same age my son started acting as hypohondriac too. He got attached to band-aids and he started asking for band-aids even for the door's scratches. I used the opportunity to introduce him to some simple anatomy and it worked great. He knows about his body and how the body parts work more than an adult. He loves to go to the doctor's office and he will take anything there. Back then I used the "magic kisses" for most of the "injuries" and later introduce him to the "magic" tea (chamomile) and the "magic" medication (honey). Along with that he eats good healthy foods because he knows what the junk food do to our body. He knows things like meat is protein and his body needs it to build his muscles, so he can be strong. Carrots, so he can have good eyes. Calcium for the bones and teeth. Broccoli, so he can run fast. Well, like every 4 year old he likes sugar but he will ask for a candy only after he gets a good healthy breakfast. He will refuse a loli-pop from grand-ma because he didn't have his lunch. Just take the advantage of the situation and teach him how to deal with pain. We also did set up 2 min time for wining or crying, I just told him that this is how long you have to do it and now he does it even when he really hurts and than he can chose his own "medication". Good luck!
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