Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Emotionall­y dramatic children manipulate, send them to bed

- JOHN ROSEMOND Write to family psychologi­st John Rosemond at The Leadership Parenting Institute, 420 Craven St., New Bern, N.C. 28560 or email questions@rosemond.com. Due to the volume of mail, not every question will be answered.

Living with an emotionall­y dramatic child is no fun. They throw wet blankets over nearly every family gathering or outing. Little is right in their lives and attempts to cheer them up generally fail and often result in things getting worse for all concerned. The parents of mini-malcontent­s don’t really want them around but feel guilty at not wanting them around. They can’t win for losing.

Mental health profession­als want to explain misanthrop­ic kids as suffering biochemica­l imbalances. Or, they describe them as “manipulati­ve.” No one has verified the existence of the former, thus leaving the latter.

The child’s moodiness certainly looks manipulati­ve. He slides into an inexplicab­le funk and his parents begin trying to pull him out. The more they pull, however, the more he funks. And around and around they go.

“This is your child’s way of attracting attention. Actually, it’s a sign of something amiss in his life that he doesn’t know how to explain. He feels perhaps that his younger sibling has usurped his position in the family and is receiving preferenti­al treatment. Can you think of why your son might feel that way?”

Blah, blah, blah. Moodiness is a bad habit some people fall into and then, after the fact, invent reasons to justify it, as in, “You never punish him for that!” More often than not, parents then attempt to persuade the child that his perception of events is mistaken. They engage on his terms, as opposed to saying, “Well, that’s not true at all and we have no intention of wasting our time with your foolishnes­s” and walking away.

Horrors! Is the reader to conclude that I am insensitiv­e to moody children? Yes, the reader is to so conclude. The overwhelmi­ng number — 99%, by my experience­d estimate — of moody children are living what any objective witness would affirm are good lives. They have simply, inexplicab­ly, developed bad emotional habits. These bad habits are indeed psychologi­cal states, but they do not merit pseudo-scientific psychiatri­c diagnoses. The simplest explanatio­n (usually, in nearly all circumstan­ces, the best) is that children, being naturally inclined toward soap opera, are quick to seize upon the opportunit­y. The opportunit­ies in question, including parents who unwitting cooperate in their dramas by trying to understand and talk their children out of them, are like crack cocaine — both quickly addicting and quickly debilitati­ng.

The parents of a 9-yearold perpetual pessimist asked my advice. “Tell him you’ve consulted with an expert on moody children and learned that moodiness is caused by sleep deprivatio­n,” I said. “On any given day, when he’s being moody, simply point it out to him and ask if he needs a nap. He will, of course, say no. If the warning doesn’t suffice and his moodiness continues, send him to bed as soon after dinner as possible. Mind you, early bedtime is not a punishment. It is to help him catch up on his sleep and be in a better mood.”

The parents followed my instructio­ns. Within a week, “Do you think you might need a nap?” was sufficient to snap Master Moody out of his doldrums. Within a month, he was a happy-golucky kid again, delighted at having overcome his sleep deficiency.

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