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General Parenting
Does your difficult child teen daughter, when Tom
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<blockquote data-quote="flutterbee" data-source="post: 180240"><p>My difficult child isn't regular yet - she started out that way and has slid back and her GP said it takes 3-5 years to become regular. I remember learning in school that it took a year. *shrug* So, tracking it in terms of knowing when it's going to hit and prepare with medications (as if she would take them) wouldn't help us right now.</p><p></p><p>However, I had horrible PMS that lasted about 2 weeks out of the month. I'd have days where I had to force myself to be nice to people. I'd literally push my eyebrows up and they'd go right back down into a scowl. And everything bothered me - my hair touching, my clothes touching me, people breathing....</p><p></p><p>I guess they call that PMDD now? I'll have to keep an eye on that with difficult child. From my own personal experience, it's much worse to live it than to live with someone with it...and I say that living with a difficult child who I think experiences it, too. You just want out of your skin.</p><p></p><p>Thankfully, I don't have a TOM anymore because of medications for endometriosis and my life (internally) has never been so calm. I think I could probably stop the lexapro and be ok, but if I stopped the aygestin I'd probably lose it again.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="flutterbee, post: 180240"] My difficult child isn't regular yet - she started out that way and has slid back and her GP said it takes 3-5 years to become regular. I remember learning in school that it took a year. *shrug* So, tracking it in terms of knowing when it's going to hit and prepare with medications (as if she would take them) wouldn't help us right now. However, I had horrible PMS that lasted about 2 weeks out of the month. I'd have days where I had to force myself to be nice to people. I'd literally push my eyebrows up and they'd go right back down into a scowl. And everything bothered me - my hair touching, my clothes touching me, people breathing.... I guess they call that PMDD now? I'll have to keep an eye on that with difficult child. From my own personal experience, it's much worse to live it than to live with someone with it...and I say that living with a difficult child who I think experiences it, too. You just want out of your skin. Thankfully, I don't have a TOM anymore because of medications for endometriosis and my life (internally) has never been so calm. I think I could probably stop the lexapro and be ok, but if I stopped the aygestin I'd probably lose it again. [/QUOTE]
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