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General Parenting
My son used to be a sweet little empath.
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<blockquote data-quote="PiscesMom" data-source="post: 718814" data-attributes="member: 19889"><p>By the way - you said your son was a sweet little empath.</p><p></p><p>Ok - since my son was 13.5, he has been a nightmare. A year of him terrorizing me and the girls, finally I had him arrested, he lives w his dad and they grow weed together, stays in residentials, etc. My strained relationship w him, my other daughters' mental health struggles. (All of this popped up in their early teens, I can think of many reasons, one being brain wiring, stresses, whatever.)</p><p>Now he is 18, still at dad's, still smoking round the clock, but he really seems to be understanding his mental illness.</p><p>He is seeing a therapist. We talk, we connect. He feels bad for having bullied my daughter, and contributing to her anxiety.</p><p>My son was always very sweet, very thoughtful. He had a diagnosis of conduct disorder, but always scored very high on higher level thinking, which doesn't fit.</p><p>My point, and my head hurts from crying so much last night from being judged by a professional who doesn't know me or my daughter, so I kind of rambling.</p><p></p><p>The person your son is, the sweet boy, still there. You just may not see him for awhile.</p><p></p><p>Can you get yourself to NAMI? They really are great.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="PiscesMom, post: 718814, member: 19889"] By the way - you said your son was a sweet little empath. Ok - since my son was 13.5, he has been a nightmare. A year of him terrorizing me and the girls, finally I had him arrested, he lives w his dad and they grow weed together, stays in residentials, etc. My strained relationship w him, my other daughters' mental health struggles. (All of this popped up in their early teens, I can think of many reasons, one being brain wiring, stresses, whatever.) Now he is 18, still at dad's, still smoking round the clock, but he really seems to be understanding his mental illness. He is seeing a therapist. We talk, we connect. He feels bad for having bullied my daughter, and contributing to her anxiety. My son was always very sweet, very thoughtful. He had a diagnosis of conduct disorder, but always scored very high on higher level thinking, which doesn't fit. My point, and my head hurts from crying so much last night from being judged by a professional who doesn't know me or my daughter, so I kind of rambling. The person your son is, the sweet boy, still there. You just may not see him for awhile. Can you get yourself to NAMI? They really are great. [/QUOTE]
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My son used to be a sweet little empath.
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