Anonymous wrote:Why can't you just call and pretend to be your DD? Get an itemized bill sent to you. Then you'll know exactly what the real story is by the labs ordered. Create a fake Gmail to use if they have an email option. If not, have it mailed.
Like, I know it's dishonest and illegal, but I'm doing anything needed if I think my kid is not being truthful and is in crisis.
If my parents had pushed harder when they had to rush my barely legal brother to the ER for alcohol poisoning, maybe he wouldn't be a 37 yo alcoholic with multiple DUIs, a failed marriage, kids he never sees, and still living at home.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't you just call and pretend to be your DD? Get an itemized bill sent to you. Then you'll know exactly what the real story is by the labs ordered. Create a fake Gmail to use if they have an email option. If not, have it mailed.
Like, I know it's dishonest and illegal, but I'm doing anything needed if I think my kid is not being truthful and is in crisis.
If my parents had pushed harder when they had to rush my barely legal brother to the ER for alcohol poisoning, maybe he wouldn't be a 37 yo alcoholic with multiple DUIs, a failed marriage, kids he never sees, and still living at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP, just think for a moment, what if I am wrong and accuse my daughter of horrible things and lying.
What if your daughter was raped or roofied or whatever. Maybe she is processing that. Maybe she is lying, but why jump to the conclusion she is lying?
She probably didn't realize you'd get this bill or she didn't want to talk about it.
What are the consequences if you threaten her and go ballistic and you are doing it to a victim?
Take a breath. Some of the responses have this girl in rehab, some say get her on BC? Why are we assuming she is a huge liar?
What you do here can really affect your future relationship. You sound hot headed if your first inclination is to ban her from having a car a year from now. I hope you haven't said this to her.
If you're so concerned, go see her, tell her you're concerned and how can you help?
She posted a drunk TikTok from her hospital bed, flashing peace signs and the like. (A friend of hers showed me). She says she wasn’t raped and while I guess being roofied CAN result in behaving extra drunk, roofies are actually sedatives. Unfortunately, I don’t believe she was roofied — I think that is a story to cover up the fact that she was so trashed that her friends decided to intervene and take her to the hospital. If so, this is now at least the second event I am aware of in the year where she has been blackout drunk. So we clearly need a conversation about substance abuse.
We will have a conversation in two weeks after finals. I have told her to bring a copy of the police report and the tox screen from her hospital visit as well as the itemized bill. We will look at those things together.
If, in fact, she brings those things, the discussion will be limited to does she need support to deal with being crime victim and this basic idea that you call your parents when you are hospitalized.
If she can’t produce them or refuses, then I will have no choice to conclude that she was drunk to the point of being taken to a hospital, which in my mind is very serious. She followed that up with the extremely poor judgment in failing to notify immediately (lie of omission), inventing a story to cover (lie of commission), and gaslighting (“this is why I didn’t tell you.”).
And because of these poor choices, she won’t be allowed to rush this Spring (she has no money of her own since she spent her job money as quickly as she had it despite my continued counsel to build up savings for college expenses. She gets an allowance but doesn’t save that either.) I had agreed previously to pay for rush and sorority dues since she got several scholarships, but there’s no way I am going to pay to put her into a Greek system where attitudes about alcohol are worse than the school at large, under the circumstances.
As for the car, I may place conditions on her to earn it for next year. These include:
— Completing an alcohol awareness class
— Showing me her report card (something I have never asked of her older sister) and granting me FERPA waiver.
— Maintaing her scholarship.
— Getting a job on campus second semester to supplement the allowance (clearly she had the time).
— Getting a source of decent summer income, either at home or like as a camp counselor or something. She’s too young to get an internship, probably, but if she got one of those I would accept it as a substitute even if it didn’t pay.
That’s my “morning after” plan.
I personally wouldn’t punish her so harshly for seeking medical care. She did the right thing and she it seems rightly knew you would freak out if she told you. I’d just pay the bill and tell her to always seek care if she’s worried and that you are always willing provide a nonjudgmental ear. She’s an adult so your relationship needs to change from “punishing” to supporting her into adulthood.
This is a good take. I can’t imagine punishing a young adult who found herself in a bad situation but did the right thing. All that punishment is going to teach her to not seek medical care next time, which will have bigger implications.
OP, go ahead with that plan. We’ll plan to check back in with you in a few years when your child have no relationship with you and you’re posting on here about why you’ve been cut out of her life. You already have a shaky relationship and you want to approach the resolution with anger, fear, and punishment? Why does that seem like the right approach to you?
OP here. What the hell is wrong with you, you sanctimonious twat?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t get an explanation of benefits? She’s on your insurance and you would need to submit that for HSA reimbursement. I don’t think her being an adult makes a difference for that.
No, you can't get an EOB for another adult.
Eventually, I suppose they may mail one to her here at the house and i could open it. But online it says "patient view only."
HIPPA and all that.
Yes, I could ask her to waive it. But given her hostility around asking for details about the police report, I'm guessing she will refuse. I'm not there yet.
Yes you can… if you’re the primary account holder of the insurance. Just log in and see.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people keep insisting that her daughter sought medical care? It’s highly unlikely that the daughter did that on her own. Much more likely her friends took her to the hospital (good for them!).
OP, I think you need the health care power of attorney going forward.
OP here.
Yes, this is evidently what happened.
Bottom line is she appears to have been hospitalized for alcohol use and then invented a lie about being a victim of a crime when asked about the TikTok by one parent then the hospital bill by me. Told the parents different stories too, thinking we wouldn’t compare notes (we did, and we both agree it’s unlikely she was actually roofied).
In my book, being hospitalized for alcohol abuse and then lying about it is a pretty big red flag that needs to be addressed. Especially if she wants even more freedoms next year, including a car I pay for and insure. As far as I am concerned, it is legitimate to be worried about a combination of a history of poor judgment with alcohol and access to a car when the party scene will be five or six miles from her off campus rental.
It’s weird some of you see that as “punishment.”
Evidently some of you are shitty parents who think I should just ignore and carry on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s clear that she shouldn’t have a car under any circumstances, and that you shouldn’t be giving her any pocket money. I’d also tell her that access to medical records is a requirement if she wants to stay on my insurance and have me pay tuition. She wouldn’t be able to live there without your support, and you have the right to make sure she isn’t hurting herself or others while she’s living there.
Omg, people. This is the surest way to make sure she doesn’t access needed health care.
There needs to be some kind of compromise though. Should she expect her parents to keep paying for her healthcare while she participates in self-destructive behavior (if that is the case)? Colleges usually have student insurance available if she would rather pay for that and keep everything private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s clear that she shouldn’t have a car under any circumstances, and that you shouldn’t be giving her any pocket money. I’d also tell her that access to medical records is a requirement if she wants to stay on my insurance and have me pay tuition. She wouldn’t be able to live there without your support, and you have the right to make sure she isn’t hurting herself or others while she’s living there.
Omg, people. This is the surest way to make sure she doesn’t access needed health care.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s clear that she shouldn’t have a car under any circumstances, and that you shouldn’t be giving her any pocket money. I’d also tell her that access to medical records is a requirement if she wants to stay on my insurance and have me pay tuition. She wouldn’t be able to live there without your support, and you have the right to make sure she isn’t hurting herself or others while she’s living there.