Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with all previous posters. Skin picking is often due to anxiety, but it’s also a very difficult habit to break. Breaking this behavior pattern will require some real work. Punishment for skin picking will exacerbate stress, which will cause more anxiety, which will make it harder to stop the behavior. You need to be a source of support and help figure out strategies to interrupt the mindless skin picking. Even kids who don’t seem outwardly anxious may pick skin when they’re stressed. You may think everything is just fine in your DD’s life and that she has no good reason to be anxious, but that’s what anxiety (the mental health diagnosis, not the emotion itself) is all about. It’s not rational; it’s a stress response that is disproportionate to any actual threat.
Thank you. I truly had no idea. I will definitely be looking into getting her some help and offering her support. And punishment is obviously off the table! I feel foolish.
I'm really glad you listened with an open mind. Maybe think of this next time you are struggling with an issue - consider what's actually happening before you and your DH start formulating punishments?
Anonymous wrote:Whoa whoa whoa. You are TOTALLY misreading this situation. This is NOT a dermatological problem. This is a mental health issue, one that I’ve struggled with since I was 11/12 (I’m 40 now). It’s called dermatilllomania (sp?). For me, it was a manifestation of anxiety. If she says she wants clear skin and is STILL picking at it, that’s most likely what she’s dealing with, and punishment is absolutely the wrong approach. Get her to a psychologist who specialize in this, stat. It took me a decade as an adult to get this under control, and I ish my parents had figured it out/treated it when I was young.
And if you’re thinking “she doesn’t seem anxious” - neither did I.
Anonymous wrote:OP, there are also fidgets called "Picky Pads" that many people with this behavior use as a replacement. I'm glad you're considering it from a mental health lens.
Anonymous wrote:I can see why the girl has anxiety behaviors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with all previous posters. Skin picking is often due to anxiety, but it’s also a very difficult habit to break. Breaking this behavior pattern will require some real work. Punishment for skin picking will exacerbate stress, which will cause more anxiety, which will make it harder to stop the behavior. You need to be a source of support and help figure out strategies to interrupt the mindless skin picking. Even kids who don’t seem outwardly anxious may pick skin when they’re stressed. You may think everything is just fine in your DD’s life and that she has no good reason to be anxious, but that’s what anxiety (the mental health diagnosis, not the emotion itself) is all about. It’s not rational; it’s a stress response that is disproportionate to any actual threat.
Thank you. I truly had no idea. I will definitely be looking into getting her some help and offering her support. And punishment is obviously off the table! I feel foolish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with all previous posters. Skin picking is often due to anxiety, but it’s also a very difficult habit to break. Breaking this behavior pattern will require some real work. Punishment for skin picking will exacerbate stress, which will cause more anxiety, which will make it harder to stop the behavior. You need to be a source of support and help figure out strategies to interrupt the mindless skin picking. Even kids who don’t seem outwardly anxious may pick skin when they’re stressed. You may think everything is just fine in your DD’s life and that she has no good reason to be anxious, but that’s what anxiety (the mental health diagnosis, not the emotion itself) is all about. It’s not rational; it’s a stress response that is disproportionate to any actual threat.
Thank you. I truly had no idea. I will definitely be looking into getting her some help and offering her support. And punishment is obviously off the table! I feel foolish.
There’s no reason to feel foolish. You’re in a situation you didn’t know much about and you asked for help. You’ve done nothing wrong. You handled this well!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with all previous posters. Skin picking is often due to anxiety, but it’s also a very difficult habit to break. Breaking this behavior pattern will require some real work. Punishment for skin picking will exacerbate stress, which will cause more anxiety, which will make it harder to stop the behavior. You need to be a source of support and help figure out strategies to interrupt the mindless skin picking. Even kids who don’t seem outwardly anxious may pick skin when they’re stressed. You may think everything is just fine in your DD’s life and that she has no good reason to be anxious, but that’s what anxiety (the mental health diagnosis, not the emotion itself) is all about. It’s not rational; it’s a stress response that is disproportionate to any actual threat.
Thank you. I truly had no idea. I will definitely be looking into getting her some help and offering her support. And punishment is obviously off the table! I feel foolish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because dermatologists are not mental health experts
But… you all are?
Anonymous wrote:Agree with all previous posters. Skin picking is often due to anxiety, but it’s also a very difficult habit to break. Breaking this behavior pattern will require some real work. Punishment for skin picking will exacerbate stress, which will cause more anxiety, which will make it harder to stop the behavior. You need to be a source of support and help figure out strategies to interrupt the mindless skin picking. Even kids who don’t seem outwardly anxious may pick skin when they’re stressed. You may think everything is just fine in your DD’s life and that she has no good reason to be anxious, but that’s what anxiety (the mental health diagnosis, not the emotion itself) is all about. It’s not rational; it’s a stress response that is disproportionate to any actual threat.
Anonymous wrote:Because dermatologists are not mental health experts