Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wow, OP. Her son is not a normal functioning adult, he has medical issues that are complicated. What do you expect her to do? Just ship him off to an institution?
Yes that they have been talking about doing. The sooner he does the more of a chance he has at overcoming this and starting to live a life of semi normalcy. They are not helping anyone by him being put up in his room. At almost 24 he has no skills, no education, no job,etc....it is a fact that the vast majority of young adults who go into intensive residential therapy come out markedly improved. She knows this but as her friend I feel like I should gently encourage her to really start thinking about this as not only an option but something she needs to do. First and foremost for him and then secondly for their family.
Anonymous wrote:OP, with regard to your friend being in "total denial," sometimes being in "total denial" and having relentless optimism when the reality of the situation is much worse, is OK and even healthy. I think that things can be too much to bear and denial is a type self-protection that allows a person to cope.
Anonymous wrote:You are crazy as a loon. those comments that you are highlighting still doesn't make OPS friend have a daughter instead of a son. And exactly what is it that you want OP to say? I AM REALLY SORRY ABOUT THE LAHORE THAT YOU LOST, BUT IT HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH THIS PARTICULAR SITUATION IN WHICH A FAMILY IS DOING EVERYTHING THEY POSSIBLY COULD DO WITH THE HELP OF MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS WHICH OP IS NOT SO UNLESS YOU JUST WANT HER TO SAY SOMETHING JUST FOR THE HELL OF SAYING IT THEN YOU AND OP NEED TO TAKE A SEAT SEVERAL SEATsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm a PP from page 2 who dealt with family denial that ended in suicide much like your friend's dd. You are on the right track with how you support the family, and god bless you for it. It sounds like your friend could use some distance to see the situation clearly. if she knows this person also, maybe just mentioning how you have been thinking about them lately and wondering if her son is on that path will be a good conversation starter. If she kneejerks "NO that is NOT my son how could you say that!!!" vs if she says "yeah I've been worried about that too, nothing we do seems to be working"--then you will know how much denial she really is in.
Ignore the haters here. they have never dealt with mental illness or suicide and it's obvious.
have you read anything OP said...and by the way OP's friend has a son.Geez
I read when she said this:
We both know someone who a few years ago was in a similiar situation but with a daughter. The mom just refused to see and acknowledge how bad it was, maybe living with it every day she just got used to that as being her new norm.
People were very hushed about it because they saw the wall she put up. Sadly the D committed suicide about a year later, no one thought it was "that bad" and needless to say it has devastated that entire family. I keep thinking about them, maybe someone close to them SHOULD have spoken up and said something, urged them to do more, etc........
Have YOU read what she's written? About the way she supports the family, the healthy son, and sees him as the mom does not? Have YOU dealt with the mental illness and suicide of a loved one? Have YOU had to look at yourself in the mirror afterwards and remember all the times you could have said something, but didn't?
I'm betting no by your judgmental stone-throwing. People who have been there generally have more empathy. You have contributed nothing, no experience, no insight, just negativity, and poorly-informed negativity at that. So sit down, shut the fuck up, and let people who have been there help each other.
YOU SOUND CRAZY
You are crazy as a loon. those comments that you are highlighting still doesn't make OPS friend have a daughter instead of a son. And exactly what is it that you want OP to say? I AM REALLY SORRY ABOUT THE LAHORE THAT YOU LOST, BUT IT HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH THIS PARTICULAR SITUATION IN WHICH A FAMILY IS DOING EVERYTHING THEY POSSIBLY COULD DO WITH THE HELP OF MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS WHICH OP IS NOT SO UNLESS YOU JUST WANT HER TO SAY SOMETHING JUST FOR THE HELL OF SAYING IT THEN YOU AND OP NEED TO TAKE A SEAT SEVERAL SEATsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm a PP from page 2 who dealt with family denial that ended in suicide much like your friend's dd. You are on the right track with how you support the family, and god bless you for it. It sounds like your friend could use some distance to see the situation clearly. if she knows this person also, maybe just mentioning how you have been thinking about them lately and wondering if her son is on that path will be a good conversation starter. If she kneejerks "NO that is NOT my son how could you say that!!!" vs if she says "yeah I've been worried about that too, nothing we do seems to be working"--then you will know how much denial she really is in.
Ignore the haters here. they have never dealt with mental illness or suicide and it's obvious.
have you read anything OP said...and by the way OP's friend has a son.Geez
I read when she said this:
We both know someone who a few years ago was in a similiar situation but with a daughter. The mom just refused to see and acknowledge how bad it was, maybe living with it every day she just got used to that as being her new norm.
People were very hushed about it because they saw the wall she put up. Sadly the D committed suicide about a year later, no one thought it was "that bad" and needless to say it has devastated that entire family. I keep thinking about them, maybe someone close to them SHOULD have spoken up and said something, urged them to do more, etc........
Have YOU read what she's written? About the way she supports the family, the healthy son, and sees him as the mom does not? Have YOU dealt with the mental illness and suicide of a loved one? Have YOU had to look at yourself in the mirror afterwards and remember all the times you could have said something, but didn't?
I'm betting no by your judgmental stone-throwing. People who have been there generally have more empathy. You have contributed nothing, no experience, no insight, just negativity, and poorly-informed negativity at that. So sit down, shut the fuck up, and let people who have been there help each other.
Anonymous wrote:OP friend's son is like mine but my DS is not nearly as bad. He had a traumatizing experience at college (roommate bullied him relentlessly) in addition to other problems, came home. Before this he did part of a summer at a therapeutic place ($50,000, some insurance re-imbursement). Took a job for a while, quit. Went to CC a semester, failed. Sat at home for about two years.
What has NOT helped. DH saying repeatedly, "Let's face it he is a hopeless case--he needs years of therapy."
First off, he won't go to therapy and he is over 18 so I can't make him. He does see a medicating psychiatrist. I have looked into places as no doubt OP has. But, apart from the important fact that DS won't even do the intake interview, I really think the vast majority of them will not be helpful.
A place like Menninger may be successful at getting someone out of a deep depression but then what? I'd spend the money if I thought it would put him firmly on a positive, upward path, but I know the chances are against this and it is all hypothetical if he is not willing to go in the first place.
What has helped. Me keeping an optimistic outlook and giving him lots of encouragement. He started college locally this semester and so far it is looking okay. Far from perfect, but he is turning in work and attending classes.
OP appears to think her friend is in denial because she won't admit her DS is a hopeless case a la DH. OP thinks she would be doing her friend a favor by giving her a reality check on her denial. If someone called me on how I am handling the situation I'd say what I've said above, in . If they then pressed that I was in denial, I'd say I am doing the best I can and keeping positive allows me to continue giving him encouragement, the best and only hope he and I have.
Anonymous wrote:16:02 here. 16:50, you only think that because YOU have thought about it. That is what denial means. My family member had previous attempts under her belt, and it was STILL not on the radar of those closest to her. OPknows her friend better than we do and is in a better position to judge.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm a PP from page 2 who dealt with family denial that ended in suicide much like your friend's dd. You are on the right track with how you support the family, and god bless you for it. It sounds like your friend could use some distance to see the situation clearly. if she knows this person also, maybe just mentioning how you have been thinking about them lately and wondering if her son is on that path will be a good conversation starter. If she kneejerks "NO that is NOT my son how could you say that!!!" vs if she says "yeah I've been worried about that too, nothing we do seems to be working"--then you will know how much denial she really is in.
Ignore the haters here. they have never dealt with mental illness or suicide and it's obvious.