Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She's an adult, this is her business now, if she shut you down when you broached it before, it is unlikely she will be more receptive next time. Either she is very resistant to the idea that this is an issue, in which case the only option is to let her figure it out herself, or your relationship is such that she is resistant specifically to the suggestion coming from you. In the latter case, continuing to bring it up will only make it less likely that she ultimately gets checked out for ADHD because that would mean admitting you are right and if you have the kind of combative relationship that makes that hard, she will fight against it.
Leave it alone. Focus on having a good relationship between the two of you and especially on being mutually respectful and having good boundaries. She's an adult now and you have to treat her like one, the more you resist this the worse it will get. You absolutely cannot try to micromanage her health or her personal relationships at this point, it will be disappointing for you and drive her away.
Stop trying to control her.
Good God, triggered much?
I don't see this as OP trying to control her child at all... this is called concern, not control.
If he daughter is stiruggling with something like HFP, her daughter most likely WON'T sell help on her own, as she might not recognize it... it's good she has a mother who is concerned.
It sounds like you're projecting your own mommy issues onto OP, because her post doesn't come off as the least bit controlling... if it did, you can trust that DCUM would have informed her and she'd have a ton of critical posts telling her so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You may not think it's depression, but you should look into high functioning depression -- it looks NOTHING like you'd expect depression to appear, yet when you look at the symptoms it all might click.
I was going to suggest high functioning depression too!
People hear depression and they imagine someone sobbing uncontrollably & all the time, can't get out of bed, won't shower or communicate with other people... however, it's a narrow mined view that society has adopted from movies & TV.
The thing that really stuck out to me OP, is you saying that it's impacting her friendships or social life.
Look into HFD, it's much more prevalent in your daughter's age group than adult onset ADHD is -- especially since she's a first year college student that's living away... which may be symptomatic as well.
Anonymous wrote:She's an adult, this is her business now, if she shut you down when you broached it before, it is unlikely she will be more receptive next time. Either she is very resistant to the idea that this is an issue, in which case the only option is to let her figure it out herself, or your relationship is such that she is resistant specifically to the suggestion coming from you. In the latter case, continuing to bring it up will only make it less likely that she ultimately gets checked out for ADHD because that would mean admitting you are right and if you have the kind of combative relationship that makes that hard, she will fight against it.
Leave it alone. Focus on having a good relationship between the two of you and especially on being mutually respectful and having good boundaries. She's an adult now and you have to treat her like one, the more you resist this the worse it will get. You absolutely cannot try to micromanage her health or her personal relationships at this point, it will be disappointing for you and drive her away.
Stop trying to control her.
Anonymous wrote:
You may not think it's depression, but you should look into high functioning depression -- it looks NOTHING like you'd expect depression to appear, yet when you look at the symptoms it all might click.