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Woke up to find a note from difficult child:
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<blockquote data-quote="dashcat" data-source="post: 552745" data-attributes="member: 9175"><p>She used to cycle infrequently and, though her highs were sky high, her lows weren't very low. That's how she managed to fly under the radar for so long. Her dad still thinks episodes like her leaving college to run off with I guy she met on the internet, had never met and "knew" for three weeks was typical teen behavior. Most of her less serious manic episodes did appear that way.</p><p></p><p>You are so right about the sex addiction. She'll go great guns with the girls until she gets tired of it and then she'll start speculating t that she might actually be straight and the guys will be lining up to prove that they are the "one" to help her to see the light. And back again. The combination of sex and drama are irrestible to her.</p><p></p><p>The truly funny thing about this is that my difficult child really does not like women. And I mean that in the sense that she does not relate to or get along terribly well with females. On my side of the family there is onlyl one male cousin - and he's gay. She does not talk to any of her girl cousins on either side outside of family gatherings ...and the, reluctantly. She is close to the gay cousin and, on her dad's side, she only hangs with the guy cousins. She has excatly one female friend - the crazy, enabling S, and they fight like cats. She had two good friends in HS (but these girls didn't know each other) and theyr eally hung in there with her. She burned both of those bridges evenutally.</p><p></p><p> And, Nancy, we better hope and pray that the very real possiblity that our difficult child's could meet never happens....</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dashcat, post: 552745, member: 9175"] She used to cycle infrequently and, though her highs were sky high, her lows weren't very low. That's how she managed to fly under the radar for so long. Her dad still thinks episodes like her leaving college to run off with I guy she met on the internet, had never met and "knew" for three weeks was typical teen behavior. Most of her less serious manic episodes did appear that way. You are so right about the sex addiction. She'll go great guns with the girls until she gets tired of it and then she'll start speculating t that she might actually be straight and the guys will be lining up to prove that they are the "one" to help her to see the light. And back again. The combination of sex and drama are irrestible to her. The truly funny thing about this is that my difficult child really does not like women. And I mean that in the sense that she does not relate to or get along terribly well with females. On my side of the family there is onlyl one male cousin - and he's gay. She does not talk to any of her girl cousins on either side outside of family gatherings ...and the, reluctantly. She is close to the gay cousin and, on her dad's side, she only hangs with the guy cousins. She has excatly one female friend - the crazy, enabling S, and they fight like cats. She had two good friends in HS (but these girls didn't know each other) and theyr eally hung in there with her. She burned both of those bridges evenutally. And, Nancy, we better hope and pray that the very real possiblity that our difficult child's could meet never happens.... [/QUOTE]
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Woke up to find a note from difficult child:
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