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General Parenting
He was VERY good for US...
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<blockquote data-quote="butterflydreams" data-source="post: 225573"><p>Ugh! I hate that. Of course they didn't have any trouble, let them live with it day in and day out.</p><p></p><p>What I get from my ex-mother in law, who lives in another state and hasn't seen my daughter in 2 years and my son in almost 4, is:</p><p></p><p>your daughters mood swings aren't they just normal teenage girl stuff? She doesn't get it, nor does she want to accept that anything is wrong. I tried to explain that it is way different and more intense. I wasn't going to go into everything with her because she wouldn't understand or believe me anyway.</p><p></p><p>As far as difficult child, when he first went inpatient, she just couldn't understand it, when I told her the psychiatrist suspected bipolar she started crying and said you mean and have to take medicine for the rest of his life, then she said well I am not going to believe that.</p><p></p><p>UGH.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="butterflydreams, post: 225573"] Ugh! I hate that. Of course they didn't have any trouble, let them live with it day in and day out. What I get from my ex-mother in law, who lives in another state and hasn't seen my daughter in 2 years and my son in almost 4, is: your daughters mood swings aren't they just normal teenage girl stuff? She doesn't get it, nor does she want to accept that anything is wrong. I tried to explain that it is way different and more intense. I wasn't going to go into everything with her because she wouldn't understand or believe me anyway. As far as difficult child, when he first went inpatient, she just couldn't understand it, when I told her the psychiatrist suspected bipolar she started crying and said you mean and have to take medicine for the rest of his life, then she said well I am not going to believe that. UGH. [/QUOTE]
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He was VERY good for US...
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