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General Parenting
difficult child in neighbor's closet (long)
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<blockquote data-quote="klmno" data-source="post: 182070" data-attributes="member: 3699"><p>It might help to look at the bkkids website and there are a couple of others (one for juvenile BiPolar (BP))- but, I'd suggest looking at the different (but similar) lists, printing a couple out and taking to psychiatrist with checkmarks alongside the things he has done. One of the earliest things my son did, that I had no clue what it meant until much, much later, was the craving for sweets/certain foods. When my son is unstable, he will literally steal packs of sugar from restaurants and eat the sugar right out of the packets (he sneaks- I find handfuls of empty sugar packets). Initially, I thought he was acted hyper because he had eaten all that sugar. Of course the sugar didn't help, but the compulsion, action, and hyperness actually resulted from the illness. To me, my difficult child's hypomanic state looks like ADHD-</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="klmno, post: 182070, member: 3699"] It might help to look at the bkkids website and there are a couple of others (one for juvenile BiPolar (BP))- but, I'd suggest looking at the different (but similar) lists, printing a couple out and taking to psychiatrist with checkmarks alongside the things he has done. One of the earliest things my son did, that I had no clue what it meant until much, much later, was the craving for sweets/certain foods. When my son is unstable, he will literally steal packs of sugar from restaurants and eat the sugar right out of the packets (he sneaks- I find handfuls of empty sugar packets). Initially, I thought he was acted hyper because he had eaten all that sugar. Of course the sugar didn't help, but the compulsion, action, and hyperness actually resulted from the illness. To me, my difficult child's hypomanic state looks like ADHD- [/QUOTE]
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