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General Parenting
what triggers mania or hypomania?
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<blockquote data-quote="Wonderful Family" data-source="post: 196810"><p>Mania/hypomania are very hard to predict, but we did identify two things that don't look like they were specifically mentioned. We've found with difficult child that he still cycles consistently over a certain period of time, it's just more obvious sometimes versus others. </p><p> </p><p>After a family crisis; he will always fall apart; difficult child holds everything in trying to help out during these situations most of the time. We're trying to work through the fall-out now from my Dad just passing away. He was a model child throughout Dad's sickness and funeral services.</p><p> </p><p>Slight, but consistent changes in behavior are also important predictors for our difficult child - the same comments, feedback, actions, etc. seem to happen over and over again. They are usually the foreshadow to the cycling that difficult child is still internalizing perhaps? What we used to be surprised by, we now can sometimes identify and help him to handle a little better. Unfortunately, we are still missing things far too often and end up with an "aha" moment afterwards - but it does seem to help some. </p><p> </p><p>Diet, exercise, sleep, etc. are all the same for my difficult child as mentioned by others.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Wonderful Family, post: 196810"] Mania/hypomania are very hard to predict, but we did identify two things that don't look like they were specifically mentioned. We've found with difficult child that he still cycles consistently over a certain period of time, it's just more obvious sometimes versus others. After a family crisis; he will always fall apart; difficult child holds everything in trying to help out during these situations most of the time. We're trying to work through the fall-out now from my Dad just passing away. He was a model child throughout Dad's sickness and funeral services. Slight, but consistent changes in behavior are also important predictors for our difficult child - the same comments, feedback, actions, etc. seem to happen over and over again. They are usually the foreshadow to the cycling that difficult child is still internalizing perhaps? What we used to be surprised by, we now can sometimes identify and help him to handle a little better. Unfortunately, we are still missing things far too often and end up with an "aha" moment afterwards - but it does seem to help some. Diet, exercise, sleep, etc. are all the same for my difficult child as mentioned by others. [/QUOTE]
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what triggers mania or hypomania?
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