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General Parenting
So, My Son That Is Supposedly Not Bipolar
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<blockquote data-quote="Shari" data-source="post: 114171" data-attributes="member: 1848"><p>Hugs! Many of them.</p><p></p><p>I apologize, I don't recall all of the details of the "middle" of Dylan's story, but I do recall when you first came here that mood stabilizing medications made a world of difference for Dylan. If I recall correctly, it was the side effects that eventually took them away.</p><p></p><p>I have never been sure that my difficult child 1's diagnosis of BiPolar (BP) is correct, however, even tho he denies adamantly that there's anything "wrong" with him, he will readily admit that mood stabilizers made him feel a WHOLE lot better - less distracted, better memory, less depression, etc (his descriptions, not mine). I've questioned several docs, and they all say the same thing - if there wasn't something to "correct", the drugs wouldn't "help" him.</p><p></p><p>So I guess I'd be looking down that road again.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Shari, post: 114171, member: 1848"] Hugs! Many of them. I apologize, I don't recall all of the details of the "middle" of Dylan's story, but I do recall when you first came here that mood stabilizing medications made a world of difference for Dylan. If I recall correctly, it was the side effects that eventually took them away. I have never been sure that my difficult child 1's diagnosis of BiPolar (BP) is correct, however, even tho he denies adamantly that there's anything "wrong" with him, he will readily admit that mood stabilizers made him feel a WHOLE lot better - less distracted, better memory, less depression, etc (his descriptions, not mine). I've questioned several docs, and they all say the same thing - if there wasn't something to "correct", the drugs wouldn't "help" him. So I guess I'd be looking down that road again. [/QUOTE]
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So, My Son That Is Supposedly Not Bipolar
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