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Parent Emeritus
difficult child breakdown; back to square one
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<blockquote data-quote="katya02" data-source="post: 307750" data-attributes="member: 2884"><p>Thank you both, I agree, I'm sure this isn't finished yet. I'm expecting more calls, if not tonight then very soon. I am going to meet with difficult child tomorrow and try very hard to get him to cooperate with evaluation. I don't know that I'll be successful at this point. Then, if he agrees, the trick is getting someone to actually evaluate him!! But I'll enlist husband and whoever he knows. Although, it's always the way, husband has to be in another city talking to attorneys tomorrow ... always something. But I'll rattle some cages myself. </p><p></p><p>I do think difficult child has serious potential for acting on suicidal impulses. His moods swing wildly, and he can go from being suicidal to being afraid for his life (which complicates emergency evaluations), but when he's 'in the moment' he's extremely impulsive.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="katya02, post: 307750, member: 2884"] Thank you both, I agree, I'm sure this isn't finished yet. I'm expecting more calls, if not tonight then very soon. I am going to meet with difficult child tomorrow and try very hard to get him to cooperate with evaluation. I don't know that I'll be successful at this point. Then, if he agrees, the trick is getting someone to actually evaluate him!! But I'll enlist husband and whoever he knows. Although, it's always the way, husband has to be in another city talking to attorneys tomorrow ... always something. But I'll rattle some cages myself. I do think difficult child has serious potential for acting on suicidal impulses. His moods swing wildly, and he can go from being suicidal to being afraid for his life (which complicates emergency evaluations), but when he's 'in the moment' he's extremely impulsive. [/QUOTE]
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difficult child breakdown; back to square one
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