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2 y.o. ocd

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Does any have expirience with a 2 y.o. ocd. I am not sure, he just

gets " stuck " for a while repeating the same thing " blue car " ,,,,

it's hard to get him out of there... looks irracional morethan

behavoir. At least i hour a day.

Thanks

Annel

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Hello Annel,

Yes, there can be symptoms of OCD from infancy - two of mine were doing

compulsions before 18 months - the third was a little closer to 2 yrs

old!!

What you may want to try is changing how you react and move him along.

When he says " blue car " ackownledge him, and then say something like

" let's leave the blue car here and go play in the sand " or something

else that brings him pleasure. Ignoring is also a good tactic. What you

want to rememeber is that each time you reinforce the behaviour

(telling him to stop, repeating yourself to him, etc.) its like adding

yeast to dough!

What you might want to try is keep track of how many times a day this

occurs and what you/your family do as a reaction to his repetition.

Good luck - btw, my son did this at 2 - his word was 'kaka' which he

delightfully repeated at the end of every sentance!

take care, wendy, in canada

--- agf_ocd <agf_ocd@...> wrote:

> Does any have expirience with a 2 y.o. ocd. I am not sure, he just

> gets " stuck " for a while repeating the same thing " blue car " ,,,,

> it's hard to get him out of there... looks irracional morethan

> behavoir. At least i hour a day.

>

> Thanks

>

> Annel

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Hello Annel,

Yes, there can be symptoms of OCD from infancy - two of mine were doing

compulsions before 18 months - the third was a little closer to 2 yrs

old!!

What you may want to try is changing how you react and move him along.

When he says " blue car " ackownledge him, and then say something like

" let's leave the blue car here and go play in the sand " or something

else that brings him pleasure. Ignoring is also a good tactic. What you

want to rememeber is that each time you reinforce the behaviour

(telling him to stop, repeating yourself to him, etc.) its like adding

yeast to dough!

What you might want to try is keep track of how many times a day this

occurs and what you/your family do as a reaction to his repetition.

Good luck - btw, my son did this at 2 - his word was 'kaka' which he

delightfully repeated at the end of every sentance!

take care, wendy, in canada

--- agf_ocd <agf_ocd@...> wrote:

> Does any have expirience with a 2 y.o. ocd. I am not sure, he just

> gets " stuck " for a while repeating the same thing " blue car " ,,,,

> it's hard to get him out of there... looks irracional morethan

> behavoir. At least i hour a day.

>

> Thanks

>

> Annel

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Yep, my boy was the same exact way at age two. You think it's kind of cute for

a while and then later on, when you look back, you see early signs. I agree

with to try and change the attention or activity to something else.

in TN

w birkhan <birkhanw@...> wrote:

Hello Annel,

Yes, there can be symptoms of OCD from infancy - two of mine were doing

compulsions before 18 months - the third was a little closer to 2 yrs

old!!

What you may want to try is changing how you react and move him along.

When he says " blue car " ackownledge him, and then say something like

" let's leave the blue car here and go play in the sand " or something

else that brings him pleasure. Ignoring is also a good tactic. What you

want to rememeber is that each time you reinforce the behaviour

(telling him to stop, repeating yourself to him, etc.) its like adding

yeast to dough!

What you might want to try is keep track of how many times a day this

occurs and what you/your family do as a reaction to his repetition.

Good luck - btw, my son did this at 2 - his word was 'kaka' which he

delightfully repeated at the end of every sentance!

take care, wendy, in canada

--- agf_ocd <agf_ocd@...> wrote:

> Does any have expirience with a 2 y.o. ocd. I am not sure, he just

> gets " stuck " for a while repeating the same thing " blue car " ,,,,

> it's hard to get him out of there... looks irracional morethan

> behavoir. At least i hour a day.

>

> Thanks

>

> Annel

---------------------------------

Ahhh...imagining that irresistible " new car " smell?

Check outnew cars at Autos.

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Hi , it must be hard with 3 OCD?

I will certainly follow your advise and not add gas to the fire, who

does so is my 7 Y.O. OCD he keeps asking you want this... and so on

it is really no heil.

When you ignore them do they keep on crying or yelling? sometimes it

is pretty easy to change their atention, others (usualy at sleep

time) he will cry half an hour.

How do you manage?

Regards

Annel

>

> > Does any have expirience with a 2 y.o. ocd. I am not sure, he

just

> > gets " stuck " for a while repeating the same thing " blue car " ,,,,

> > it's hard to get him out of there... looks irracional morethan

> > behavoir. At least i hour a day.

> >

> > Thanks

> >

> > Annel

>

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Thanks , doing that.

Annel

>

> > Does any have expirience with a 2 y.o. ocd. I am not sure, he

just

> > gets " stuck " for a while repeating the same thing " blue car " ,,,,

> > it's hard to get him out of there... looks irracional morethan

> > behavoir. At least i hour a day.

> >

> > Thanks

> >

> > Annel

>

>

>

>

>

> ---------------------------------

> Ahhh...imagining that irresistible " new car " smell?

> Check outnew cars at Autos.

>

>

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Annel,

I do not engage - I will not participate in things related to ocd. What

I do is tell them that its an ocd thing and walk away. If someone was

so bothered and they start yelling, crying or hitting I would go in

another room, sit in my car, anything to be away from them! We had

extreme violence from our son, but Tom is doing excellently now.

Before we learned that 'helping' was wrong, I used to stand beside Tom

while he counted the electric plugs in his room - 1 hour and 45 minutes

2-3 times a day! When I stopped cooperating, everything changed. In

theory, we should have done this slowly by setting limits of how long

we would cooperate and then reduce regularly, but we didn't know that

and stopped all of a sudden! He yelled for a few hours, but that was it

- we never had to help again. Tom was 12 at the time.

What we learned to do was set limits. We would reassure once. The

second time we would ask: What did we say? The third time was you and I

have both answered, so lets move on and ... (do something else). All 3

kids and hubby were reassurance seekers I once counted 50 questions in

one day from Tom - I was too exhausted to count the others!

Bedtime rituals will become longer if you participate. Earlier in the

day, explain that you are available only for a few minutes(set a timer)

and that everything must be done during that time. When the timer goes

off, you will leave the room. Explain to your son that he will feel

anxious, but he will be ok because you don't let ocd run your life.

Each time you reduce your participation you are proving that he is able

to fight against his anxiety.

Try to externalize the ocd. Call it a bully, or anything that pushes

people around! Help him to understand that you love him with all your

heart but you hate ocd and what it makes him do and that you are a team

against this monster!

good luck, you will survive!

wendy, in canada

--- agf_ocd <agf_ocd@...> wrote:

> Hi , it must be hard with 3 OCD?

>

> I will certainly follow your advise and not add gas to the fire, who

> does so is my 7 Y.O. OCD he keeps asking you want this... and so on

> it is really no heil.

>

> When you ignore them do they keep on crying or yelling? sometimes it

> is pretty easy to change their atention, others (usualy at sleep

> time) he will cry half an hour.

>

> How do you manage?

> Regards

> Annel

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