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
»
Adult Children
Reply to "Failure to Launch Daughter Is Unemployed and Blaming Me for All of Her Problems "
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][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]OP here. I'm back with an update. DD called me and said that she had a neuropsych eval last month, and that the results would come out later this week. I don't see the point of this at all because we already paid for a neuropsych eval ~5 years ago for her. She is convinced that she has autism, which is ridiculous -- her last neuropsych eval ruled that out. She told me over the phone this morning that "an update neuropsych will explain why I have a hard time in the workplace." Okay, well... regardless of whatever the results say, that doesn't help her situation. At all. I'm just sick of her making excuses for her immaturity. It seems like this fixation on autism is the latest in her attempt to build an identity or a personality that is, as always, based on victimhood. At first it was how "abusive" DH and I were to her as a child and how we "traumatized her for life," and now it's autism. None of this, of course, is helpful nor productive. [/quote] Teens are very difficult to diagnose, and autism often presents differently in women. It's a good thing to have a fresh evaluation, and it's a good thing that she recognizes something is going on. You should be waiting to see how you can be supportive of her growth in light of whatever her eval reveals. I had a super high achiever that wasn't diagnosed with severe ADHD and severe dyslexia until college. It was a gut punch knowing how difficult things had been for her. No one ever saw the signs, not me, not teachers, pediatricians, it only became apparent that something was really off when online schooling at the beginning of lockdown really impacted her. The diagnoses were very freeing and she learned to manage her life in a new way that was so much easier for her and relived so much stress and anxiety. OP you are so rigid and controlling. You are going to lose your daughter forever if you don't stop treating her with so much judgment and cruelty. It sounds to me like she is doing her best and you are the one who is failing. [/quote] OP here.[b] I just don't understand what an autism diagnose at the age of 24 would do. It's not like she's in high school or college, where an autism diagnosis would at least grant her accommodations and maybe access to social skills classes[/b]. It just feels like she wants an excuse from adulting, and that she's latching onto a potential autism diagnosis as a way to escape the "real world" of work and compromising in relationships. I also think that it's dubious how effective or helpful a diagnosis would be if she's getting diagnosed this late -- at that point, she's high functioning enough (if she even qualifies for a diagnosis in the first place, which I doubt as she's pretty good at picking up on subtext) that it wouldn't qualify her for disability income. [/quote] Many employers want to brag that they hire autistic adults - especially if they are large and seek or have federal contracts. Google Employers who hire autistic. This fact is pertinent to your situation, please keep reading. My DS is autistic/ADHD/Anxiety and 30. Testing was not as precise back then, so it took five rounds of testing with inconclusive findings ("high IQ/maybe ADHD, we don't know/executive function/anxiety") until at 14, we finally got the autism (then called Asperger's) diagnosis. And suddenly all of his struggles fell into line. Our two pediatricians and I missed it. When the psychiatrist told us, I remarked that he had fine, direct eye contact. The shrink said, "No, he doesn't, you are too close to it to see it". She was right - I mentioned that because a PP above said the same about those close to the child being unable to see some significant patterns. After that diagnosis, we tried private school, public school with an IEP, etc. He finished college, using disability services, and is doing fine in a job. The reason I mention all that is that he wanted (and his therapist recommended) a fresh round of testing at age 30, so he arranged it, and fortunately, his insurance paid for it. The diagnosis was more fulsome but still the same as when he was a teenager: Autism/anxiety/ADHD, but he felt it was well worthwhile because it confirmed for him his life experience. It was helpful to her therapist, physician, and executive-function coach to have it reassessed. That's why your daughter should have it done, and why she may need to do it again after three years. It may, indeed, explain some of the difficulties she has had with life. It may not.. Our son shared that study with us and took the results to HR, which filed it and asked what accommodations he needed. He asked for a few tiny items that would help him focus better, and they accommodated that, but not much more. However, his company underwent a massive layoff, and he survived. Was it the fact that he had filed with HR? We don't know, but his one other friend, who wasn't fired, had also filed disability testing results with HR. Your daughter sounds troubled, as you know. [b]She clearly wants this diagnosis because she can transfer blame (yes, you are right about that). [/b]She may lie about the results. Our son showed us his results. It sounds like your daughter may not want to share, but you can express interest in exploring this new world with her and in seeing the results. The worst she can do is say "no". [b]Good luck! I'll try to circle back and see if you have any questions.[/quote][/b] OP, are you coming back? I'd like to know the results. Whether or not she says she has autism or not, why don't you use this game-changer to start a new relationship with her? Suggest a quiet lunch out and ask her to talk about the results and what they mean to her. [/quote] OP here. Just got off a phone call with DD. Yes, the neuropsych (yet again) confirmed that she has ADHD but NOT autism. She was distraught that she didn't get an ASD diagnosis, but I told her that it's important to base her identity off of her "disabilities" or her victimhood. She told me that she was looking forward to an autism diagnosis to explain her struggles and to "find the right job for her," and I definitely felt that she was looking to transfer blame for her poor decisions on a (nonexistent) diagnosis. It's just frustrating when DD's whole personality is how much of a victim she is. With her, it's only about how much DH and I have allegedly "abused" her and "invalidated" her insane emotional responses. All of her poetry is about how badly DH has allegedly abused her. She can't find a single positive thing to say about her childhood despite us pouring a TON of time, money, and effort into her K-12 schooling and paying for all of her college degree. [/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