Anonymous wrote:I’ll be the counterpoint: two weeks out, this seems in the realm of normal emotional up and down, for first major heartbreak.
Is she coming home for Thanksgiving? Empathize, validate, and then if u think she needs scaffolding to get her act together for end-of-semester, can you go back with her and stay nearby (hotel?) I recognize that’s disruptive and expensive. But there is a real cause for her feelings which tips it for me into realm of possibly normal, and she needs you to model and help with coping skills, NOT blow up her life by pulling her out of school!
Anonymous wrote:Try to empathize and say that everyone needs someone to talk to sometimes. Suggesting the therapist doesn't mean that you think she's depressed. It's normal to be sad when something bad happens, but when that sadness interferes with functioning (missing school and meals). Sometimes stuff happens that is so bad it overwhelms our normal ways of coping and we need to go back to therapy and change meds as part of our coping.
I would also give her a little feminist love -- it's always hard to break up, but she's so young that you expect she will go through a lot of breakups before she finds someone to marry or settle down with. Now is the time of her life where she should date more not less. Breaking up also isn't something one should frame as "there is something wrong with me" - sometimes peoples lives just don't mesh. There are many people I have loved in life but who weren't right for the long haul. Letting go of people so they can be who they need to be is a kindness, even if you feel alone for awhile.
That is why talking to a therapist can be helpful -- no one wants to process healthy love, sex and relationship with their own parents, and the parents advice is always suspect. Better to see a therapist and process what happened in a healthy way and hopefully get back to full functioning sooner.
Anonymous wrote:DD has a history of anxiety and is is on Zoloft.
She started the semester out strong. Good grades and social life, made new friends.
But things took a turn when her high school boyfriend broke up with her. Since then, she's missed two weeks of school, spending most of her time sleeping during the day, skipped meals, crying often, and still trying to convince boyfriend to get back together.
We asked her to seek help from a therapist, but she refused. What can we do to assist her and prevent the situation from worsening?
Anonymous wrote:Does she live at home?