Anonymous wrote:My kid had anxiety and social anxiety. Once we treated that with meds, the social and school issues faded away. He’s now in college and off meds and has a group of friends. My advice. Don’t be afraid of meds. Use them as a short term tool. Sure, therapy helps but sometimes you need meds to help therapy achieve goals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid had anxiety and social anxiety. Once we treated that with meds, the social and school issues faded away. He’s now in college and off meds and has a group of friends. My advice. Don’t be afraid of meds. Use them as a short term tool. Sure, therapy helps but sometimes you need meds to help therapy achieve goals.
So, your son did not need the meds.
so because antibiotics cleared up your strep throat, you never needed them in the first place?
Anonymous wrote:What wrong with not having friends
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op back. Thanks to those who offered ideas. I do think DC has social anxiety, though it did not come up in the neuropsych's we have done. That is actually why I am asking for suggestions on therapists/consults to work through this. It does bother DC that he does not have friends. He is active and likes to do things out and about. We have tried all the typical suggestions: encouraging him to ask other kids to do things (like, other nice kids, not the "popular" kids or whatever), getting involved in clubs, etc. There is just something that makes him not be able to really break in and that is what we are trying to help with.
He is on a HS and club sports team that both take up a lot of time and though friendly with those kids, just hasn't been able to form friendships and in fact is a bit on the outside of the group there. If you saw him at a game or on the halls of school you would not think this is an issue for him because he is always chatting and joking around with kids but that has not led to any actual friendships and leaves him isolated at home.
I will check out the therapist recs PPs suggested.
This is very helpful. You said "he is always chatting and joking around with kids" and he is in a club sport, etc so he is engaged. Does he have people to sit with at lunch? It sounds like he feels upset about this because he is "isolated at home." Does he have a lot of free time on weekends even with studying/keeping up with school work?
My kids do some sports and clubs and have friends (daughter has close friends, son has less close friends, but feels connected) and both of them prefer not to hang out with friends on weekends-just over breaks. My daughter texts a lot with friends, can't stand when her friends want to make Tiktok videos or stalk boys on social media so she prefers not to see them unless that often outside of school. My son needs down time to decompress and and they both have a lot of studying to do on the weekend. So, it sound like my kids are like you son is some ways, except they don't prefer not to see friends on weekends.
Anonymous wrote:Op back. Thanks to those who offered ideas. I do think DC has social anxiety, though it did not come up in the neuropsych's we have done. That is actually why I am asking for suggestions on therapists/consults to work through this. It does bother DC that he does not have friends. He is active and likes to do things out and about. We have tried all the typical suggestions: encouraging him to ask other kids to do things (like, other nice kids, not the "popular" kids or whatever), getting involved in clubs, etc. There is just something that makes him not be able to really break in and that is what we are trying to help with.
He is on a HS and club sports team that both take up a lot of time and though friendly with those kids, just hasn't been able to form friendships and in fact is a bit on the outside of the group there. If you saw him at a game or on the halls of school you would not think this is an issue for him because he is always chatting and joking around with kids but that has not led to any actual friendships and leaves him isolated at home.
I will check out the therapist recs PPs suggested.
Anonymous wrote:Op back. Thanks to those who offered ideas. I do think DC has social anxiety, though it did not come up in the neuropsych's we have done. That is actually why I am asking for suggestions on therapists/consults to work through this. It does bother DC that he does not have friends. He is active and likes to do things out and about. We have tried all the typical suggestions: encouraging him to ask other kids to do things (like, other nice kids, not the "popular" kids or whatever), getting involved in clubs, etc. There is just something that makes him not be able to really break in and that is what we are trying to help with.
He is on a HS and club sports team that both take up a lot of time and though friendly with those kids, just hasn't been able to form friendships and in fact is a bit on the outside of the group there. If you saw him at a game or on the halls of school you would not think this is an issue for him because he is always chatting and joking around with kids but that has not led to any actual friendships and leaves him isolated at home.
I will check out the therapist recs PPs suggested.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid had anxiety and social anxiety. Once we treated that with meds, the social and school issues faded away. He’s now in college and off meds and has a group of friends. My advice. Don’t be afraid of meds. Use them as a short term tool. Sure, therapy helps but sometimes you need meds to help therapy achieve goals.
So, your son did not need the meds.
I guess you don’t know how meds work.
You’re part of the problem with the culture of overmedicating children with psychographic drugs. Plenty of studies have been done to prove that this is a problem and you cannot deny that. Too many, like yourself, are quick to want to drug children to control behaviors that would be best for them to receive psychological intervention and treatment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid had anxiety and social anxiety. Once we treated that with meds, the social and school issues faded away. He’s now in college and off meds and has a group of friends. My advice. Don’t be afraid of meds. Use them as a short term tool. Sure, therapy helps but sometimes you need meds to help therapy achieve goals.
So, your son did not need the meds.
so because antibiotics cleared up your strep throat, you never needed them in the first place?
NP. Antibiotics are often overprescribed as well. You know this.
If one does need it for a confirmed strep throat case, that can be quantified. The antibiotics will in fact kill the bacteria. You cannot say the same for medicating one out of behaviors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid had anxiety and social anxiety. Once we treated that with meds, the social and school issues faded away. He’s now in college and off meds and has a group of friends. My advice. Don’t be afraid of meds. Use them as a short term tool. Sure, therapy helps but sometimes you need meds to help therapy achieve goals.
So, your son did not need the meds.
so because antibiotics cleared up your strep throat, you never needed them in the first place?