Anonymous wrote:To me it sounds like mild anxiety. I woukd talk to a specialist. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you tend to worry, she also could be developing an anxiety disorder by worrying about suffering. I think you are lucky to have her. She is an empath, or a highly sensitive person, but the downside is that she may be prone to depression in the future. It's a hard job of caring in a world where bad things happen left and right. If you teach her boundaries, it might save her some grief. She can empathize with family and friends, but you have to draw the line somewhere. She can pick a specialty as her pet thing to be empathetic about, like animals, and let her indulge in that, but she doesn't need to worry about the homeless, veterans, heart disease, and whatever else there is. They are all worthy causes but she shouldn't spread herself too thin.
Not OP, but I don't understand what you're suggesting. When you say draw the line, you mean what exactly? I don't know how you can stop her from feeling empathy. Or did you mean limit how much time she can talk about it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a good hearted girl!
Are you religious? If so maybe you could teach her to say a little prayer for someone when she knows they are suffering- that way she feels like she is doing something helpful and hopefully will not dwell on it so much. If not, then maybe just positive thoughts or well wishes?
Additionally, she could earn money from you and make a little donation to causes that would make her feel better.
My mom always said to "offer it up." I think we may have interpreted it slightly different than intended, but to me it meant to say a prayer for the suffering animal or whatever and allow god to do the worrying for me. God would take care of it. It did help me as a kid to know that I could notify god of the particular injustice and he'd look into it. I'm not religious anymore, but this idea still comforts me in certain situations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This 10 year old's behavior is outside of the range of normal. It is handicapping her socio-emotional development to a significant degree, and MUST be addressed, because all the smarts and diplomas in the world will not compensate.
As you suspected, this is a case for the pediatric psychologist, for a full evaluation, then possibly, the pediatric psychiatrist, for medication, if recommended by the psychologist. Additionally there may be specific therapies that will be recommended.
Good luck, OP.
LOL, oh yes, OP should probably have her daughter lobotomized. Sorry your parents never hugged you, PP.
I'm a scientist, I've got experience in the fields of medicine and psychology, so don't scoff like an idiot. OP needs concrete suggestions, and if they're scary, I'm sure she can handle it. She's not made of glass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This 10 year old's behavior is outside of the range of normal. It is handicapping her socio-emotional development to a significant degree, and MUST be addressed, because all the smarts and diplomas in the world will not compensate.
As you suspected, this is a case for the pediatric psychologist, for a full evaluation, then possibly, the pediatric psychiatrist, for medication, if recommended by the psychologist. Additionally there may be specific therapies that will be recommended.
Good luck, OP.
LOL, oh yes, OP should probably have her daughter lobotomized. Sorry your parents never hugged you, PP.
Anonymous wrote:
This 10 year old's behavior is outside of the range of normal. It is handicapping her socio-emotional development to a significant degree, and MUST be addressed, because all the smarts and diplomas in the world will not compensate.
As you suspected, this is a case for the pediatric psychologist, for a full evaluation, then possibly, the pediatric psychiatrist, for medication, if recommended by the psychologist. Additionally there may be specific therapies that will be recommended.
Good luck, OP.
Anonymous wrote:What a good hearted girl!
Are you religious? If so maybe you could teach her to say a little prayer for someone when she knows they are suffering- that way she feels like she is doing something helpful and hopefully will not dwell on it so much. If not, then maybe just positive thoughts or well wishes?
Additionally, she could earn money from you and make a little donation to causes that would make her feel better.
Anonymous wrote:I am like this OP. Try to teach her that she doesn't have to take on everyone's problems and that they need to work through their own things. It always helps me when I'm reminded I don't HAVE to feel bad for everything and everyone. I feel others' pain as if it's my own. It's a terrible burden, esp when young. Def get her therapy and possibly anxiety meds and tell her that grown ups don't need children to make them feel better. That's going down a dangerous path.
Anonymous wrote:While you are working on the larger issues, I hope you are also teaching her not to touch strangers. That she would go up to a strange man and hug him is pretty disturbing.