Op, pp here. This is the kind of treatment I’m talking about - if you’re in other states you can look for something similar. I would probably recommend a center that specializes in anxiety and offers these specific treatments. This one offers teletherapy. If you can access it in person near you that is great for kids, but since you mentioned you are in a small town I am sending this example. I think it can work at 9 through telehealth too!
https://www.ocd-dc.com/our-services At some point in your journey also recommend learning about and continuing doing a SPACE course together as parents. You won’t regret it! It can be huge for kids with anxiety. It is just for parents and gives you the tools to support your son. It is really hard to be the parent of a child struggling with anxiety, this can be a good toolkit. Potentially for the future once you get a handle on how much of this is anxiety, sounds like it probably is! https://www.rosscenter.com/ross_event/space-training-a-7-week-group-for-parents-of-anxious-children/ The Ross center linked above is also a great resource generally for kids and OCD, not sure if they do telehealth but would be worth a check. I didn’t link it above because it doesn’t note it though they very likely do and could also be a good fit for therapy for ERP. |
Considering** not continuing |
I'm sorry. I've been dealing with this with my child for a good decade. On the plus side, she's graduating from college next week. But there have been hospitalizations along the way. It's been incredibly stressful and expensive. You sound like you're doing the right things. I wish you the best. |
Our son was on a similar track around age 11. Looking back, we didn't take it seriously enough and relied on talk therapy, school adjustments and just trying to work through it. At age 16 he landed in residential treatment and we couldn't communicate with him for a month that included Christmas. Ugh.
Eventually, he got the drugs that really helped (mostly Bupropion) and a Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP) at Newport Academy. It was not the teenage years we imagined but he's alive, will graduate from high school and spends time with his friends. It's a win. Our regret was not going after his problems aggressively enough at the start. |
There’s a difference between suicidal ideation and talking about hurting yourself for attention. You should look closely at the latter. |
My kid has ASD and I wondered if this situation was an untreated child with ASD. Could you do a neuro-psych? |
Behavior is communication either way, PP. It's still not normal to threaten suicide for attention. The kid needs help either way, a therapist can figure out what type of help. |
+1 on this, OP. Have none of the therapists recommended a neuro-psych? That should be a baseline. |
My DS at 10 went through this. It was so scary and we felt so helpless. We ended up pulling him out of school to homeschool. He had skipped a grade during Covid and the social struggles had him spiraling. I’m so sorry |
The op says they have an assessment in June at a psych center. |
Op ignore this person who is not trained in mental health, clearly. 9 year olds do not do this for attention. If it is happening for “attention” it is related to complex trauma typically which doesn’t sound like your case. You got good advice in the beginning of this thread and it appears to be going off the rails I’m sorry! |
OP, just want to say that I’m sorry you’re dealing with this.
Sending light to your family. |
Thank you! I missed that part. Good luck with the assessment, OP. It could really help. |
NP. I'm so sorry you got stuck on talk therapy and no one helped you and your son progress to meds quickly. I think there is so much stigma around medication, and so many parents believe "We have to try everything before we try meds." In actuality, I think it's important parents are aware that they should sometimes think in reverse, especially when the behavior is dangerous or having a very negative impact, i.e. "meds first" or "meds quickly" may allow a kid to improve enough that they can actually take advantage of talk therapy and school adjustments, etc. Some kids need to stay on meds, but other kids may use medication for awhile until they learn to manage their feelings in other ways. I say that because my kid went on an anti-depressant in HS. Probably, he should have been on it in MS. He went off of it in college. He had some trouble academically and feeling depressed but he was able to work through it without going back on meds (even though I encouraged him to consider it). I think parents should not be so reluctant to try medication -- and that might include trying several different kinds of medication until the right one is found. |
I really disagree with the above statement. When you say, "you should look at the later," "you" means the parent -- parents are not trained to differentiate between a "real" suicide threat and a suicidal statement "made for attention". Every threat of suicide should be raised with a doctor or health professional -- they are the ones that are trained to assess such statements. I also think that it is somewhat stigmatic to label suicide threats as "for attention" in general. People who talk about suicide, whether they ultimately intend or try to take their life, are people that are in some kind of pain and deserve help, not dismissal and judgement that they are "doing it for attention." |