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General Parenting
For those of you with BiPolar
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<blockquote data-quote="tiredmommy" data-source="post: 9415" data-attributes="member: 1722"><p>WFEN brings up an interesting point. It seems to me that most of the difficult children who have done well either have a talent or a passion that they can work with (Martie's ex-difficult child). Some have new responsibilities that they take very seriously (Genny & Ant's Mom). The thing is, they end up doing well enough to either survive or thrive because they play to their strengths rather than their weaknesses. So, the trick is figuring out his skill set and going from there.</p><p>MWM has bipolar and just became a published author.</p><p>Dammit Janet worked for social services for years despite her bipolar.</p><p>Success and at least relative stability are possible...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tiredmommy, post: 9415, member: 1722"] WFEN brings up an interesting point. It seems to me that most of the difficult children who have done well either have a talent or a passion that they can work with (Martie's ex-difficult child). Some have new responsibilities that they take very seriously (Genny & Ant's Mom). The thing is, they end up doing well enough to either survive or thrive because they play to their strengths rather than their weaknesses. So, the trick is figuring out his skill set and going from there. MWM has bipolar and just became a published author. Dammit Janet worked for social services for years despite her bipolar. Success and at least relative stability are possible... [/QUOTE]
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