Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell her nobody wants to hang out with a whiner and to fake being confident. You need mental help. The amount this is stressing you is out of proportion to what is going on.
I kind of agree with this. It sucks but it’s true.
Anonymous wrote:Tell her nobody wants to hang out with a whiner and to fake being confident. You need mental help. The amount this is stressing you is out of proportion to what is going on.
Anonymous wrote:No, you don’t need to talk to the therapist. I would tell her she’s doing great and sometimes things like that happen and don’t take it personally.
The most important thing you can do is work on regulating your own emotions and not being codependent or enmeshed in hers.
Anonymous wrote:If child does actually have ADHD, rejection sensitivity is a symptom: out-of-proportion responses to rejection. And, yes, not being specifically asked to go to eat can be seen as rejection.
I think that the first semester is always a more rough transition than anyone talks about. Selingo’s new Dream School book talks about this & research behind it
You say your child is medicated. For anxiety? Could it be that the anxiety is a symptom of the ADHD (it often is in women/girls & from the hug comment, I’m assuming a female tbh). So, if what you to do is to maybe think about if ADHD is the root & if more specific treatment for that would be helpful
Anonymous wrote:No, you don’t need to talk to the therapist. I would tell her she’s doing great and sometimes things like that happen and don’t take it personally.
The most important thing you can do is work on regulating your own emotions and not being codependent or enmeshed in hers.