17 answers

Anyone Else with a 6 Year Old Teenager?

I am having trouble with my 6 year old son. Almost all of the time he is well behaved and does the right thing. HOWEVER; Sometimes he becomes this little teenager that is disrespectful, defiant and just mean. He yells and screams and carries on. It is unbelievable to me that he is the same kid. It is not very often, but when it happens it is terrible. Is this normal stuff or is it just me? Would love to know if you've experienced this.

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So What Happened?™

WOW!!! Thank you all for your responses. It feels good to know that I am definantly not alone. There needs to be a support group! I laugh when people make a comment about the "terrible two's" I say, huh, two was a piece of cake!!! You could put them down for a nap! I think every age has it's "terrible" and its good things too. Thanks again for all the advice. Me and hubby have been deciding consequences and how to best handle this.

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We have a daughter in the house like that. She has recently been diagnosed with ADHD and we are working on a diagnosis of bi-polar disorder. Bi-polar runs in my family, get him diagnosed as soon as possible and in the habit of taking his meds, if it is bi-polar disorder. My sister and father refuse to take their meds bc they can't drink with them and they feel "off" if they don't take their meds. I believe it is far better to start healthy habits when they kids and still pliable. If you wait too long and it is bi-polar, it will be a LOT harder to handle and change not so healthy habits.

CC

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In another post on MamaSource, a mother suggested Love and Logic books for parenting techniques. I checked out Love and Logic Magic for Early Childhood from our library and just finished it. It is excellent!!! www.loveandlogic.com. They specifically address the issues you are having. Perhaps this will help. Good luck!

He is testing you. I have a six year old daughter that pulls a disrespectful tone sometimes. Make sure you are being the parent and letting him know that that is not acceptable behavior. Do not yell and scream back, but do make sure he is being punished for the actions so he will remember it. A time out chair or quiet room time is usually suficient for my daughter because she hates being byherslef. So pick out something that will "get to them".
I have also found that the TV programs that little children watch have TOO MUCH bad influence on them. There is too much talking back and rolling eyes. I have to approve anything she watches and it does not include most stuff found on childrens networks in the afternoon. Best of Luck to you.

My boy who is 15 now had a horrible temper when he was 5-9. Like your son, it only happened once in awhile, but when it did, he was just as likely to hit and hurt someone as he was to hurt himself. It scared me terribly. As I watched him, I noticed that it mostly happened when he hadn't had any food in the past few hours. So, I started explaining to him that it was possibly his body making him act like this and as I saw a "bout" beginning to simmer, I gave him something to eat like a cookie or a granola bar or something like that. We did some other things too, like letting him hit pillows and break up boxes when he was angry so I still don't know exactly what did the trick or if it was me talking to him about it over and over, but by the time he was in second grade, Mr. Bad Guy was pretty much gone and now he's a wonderful young man. I think it was that at five and six he was too young to actually control the anger

Yes, I too have a 6 year old teenager. It's very scary. Just like your son, he's normally very kind and respectful but he has his moments when he's mean to his little brother. He screams at him and tells him to leave his room. It's very upsetting to his younger brother who idolizes him.

My son wants to relate to older kids so badly. He talks about wanting to drive, being in a band, having "grown up" hair cuts and girlfriends. Ugh! He even writes reports for school about being a teenager.

I can only imagine what the actual teenage years will be like.

I think this is normal behavior in some children. My son has never acted like a baby. We also never treat him like one. I just accept him for who he is and remind him that his actions have consequences.

You are not alone with your experiences. I hope that makes you feel a little reassured.

here is a question to ask yourself- do you ever have a bad day? Do you ever feel like crying, screaming, or just throwing a fit? Ok- now take that answer and deduct the ability to constantly control your temper (if indeed you always do)- you have a child.. or at the very least a human. Point is- yes it's normal- and yes- you should be concerned. Part of your job is to teach him to control his emotions so that he doesn't explode. Talking may help, discipline may help, or he may need an activity to help him release anger and energy. But yes- it's normal.

AGGHH!!! You and me both! I just got called down to his school yesterday for him lipping off teachers after being really mean to a little girl in his class (he said something that was absolutely appalling to me and I never expected out of a six year old's mouth). We are so frustrated with him that we made the decision yesterday that he now loses all privileges (toys and every thing have been removed from his room, no tv, no play outside with friends, no computer, no field trip in school, nothing) and he can earn it back a bit at a time with good behavior and NO LIP!!! With us it has been happening more and more frequently and we can't stand it anymore. We also get the "sour grapes" response when we remove something, which is really frustrating (you know, the "I didn't really want it anyway" response). He also brings up his siblings in the context of "How come they don't have to do this?" (they are 4 and 1). I think my sister went through some of this with her boys too at this age. From what I've heard they outgrow it, although I don't know if that means they learn through repeated consequences or they just mature, but we're going with the first option.

Hi M.,

It is natural for your six year old son to behave this way. I know people don't feel this works, but believe me it does. I have five kids of my own. Ranging from 14 to 5. Each one of them went thru this stage and are still going thru it.
Everytime my kids got out of hand although it wasn't often. Bend to their level where you two are eye to eye. Say firmly of what you will do if they continue to act in that manner. Explain to them why that type of behavior will not be tolerated and then remove something they love for the moment. I know it may sound corny, but try it the next your six year old behave like that. If it doesn't work. Let me know.

Hi M.

My gosh you have just described our 6 year old son! We went to a parent group last month and was relieved to hear other parents with the same 6 year old behaviour. It is troubling to have a 6 yr old teenager. We're trying to keep calm (not easy), be consistent, and have found that lots of praise when all is good and taking time to talk about the behaviour has helped. He knows what is appropriate behaviour but seems to make snap decisions that turn him in to someone else. He is really responsive when we take the time to calmly talk about the situation. That said, it also works better when we've calmed down (me included) and had a few minutes apart to think. I don't remember this strategy all the time, especially in the heat of the moment but have found when I do the response is good,

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