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General Parenting
and then there is this potential
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<blockquote data-quote="klmno" data-source="post: 184695" data-attributes="member: 3699"><p>I like the idea of "emotional issues" instead of "BiPolar (BP)". I guess my mind went immediately to "OMG, I have to tell them everything about him", but I guess I don't.</p><p></p><p>I would want them to feel comfortable telling me if they ever saw difficult child doing things that weren't quite right, instead of just whisking their kids inside. Of course, I don't expect them to babysit him or watch out for him like protecting him or being responsible for him. I guess I'd like to gradually educate them like we advocate for our kids- you know, so they ultimately get the point that a kid who is unstable sometimes warrants letting the parent know what you've seen and yes, protect your own kids, but you don't have to panic and black-list the kid forever.</p><p></p><p>I might be dreaming too much on that one- I guess I should stick to what you all suggest to start out with!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="klmno, post: 184695, member: 3699"] I like the idea of "emotional issues" instead of "BiPolar (BP)". I guess my mind went immediately to "OMG, I have to tell them everything about him", but I guess I don't. I would want them to feel comfortable telling me if they ever saw difficult child doing things that weren't quite right, instead of just whisking their kids inside. Of course, I don't expect them to babysit him or watch out for him like protecting him or being responsible for him. I guess I'd like to gradually educate them like we advocate for our kids- you know, so they ultimately get the point that a kid who is unstable sometimes warrants letting the parent know what you've seen and yes, protect your own kids, but you don't have to panic and black-list the kid forever. I might be dreaming too much on that one- I guess I should stick to what you all suggest to start out with! [/QUOTE]
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