Yesterday, my son and I played an entire game of Chutes and Ladders without him crying or running out of the room, even when he didn’t win.
This has been a long time coming. Michael has wanted to play board games for the last couple of years, but would usually quit in tears when it looked like he was losing, or try to change the rules around to suit him partway through.
I have tried lots of different approaches. We have talked about what it feels like to lose and what he could say or do that wouldn’t involve yelling or destroying the game board, without much success when it actually came down to it.
I have insisted that he come back and finish the game after calming down, often resulting in another meltdown. I have given in on occasion and played games by whatever rules he wanted.
Finally, I have said that he could choose to stop playing the game and do something else if he would tell me nicely and help clean up the game, also easier said than done. The ironic thing about this is that once we finish this, he often immediately asks to play a different board game! Uh, no.
What seems to have made the difference is a practice I picked up from his current speech therapist of reviewing the rules of an activity before starting it, even if it is something he has done before.
So now I go over the rules of each game before we start playing, no matter how many times we have played it. If he gets upset during the game, we stop and talk about what the confusion is and take however much time is necessary to figure it out before continuing to play.
At this point, I am even reviewing the rules if we play the game again right away. This is due to an Old Maid incident last week where he became extremely upset because he had the fewest matches, despite the fact that this was our second game and we had gone over the rules before the first one. Once he calmed down, we reviewed the rules again and he was able to finish the game.
Not earthshaking, I know, but one of the things I am thankful for this week.
Trish can be found writing here at 5MFSN every Friday in addition to hosting Try This Tuesday. You can also find Trish at her blog, Another Piece of the Puzzle.













Great milestone!
Just last week, I reviewed with my son the merits of enjoying the process of playing Chutes and Ladders, and not being as concerned with who wins. I think we each won once.
It’s important to help our kids to enjoy things whether they win or lose. I wasn’t given the opportunity to lose, and now, while I enjoy a game for the friendship time and no longer excessively strive to win, I have a lot of trouble handling failures in real life.
I don’t know, Trish, this sounds pretty earthshaking to me. I have two sons that we’ve worked with for years on this exact issue, and your approach is excellent. Way to stick with it, mom.
[...] over at 5 Minutes for Special Needs today sharing about how we finally managed to finish a board game without anyone falling apart (me [...]
I’d say that is a pretty big breakthrough. This is one of those things that can make or break interacting with peers. Frog is still a long ways off from sitting for a board game, but I can see how making the rules reveiw part of the activity routine would be very helpful – I’m tucking this nugget away for later :0)
Thanks Trish!
I think it’s great too and I am going to start doing it with our boys. They get frustrated and what to give up right in the middle of the game many times. I think it’s great advice for families.
That’s wonderful!!! I’ll keep this in mind. We’re working on board games. More turn taking than following rules and finishing…but we’ll get there!
Thanks!
That’s impressive! My 7-yr-olds have a hard time with board games. They do pretty good with turn-taking (after a lot of work on that) but BH prefers to play by his own rules and CB often loses interest after the first couple of minutes and starts getting hyper and being overly silly and pretty soon there are pieces everywhere.
They both wanted to try chess club this year but I think we’re done now. BH lost interest and CB keeps having meltdowns when he loses
. Maybe we’ll try again next year if they want to.
That’s great, Trish! So glad you found something that works for him!