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Would you do this for your difficult child?
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<blockquote data-quote="trinityroyal" data-source="post: 562377" data-attributes="member: 3907"><p>I can understand the need to monitor your difficult child's medications, especially with the constraints from the pharmacy. We live with that as well, and it can really cause problems. Still, if your difficult child is going to treat you horribly when you're taking him to the doctor, is there any leverage you can use on him? Can you make him find his own transportation, or would he just ditch the appointment if you didn't drive him there? It's a delicate balancing act, that's for sure.</p><p></p><p>And yes, I think that once your difficult child is on his own he will look back and realize that it was the best thing you could have done for him. </p><p></p><p>In my case, I left of my own accord rather than being thrown, but it was one of my best decisions.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="trinityroyal, post: 562377, member: 3907"] I can understand the need to monitor your difficult child's medications, especially with the constraints from the pharmacy. We live with that as well, and it can really cause problems. Still, if your difficult child is going to treat you horribly when you're taking him to the doctor, is there any leverage you can use on him? Can you make him find his own transportation, or would he just ditch the appointment if you didn't drive him there? It's a delicate balancing act, that's for sure. And yes, I think that once your difficult child is on his own he will look back and realize that it was the best thing you could have done for him. In my case, I left of my own accord rather than being thrown, but it was one of my best decisions. [/QUOTE]
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Would you do this for your difficult child?
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