Kids Activities  Quizzes  Photos  Classifieds  Coupons  Freebies 
Home  Login  Sign Up 
Raising Indigo Children
Public online group
 
Indigo child...??
My 8 year old son Andrew is of my concern. He is just "different". He's always had social problems at school, doesn't really have friends. Andrew is an honest (sometimes overly), extremely sensitive little boy. Academically he is above his peers, especially in math but when it comes to interpersonal relationships kids have a difficult time relating to Andrew and understanding him. His ways of coming to conclusions are very different, correct in the end but just different. When he was very little, maybe 2, he'd wake up in the middle of the night terrified of a "fire" (he's never seen one and never heard of any fire when he was 2). He sleepwalks regularly and never remembers any of it in the morning.
Kids at school make fun of him and don't want to play with Andrew because he's "different". It saddens me because I don't want him to be lonely... He acts out trying to impress others but in the end the people around him think that he's just plain weird. He has an easier time relating to adults and his statements are very "mature". Andrew just doesn't know how to be a kid...
Does he sound like an Indigo child? He doesn't seem to fit an ADHD or autism diagnosis criteria but he isn't like any of his peers I came across.
How do I handle his behaviors, how do I raise him to his best potential?
Posted by ivona on 12/30/2008 05:52 PM

 

Hi Ivona -

How are you and Andrew doing now?  Has anything changed in the last year?  I don't know your feelings on past lives, but if you believe, what your son experienced at the age of 2 was a memory of something that happened to him before he was born into this life.  Does he still sleepwalk?

I can relate to what your son is going through in school, my son experienced the same things. To this day, he still gets along better with adults and can converse with them on their same level. He is now 16. 

Be there to support your son Ivona. Help him to understand that there is nothing wrong with him, that he is special just the way he is and that one day, the kids his age will grow up and meet him on the same maturity level he is at now. Don't talk down to him either. Sit down with him and look him in the eye if there is something you really need him to understand. If you stand over him, the information will literally go right over the top of his head.

If you have any questions or would just like to chat, e-mail me at hypno4kids@yahoo.com

Blessings,
Mary Ernsberger, HHP

posted by Mary on 11/09/2009 02:02 PM

 
Your reply:
 
 
Privacy Policy |  Terms of Service |  Contact Us | About Us | Made in NYC
©2012 RaisingThem.com - All Rights Reserved