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 "DD14 is cutting!"
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]I cut from ages 13-16. My brother left for boot camp and the next night I had a huge fight with my parents. That was the start. When my brother was killed a year later, it got worse. I was a competitive dancer, made cheerleading, was a honor roll student. Everything else I was doing made me seem 100% perfect. My parents eventually had me checked into an inpatient facility for a week. The doctor declared I was bipolar and drugged me to no end. I went home and was placed in another inpatient program a couple months later for about 3 weeks. My meds were changed, but I didn't take them. I had been there long enough and was cooperative enough they didn't really watch me take them or look all that hard in my mouth. I went home. I was back a few months later as an outpatient. It wasn't until I was in outpatient and doing therapy rather than drugs that I got anywhere. They quickly realized I wasn't bipolar, I was a 16 year old girl who had watched her mother die and had her brother (and best friend) body shipped back, and had a military father who was emotionally inaccessible and physically absent. There was nothing wrong with me other than I had never had anyone there to guide me through processing my emotions at any stage of my life. I started attending a weekly grief group at school (important that it was at school because it gave me people to talk to during the day if necessary), as well as seeing a therapist every 2 weeks to work on coping skills. I graduated a year early, went straight through my undergrad and also finished that a year early, had a great job, and then returned to school for my masters. While getting my masters my dad died and I was tempted to cut. I didn't and instead started drinking a lot. My advisor noticed and called me out on it. I went back into therapy and was able to straighten myself out, graduate on time, and finish with a 4.0. I have learned that I have a highly addictive personality, but that with enough willpower I can guide that addiction. I also find great comfort in routines. Since completing my masters I have made it to the gym every morning (minus scheduled rest days). No matter what else happens in my day to day life I know that I have control over the 2 hours from when I wake up to when I leave the gym. Cutting was something I controlled. It wasn't necessarily in response to emotional pain, just a response to feeling my world spiral out of control. My advice to you as a parent is not to jump right on this. There is undoubtably an underlying cause and I think a lot of it has to do with you and the rest of the family. Just from your OP it sounds like you are busy, always rushing, and to your daughter it probably seems the younger siblings come first. She's 14 so she has the usually teen hormone swings going on and her personality may very well be like mine where she likes to feel somewhat in control of her world, but she still wants to feel like an important part in yours. When my dad first found out he started going to lunch with me on Saturdays after he picked me up from dance. That was just mine and his time. We'd go to places my brother liked and we'd talk about old family memories. It greatly improved my feelings toward him and made me a little more open to the therapy idea. Be extremely cautious of psychiatrists who will try to give her an instant diagnosis and medicine. I took Depakote, Lithium, Celexa, Lexapro, and Prozac because a bad doctor decided I was bipolar and the one after him didn't care enough to even confirm the diagnosis. I stopped cutting about 13 years ago. I still have very visible scars. Yesterday I noticed that my arm hair has just now started growing back in the scarred area. I've considered having pigment added to the scars to hide the ghost white appearance, but now when I see them I just realize how far I have come and that no matter what happens I have to take care of myself to prevent me from falling back into that. [/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