
imaginary friends
Posted May 26, 2013 by anonymous | 331 views | 9 comments
my 4 year old child has conversations with something that is not there when I ask him who he is talking to he just says "no one mom" out of the blue he will just run up to me and say that there is something in his room he never really seems frightened though I don't know if this is just a case of a overactive imagination or something a little more complicated than that if any of you have had similar expiriences your feedback is appreciated thank you
Commented May 30, 2013 by anonymous
children are more able to see spirits than grown ups. it is not a bad thing, nothing to be scared of , nothing to be made a big deal out of. i know our world does not sanction such things as being real and thats really the only way its something big. in many other countries its par for the course
Commented May 27, 2013 by anonymous
Consult with a child psychologist in this regard a fit.
Commented May 27, 2013 by anonymous
I'm definitely going to look into this Thank you.
Commented May 27, 2013 by anonymous
Asian (specifically Hmong) beliefs is that young children who have not broken their first tooth yet, can see ghosts/spirits. Maybe it's similar to that? Or else, like the other comments, they're just sensitive to such things that are unseen.
Commented May 26, 2013 by anonymous
Sounds like an attention getting ploy to me. I'm thinking he'll grow out of it.
Commented May 26, 2013 by anonymous
I'm actually being very serious here so your idiotic comments are not needed Thank you
Commented May 26, 2013 by anonymous
Uh oh. It sounds like "The Sixth Sense". Ask him if he's seeing Bruce Willis?
Commented May 26, 2013 by anonymous
It could be him seeing a ghost. I was the same way as a child and would tell them that they were my friends but they died. Young children are sensitive towards that kind of stuff.
Commented May 26, 2013 by anonymous
If he is an only child it is common, there shouldn't be any issues. When he starts school it will fade if by the age of 10 it don't stop take him to a childrens therapist