Anonymous wrote:Can any parents who BTDT chime in with success stories? The hardest part, for me, parenting a child with suicidal ideation (tied to OCD, intrusive thought cycle) has been finding resources. I have found one therapist in our area who sees kids with this type of OCD in-person, but she has a waiting list--- it just feels like we have the diagnosis but no qualified professional to help navigate from here. So I am left holding my breath, praying and living day-by-day until we find the right support. Hugs to you, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its not about you.
Actually it is. As a parent, you spend your time trying to find the magic bean that will cure your kid. You worry beyond belief if they are home even five minutes late. You watch them lay in bed for days not moving even to eat or go to the bathroom because their depression is so heavy that they can’t move. You get called by the school so often that every time your phone rings you want to vomit and cry. You rush to the school or the hospital everytime they try and thank the Lord this time they weren’t successful. You live with the medical consequences of the attempts and that to the endless list of what you are doing to try to keep your child safe and your family running. You take a picture every time your child leaves the house so you can give the description for the BOLO and Amber alert. You deal with the physical and emotional scars of their violence and you spend your money on repairing walls, doors and everything else that gets destroyed by their rages.
It is about those of us who parent these kids and the other family members who live with them. We can’t control it or fix it but we have to live with the consequences sequences and pick up the pieces.
Anonymous wrote:Its not about you.
Anonymous wrote:I wish I could give you parenting advice, but I wasn’t the parent in my situation. I was the suicidal child. I don’t know why I was like that, or what happened to turn it off. All I know was for me, the years of drugs and therapy did absolutely nothing to help. And nothing was more horrible than seeing myself disappoint everyone, which just made me want kill myself all over again.
The only thing that ended up saving me was meditation. I get that it won’t work for everyone, but it worked for me because it taught me how to make some space between myself and my crazy thoughts— and see that I am not those thoughts. It’s been a long road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so sorry that you are all going through this.
I believe you love your children dearly, and are doing all you can to help them.
🤗
I'm another BTDT parent... the above is true. You do the best you can to deal it every day. You make the best choices you can make with the information you have. That is all you can do.
For my family, it involved residential treatment (2 places) then a therapist who helped us bring our kid home and coached our parenting. We parents took a close look at ourselves, changed our parenting and our family dynamic and here we are five years later with a "happy" functional family. Our depressed kid is doing well in college and is happy, has friends and is hopeful about the future. It was a very long road, and it took me years to feel like an ok mom. I am still triggered when I can sense my kid is going through a rough patch but the difference is that now I know what to look for, kid knows how to ask for help, and we have a team of providers we have worked with who can be resources again. So it does get better and you do grow as a parent and get more skills. The best choice we made was to get serious help early on - after a few months of SI. It was Covid and we couldn't access resources locally in person, so we sent our kid away to get help. Like PP we spent significant money on it. Because DH had mental illness in his family we were willing to do whatever it took to get our kid help. I'm glad we didn't take a wait and see approach, but having money made action possible.
After my experience, I no longer have any judgement for families who are going through this. It could honestly happen to anyone. I sincerely hope things work out for your child and your family OP. Stay the course.
Anonymous wrote:There absolutely are not enough resources available for youth and teen mental health, including suicidal teens and youth. My husband died and I could not find an in-person teen grief group for my kids, despite looking myself and having the hospice provider look. Almost no therapists for kids take insurance. It is a huge struggle, and I am so sorry.
Anonymous wrote:I am so sorry that you are all going through this.
I believe you love your children dearly, and are doing all you can to help them.
🤗