Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Tweens and Teens
Reply to "Dealing with high needs teen daughter"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]the second 19:33 PP here. I also counted down the years, then months, then weeks, until college. Not unusual; it's just a coping mechanism. Agree with PPs that college might not be better, but in our case, it has been great. I'm visiting my DD now (she stayed in her college town during the summer to work--which would be inconceivable to me in the past). Really, it's all the best parts of being with her and little of the worst. Out of the house is key imo, because the dynamic changes. I will tell you, when she comes home to visit, she regresses. (Many kids do). But it's okay as I'm ready for that, and I remind myself that it's temporary. OP, here is the biggest thing I've learned. Part of what's going on is you are probably shouldering a lot of whatever she needs to support her. Kids like this need a team to support them, not just mom. It's too hard to be the whole team, by yourself. And you need a team to support YOU. My DD's team: *Her psychiatrist * Her therapist *Someone to test or retest your DD. Mine was not diagnosed with ADHD until after she graduated from high school. I *think* ADHD is more commonly diagnosed when a kid is faltering in school, but my DD was doing well enough that it went unnoticed. * Her art teacher. More below. We fell into this situation, but what ended up happening was in high school, her art teacher came over every Friday evening. In truth, it was not about art, but really, a relationship between my DD and another middle aged adult woman who could offer advice and support. * After high school (too late imo but that's how it played out) and educational therapist who specializes in ADHD. She still zooms with this person now, and I have not had to step in to pick classes or do logistics; this person both works with DD to do executive functioning but also to teach her how to do it. So much is off my plate because of this person. My team: *My therapist *My physical therapist who has also becaome my friend and who has a difficult child and "gets it" *In the past (before DD went to college) my DD's art teacher mentioned above, who became a friend too. Although we were about the same age (mid-50s) this art teacher had kids in their early 30s, and the youngest kid had tons of mental health issues--way more severe than my DDs--but she knew how hard it was and how much a mom can suffer. Because really what you are describing, OP, is your suffering. *Friend(s) who had difficult kid(s) and we could commiserrate and also strategize together. Who was NOT on my team: *DH--great guy but I don't count him as part of my team because--because it's better that way, for me, because he can screw up a bit; he doesn't really know how to handle DD and seems to be unteachable. So if I don't expect him to HELP me with my own issues with DD, it's so much better. *Friends with NT kids who did not get how hard it is at all. Don't even try to explain. Even now, my friends with same-age kids were SO excited to have their kids come home after the first year of college, while I was not looking forward to it. BTW, if you've read this far, I'll end with a bit of good news: my DD's psychiatrist, who specializes in these-types-of-kids, says so much brain growth goes on with these kids between 20-25. "By 25, you won't know her!" HTH, OP! [/quote] How much did this team cost? It seems prohibitively expensive.[/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics