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difficult child Hallucinated
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<blockquote data-quote="TerryJ2" data-source="post: 289852" data-attributes="member: 3419"><p>If therapist suspects, that's a good thing. He apparently needs more time and more info.</p><p> </p><p>I can't recall why you aren't attending these sessions ... it seemed like you were there recently and husband said something weird and you didn't call him on it ... anyway, I would definitely tell therapist, because he needs all this info, not just bits and pieces. That's one thing that took us so long with-our difficult child--we were dealing with-individual behaviors, and until our easy child made an appointment on her own, and told the therapist in no uncertain terms that there was a pattern, he didn't get it.</p><p> </p><p>At any rate, I'm glad you have the alarms installed. Good safety devices. You don't want your son hallucinating on his way out the door and onto the street. It makes me want to hug him.</p><p> </p><p>You handled it well. You stayed calm and gathered as much info as you could. I've given my easy child water when she has had night terrors. It's a good, concrete, every day item--a glass of water--that somehow helps anchor them back to reality. It's a good transition.</p><p> </p><p>Best of luck.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TerryJ2, post: 289852, member: 3419"] If therapist suspects, that's a good thing. He apparently needs more time and more info. I can't recall why you aren't attending these sessions ... it seemed like you were there recently and husband said something weird and you didn't call him on it ... anyway, I would definitely tell therapist, because he needs all this info, not just bits and pieces. That's one thing that took us so long with-our difficult child--we were dealing with-individual behaviors, and until our easy child made an appointment on her own, and told the therapist in no uncertain terms that there was a pattern, he didn't get it. At any rate, I'm glad you have the alarms installed. Good safety devices. You don't want your son hallucinating on his way out the door and onto the street. It makes me want to hug him. You handled it well. You stayed calm and gathered as much info as you could. I've given my easy child water when she has had night terrors. It's a good, concrete, every day item--a glass of water--that somehow helps anchor them back to reality. It's a good transition. Best of luck. [/QUOTE]
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