Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not to freak you out, but please bring this up with your ped and try to get a psych referral. This is a huge red flag with regards to anxiety issues, and if your DD has them, the sooner she gets into treatment the better. You want her to develop coping mechanisms before her developing brain spends too much time trapped in anxious thought cycles. This is not something to wait and see on.
As someone with anxiety, I totally agree. My mom just called me a "worrier", but it can be really debilitating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clearly we don't have control over what happens to our lives but how can we make her feel safe at school knowing we are ok? She's just starting to comprehend that life isn't permanent after the loss of her dear friend's grandmother.
She doesn't have a cell phone so texting her midday isn't an option. Any ideas?
I'd try ridicule.
"That's ridiculous, Larla. Dad and I are not going to die today. Don't be so dramatic."
Because ridicule helps a child with so many different problems? Are you insane?
Anonymous wrote:21:45 has some great suggestions. I used a book with my son, I'll attach the link. It's a guidebook for the kids kind of. They draw their worries, write them down, wrote what will happen after. It was very helpful for my son.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/1591473144/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1483610558&sr=8-1&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_QL65&keywords=what+to+do+when+you+worry+too+much&dpPl=1&dpID=51kmpp5bl5L&ref=plSrch
Anonymous wrote:This was me when I was a kid. It was anxiety. I really wish someone had seen it as such and treated it.
Please set up an appointment with a therapist who specializes in treating kids with anxiety. There are ways to treat it - and they are exactly the opposite of what your instincts are leading you to do. (Reassuring only makes the anxiety worse.)
Anonymous wrote:Not to freak you out, but please bring this up with your ped and try to get a psych referral. This is a huge red flag with regards to anxiety issues, and if your DD has them, the sooner she gets into treatment the better. You want her to develop coping mechanisms before her developing brain spends too much time trapped in anxious thought cycles. This is not something to wait and see on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clearly we don't have control over what happens to our lives but how can we make her feel safe at school knowing we are ok? She's just starting to comprehend that life isn't permanent after the loss of her dear friend's grandmother.
She doesn't have a cell phone so texting her midday isn't an option. Any ideas?
I'd try ridicule.
"That's ridiculous, Larla. Dad and I are not going to die today. Don't be so dramatic."