I’m in my 50s. I was raised in the same. It’s still alarming. |
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Sounds more quirky/gothy/phase-y to me than anything truly alarming. It’s a creative outlet and is about creating her own identity.
-former emo kid |
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I’m not saying this kid is Ethan crumbly…but a mom or teacher who posted about the drawings he drew would likely get plenty of responses aging it’s normal, be careful making a big deal about it, I was like this, etc.
I think this is outside what’s normal (in some ways) and should be looked into further by a professional. |
I agree. You really need to talk to someone quickly, OP. The verbiage and focus isn't consistent with what I see with my 11 year old students. If I saw a note written that way then I would be down in the counselor's office with the student before you could blink. (MS Teacher) |
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To be fair, it's hard to tell whether there are real red flags here, or whether OP is just clutching her pearls because her younger DD is much more edgy than her perfectly perfect older DD.
There isn't a good solution, other than OP taking a very close and very long look at what her DD is doing or saying, and whether it's really a red flag. Under-reacting is bad, but overreacting could severely damage OP's relationship with her DD, especially if the DD perceives that OP just wants her to be like her older sister. |
100% disagree. She told us what her kid is doing and saying. Much of it is fine. Some does not seem fine. Mom is not qualified to determine if it’s all fine or not. A hard look at it won’t clarify it. She needs some input from professionals. You make it sound like overreacting (seeking help) has to be damaging. It doesn’t. She privately tells the therapist and pediatrician what has been said and done. She makes it clear to her daughter that she’s just seeking input from a therapist because whatever (always healthy to have neutral outlets, etc.). She doesn’t need to say I’m worried about your mental health so we are having you evaluated. Don’t scare the mom into thinking seeking help may ruin her relationship with her kid. |
| I have an 11 year old who is similar. I think there is a lot of goth-ish content for the younger set-from Lemony Snicket to tv and movies. The thing that stood out to me as a possible warning sign is not liking people. Does she have friends and enjoy their company? I would be worried about a kid who was social isolated no matter what, but even more so if they are anti-social and having stabby thoughts. For my kid I think some of it comes from having an inside and outside that don't match. To the world she is this tiny pretty girl who must love princesses and butterflies and they treat her accordingly-which she hates! |
| I just read The Push and so maybe I’m still thinking about the book, but definitely talk to your pediatrician first, and possibly a child psychologist as well. |
Good book! |
| Your kid is fine. Too many boring WASPs in this area. My otherwise boring sister was really into serial killers. I’m a goth myself although you wouldn’t know at work since I’m very high up, only if you were a close friend. |
My kid is fascinated by serial killers. Movies about them, documentaries, books, etc - she’s all over them. She does not imagine the deaths of people who annoy her, let alone by a painful and specific way. Her goth was or gore interest are normal. (How else would dateline and 48 hours still be in the air)? This kid goes beyond that. |
DP. The two big sticking points for me are that the younger DD has a best friend, and the OP went on at great length about her perfect older daughter. If the daughter were truly disturbed, I can't imagine her having any friends, much less a very close one. That, and OP's expectations that her younger DD would be just like her perfect older DD make me wonder whether OP is exaggerating or pathologizing behavior that is merely edgy. |
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I have a fairly noir-ish kid (he even loved the Charles Addams Mother Goose as a toddler/preschooler), but his outlook wasn't uniformly dark. He loved movies with explosions, but people being mean to each other really upset him.
Actual, specific descriptions of serious harm to someone is a red flag. |
| Op, people keep pointing out that you seem to favor your older child. I disagree- I vibe from your post that you find your “Wednesday Addams” child to be of superior intellect, precocious, creative, etc. And she may be all of those things. But there are some real flags in your description and I’d talk to a therapist. |
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That would worry me too!
Glad to hear she likes animals tho!! |