Ps- Is it wise to... thoughts and advice please

mawme25

New Member
is it wise for the child to even know of a support like this for the parent
any advice on this..also
thanks :doctor:
 

JJJ

Active Member
NO!! No children allowed! LOL, my kids know y'all as mommy's computer friends but they don't know that this is a message board or where to find us.
 

OpenWindow

Active Member
My kids know that I go to a site and talk to other parents with issues like difficult child. difficult child doesn't know the name of the site, though, and probably never will. I have let him read some posts that I thought were relevant.

Linda
 

busywend

Well-Known Member
Nope. Do not let your child or anyone you know in on this little secret until or only if you are comfortable with them knowing everything you post here.
 
K

Kjs

Guest
Do not let your children here. Sometimes we just need to vent, and would not want them to know how we are really falling apart sometimes.
 

DammitJanet

Well-Known Member
My kids are older and have known about this site forever. They know the people here as their "board aunties" and when something happens in their lives good or bad the first thing they tell me to do is "go tell the board mom"...lol. They know Im gonna do it anyway.

They know I have shared graduations, boot camp, worries, jail, Residential Treatment Center (RTC)'s, group homes, marriages, divorces, and births with the people here. My kids feel as much a part of some of the folks lives as I do. If something happened to me, they all would know to come here and tell this site.

Of course I have been here since my youngest was 12...lol. He is almost 21.
 

slsh

member since 1999
thank you has known about the "board" for years. Knows I have friends who have helped me, educated me, and propped me up when necessary. Knows about some of the kids/parents who have been here as long as me (Janet :wink: ). Uses the terminology. Doesn't know the website but I'm sure if he were so inclined he could find it. Fortunately, he's far too involved in his own little world - I seriously doubt he'd ever try to find us.

I don't think it's wrong for our kids to know that *we* need support too. We're trying to teach them to utilize available tools and supports. Isn't that what *we're* doing here?

I certainly wouldn't pass out the URL. :wink:
 

Hound dog

Nana's are Beautiful
My difficult children knew "of" the board for years. But I never gave them the knowledge needed to access the site. Once they hit like 16, I no longer stopped worrying over if they knew how to get here or not.

T could careless. But lots of times N or easy child have read posts with me. easy child is sometimes a lurker here. They know this is Mom's hang out, and a place I blow off steam and get feedback. They were warned long ago to not read the board if they wouldn't be able to handle what it says.

Heck, my kids have come to think of you all as their board auties. :kisses:
 

Marguerite

Active Member
It really depends on the kids, as to how much you share about this site. I know my kids will respect my boundaries. Example - easy child 2/difficult child 2 bought a Lindt white chocolate bunny for BF2 for Easter. I had tried to buy one for him, but she was the one who managed to find one. I told husband last night to put in in our room (BF2 was nearby, I didn't want to explain in more detail, it IS supposed to be a surprise!). This morning easy child 2/difficult child 2 asked where it had been put and when I told her she asked, "Can you check for me in your special drawer? Dad probably put it there and I'm not allowed to look in there at all."

In our case, I DO tell our kids about this site. If she has time I suspect easy child even browses. I know husband does, and it's been a really good thing for us, because he then understands better what I've been trying to tell him (however, never VENT about your husband if you want him to lurk here too).

There have been times when I've asked my kids their advice about someone's difficult child. The kids have been really useful for ideas and as a sounding board.

However - from the sound of your daughter right now, I wouldn't tell her. Not yet. You might hint that you've found some online friends with kids who have similar issues to her, and that we're all sympathetic to BOTH if you (hey, if she's got some sort of disorder then it's not her fault as much as she has been blamed). But you need to get past the hurdle of "my mother is my enemy, she always makes me do stuff I don't want to do," and you "my daughter is a monster, I don't know what to do with her, she is so oppositional it's frightening."
You need to get to a point where you both recognise that there is some positive solution somewhere and you're both working towards it. And you're not there yet.
With help and hard work, you can be. Not "you will be." but CAN. If you do not succeed, do not blame anyone. Not her, not yourself. It just IS. Blame slows you down, slows your thoughts and your energy and makes it even harder to do anything positive. If you try something and it doesn't work, then you have competed that experiment and gained knowledge that can be used (ie "I won't do that again"). Time has not been wasted. You have one less dead end to explore.

We're here for you, we understand. And on matters of faith, a lot of us understand there, too. But we keep it at the back of our minds, not right at the front, because here we have space for all faiths (including non-faith). I'll take advice from anybody, folks! And I want them to stick around on this site, I don't want to make them feel uncomfortable by loudly proclaiming my particular views on faith, unless I'm asked (as in recent post, discussing church and difficult children). For a lot of us from a range of faiths, it helps us cope. For those who choose non-faith, they have their own coping strategies which we also respect.
There is always room for what helps us cope, as long as we can respect that what works for us may not be everybody's cup of tea.

I'm glad you've found us. I really hope we can help you and help your daughter, just as you probably can help us in similar ways.

Welcome!

Marg
 
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