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General Parenting
New York Times: The Bipolar Puzzle
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<blockquote data-quote="klmno" data-source="post: 194150" data-attributes="member: 3699"><p>Unless my son is mis-diagnosis'd and I'm completely off track- it seems to me that it would do everyone (public, difficult child's, teachers/administrators, judges, prospective tdocs, and parents) a whole lot of good if they started out an article about a child so smart or talented in some area that maybe he was gifted, then talked about depression in that child, then talked about how the child couldn't handle certain things at certain times, then talked about how the child became so focused on certain things, then talked about raging and mania, and stressed the part about how all this comes and goes (whether it be every few hours or every few months), and what the reality <em><strong>really is</strong></em> at home and school and community (trying to make friends), etc. Why doesn't anyone do that?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="klmno, post: 194150, member: 3699"] Unless my son is mis-diagnosis'd and I'm completely off track- it seems to me that it would do everyone (public, difficult child's, teachers/administrators, judges, prospective tdocs, and parents) a whole lot of good if they started out an article about a child so smart or talented in some area that maybe he was gifted, then talked about depression in that child, then talked about how the child couldn't handle certain things at certain times, then talked about how the child became so focused on certain things, then talked about raging and mania, and stressed the part about how all this comes and goes (whether it be every few hours or every few months), and what the reality [I][B]really is[/B][/I] at home and school and community (trying to make friends), etc. Why doesn't anyone do that? [/QUOTE]
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New York Times: The Bipolar Puzzle
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