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Parent Emeritus
Hygiene Issues with older difficult children?
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<blockquote data-quote="CrazyinVA" data-source="post: 152713" data-attributes="member: 1157"><p>She has gotten comments from friends, in fact, she gets talked <u>about</u> frequently by people with regard to her hygiene issues, that's happened ever since high school. Youngest has heard lots of that through the grapevine. It doesn't seem to make much of a difference, unfortunately.. at least, not long-term. She cycles through friends pretty regularly, very few have stuck by her over the years. I don't think she's easy to be friends with. </p><p></p><p>I wish she'd go back to therapy, but doesn't seem to be very interested in that. That cycle seems to come when she is in a crisis, she'll admit herself to a psychiatric unit, stick with medications and therapy for about a month after dischage, and then stop again. It's been a few years since that happened, though. Since she's 24, not much I can do but watch, and encourage occasionally when she'll listen.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CrazyinVA, post: 152713, member: 1157"] She has gotten comments from friends, in fact, she gets talked [u]about[/u] frequently by people with regard to her hygiene issues, that's happened ever since high school. Youngest has heard lots of that through the grapevine. It doesn't seem to make much of a difference, unfortunately.. at least, not long-term. She cycles through friends pretty regularly, very few have stuck by her over the years. I don't think she's easy to be friends with. I wish she'd go back to therapy, but doesn't seem to be very interested in that. That cycle seems to come when she is in a crisis, she'll admit herself to a psychiatric unit, stick with medications and therapy for about a month after dischage, and then stop again. It's been a few years since that happened, though. Since she's 24, not much I can do but watch, and encourage occasionally when she'll listen. [/QUOTE]
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Hygiene Issues with older difficult children?
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