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Failure to Thrive
Fraternal Twin with conduct disorder, just devastated
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<blockquote data-quote="karisma" data-source="post: 693784" data-attributes="member: 20391"><p>Yes Copa, you are correct -- everything changes. Keeping ourselves in good shape is actually the only thing we can control and our suffering does nothing positive for the Difficult Child's. And SWOT, you are so right that they do not want to see or know our emotional pain, our falling apart. My son will take off from wherever we are meeting at if I show any sadness for his condition. While I am with him, I project the attitude of "its your life, do as you please, I'm indifferent"</p><p>Hope. It buoys the spirit when I have it and crushes the heart when I lose it. But I always seem to find it again on some level...and then lose it again. And on and on. So long as they are alive, there is hope</p><p>Admittedly, I feel very little hope for any real change in his condition. But I still hold on to hope that I can learn to cope better, or move on emotionally, or in some way salvage my own future. </p><p>And Rebjoh, you just put the pictures in the closet until the day you can handle them being out again. They do get better. They also get worse again, and get better again.</p><p>Such is the journey of the Difficult Child</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="karisma, post: 693784, member: 20391"] Yes Copa, you are correct -- everything changes. Keeping ourselves in good shape is actually the only thing we can control and our suffering does nothing positive for the Difficult Child's. And SWOT, you are so right that they do not want to see or know our emotional pain, our falling apart. My son will take off from wherever we are meeting at if I show any sadness for his condition. While I am with him, I project the attitude of "its your life, do as you please, I'm indifferent" Hope. It buoys the spirit when I have it and crushes the heart when I lose it. But I always seem to find it again on some level...and then lose it again. And on and on. So long as they are alive, there is hope Admittedly, I feel very little hope for any real change in his condition. But I still hold on to hope that I can learn to cope better, or move on emotionally, or in some way salvage my own future. And Rebjoh, you just put the pictures in the closet until the day you can handle them being out again. They do get better. They also get worse again, and get better again. Such is the journey of the Difficult Child [/QUOTE]
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Failure to Thrive
Fraternal Twin with conduct disorder, just devastated
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