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Antisocial Personality Disorder Diagnosis of my 18 year old son
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<blockquote data-quote="mrsammler" data-source="post: 432969"><p>"Was anyone successful in getting him to leave without the police?"</p><p></p><p>I was able to pull this off in getting my nephew difficult child (almost certainly ASPD, although I'm no clinician--has every trait in plain, inarguable abundance) out of my sister's house a year ago, but it was literally a brawl involving his younger brother and (especially) me in a very violent scene, him smashing furnishings, punching holes in walls, throwing stuff all over the place, violently cussing out everyone in the house, repeatedly attacking me (I was the "bouncer" who was there to help my sister put him out, so he saw me as the primary enemy), etc etc. My sense is that they never expect that you'll actually do it, and when you do, all of their pretenses fall away and they become viciously violent and abusive. You NEED a strong male to help you, one who won't shy away or back down from the possibility of a violent confrontation, and it's best to literally hide anything that difficult child might grab and use as a weapon--the butcher block, sharp knives in the kitchen, etc. You have no idea how bad it can get when it comes down to actually, literally putting a late-teens male difficult child out of the house. Be prepared.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mrsammler, post: 432969"] "Was anyone successful in getting him to leave without the police?" I was able to pull this off in getting my nephew difficult child (almost certainly ASPD, although I'm no clinician--has every trait in plain, inarguable abundance) out of my sister's house a year ago, but it was literally a brawl involving his younger brother and (especially) me in a very violent scene, him smashing furnishings, punching holes in walls, throwing stuff all over the place, violently cussing out everyone in the house, repeatedly attacking me (I was the "bouncer" who was there to help my sister put him out, so he saw me as the primary enemy), etc etc. My sense is that they never expect that you'll actually do it, and when you do, all of their pretenses fall away and they become viciously violent and abusive. You NEED a strong male to help you, one who won't shy away or back down from the possibility of a violent confrontation, and it's best to literally hide anything that difficult child might grab and use as a weapon--the butcher block, sharp knives in the kitchen, etc. You have no idea how bad it can get when it comes down to actually, literally putting a late-teens male difficult child out of the house. Be prepared. [/QUOTE]
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Antisocial Personality Disorder Diagnosis of my 18 year old son
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