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Parent Emeritus
When a difficult child doesn't feel well ....oh, the agony!
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<blockquote data-quote="CrazyinVA" data-source="post: 550727" data-attributes="member: 1157"><p>Oh boy do I hear you on this one. Just last week, Youngest had bronchitis. She went to the ER to find this out instead of waiting for a doctor appointment. Got medications. A few days later, was feeling worse, and had a doctor appointment for follow up. She called me to let me know she was feeling horrible, was dizzy and exhausted (she told me she "fainted"), was on her way to the doctor, and that she wa SO sick she thought they might put her in the hospital and wanted to let me know "just in case." (translation: she didn't want to take care of the kids while she was sick and would want me to take off work and drive an hour down there to help her). I told her I knew how hard it was to be sick when you're a single mom, I remember it well. It hoovers. I said to be sure she was well hydrated, rest as much as she could, and to wait and see what the doctor said before worrying about anything as serious as hospitalization. She said, "you act like you don't care!!") </p><p></p><p>By the next day she was fine, by the way.</p><p></p><p>Hypochondria and difficult children go together.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CrazyinVA, post: 550727, member: 1157"] Oh boy do I hear you on this one. Just last week, Youngest had bronchitis. She went to the ER to find this out instead of waiting for a doctor appointment. Got medications. A few days later, was feeling worse, and had a doctor appointment for follow up. She called me to let me know she was feeling horrible, was dizzy and exhausted (she told me she "fainted"), was on her way to the doctor, and that she wa SO sick she thought they might put her in the hospital and wanted to let me know "just in case." (translation: she didn't want to take care of the kids while she was sick and would want me to take off work and drive an hour down there to help her). I told her I knew how hard it was to be sick when you're a single mom, I remember it well. It hoovers. I said to be sure she was well hydrated, rest as much as she could, and to wait and see what the doctor said before worrying about anything as serious as hospitalization. She said, "you act like you don't care!!") By the next day she was fine, by the way. Hypochondria and difficult children go together. [/QUOTE]
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When a difficult child doesn't feel well ....oh, the agony!
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