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General Parenting
Does Not Get That You Reap What You Sow
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<blockquote data-quote="keista" data-source="post: 507196" data-attributes="member: 11965"><p>Even though he wasn't taking it, it could still be in his system - takes a while for some of these drugs to fully flush out. DD1 took about 4 weeks to have no trace of her "creepy" when she stopped Paxil. And after she stopped the Abilify it was almost two months until she got back to her "normal" self.</p><p></p><p>I've expressed my opinion more than once, so I won't repeat, but will suggest you try to evaluate all the possible differences between school and home. Regardless of what the diagnosis really is, it's odd to have such different behavior in the two settings - consistently. Possible things to examine - lighting, noise, decorations, schedule structure, discipline, expectations and how they are conveyed, relationships, number of relationships, intimacy level of relationships and how they specifically affect behavior.</p><p></p><p>This could help identify the diagnosis and possibly give you ideas of what could be changed to make his behavior better at home.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="keista, post: 507196, member: 11965"] Even though he wasn't taking it, it could still be in his system - takes a while for some of these drugs to fully flush out. DD1 took about 4 weeks to have no trace of her "creepy" when she stopped Paxil. And after she stopped the Abilify it was almost two months until she got back to her "normal" self. I've expressed my opinion more than once, so I won't repeat, but will suggest you try to evaluate all the possible differences between school and home. Regardless of what the diagnosis really is, it's odd to have such different behavior in the two settings - consistently. Possible things to examine - lighting, noise, decorations, schedule structure, discipline, expectations and how they are conveyed, relationships, number of relationships, intimacy level of relationships and how they specifically affect behavior. This could help identify the diagnosis and possibly give you ideas of what could be changed to make his behavior better at home. [/QUOTE]
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Does Not Get That You Reap What You Sow
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