
Anonymous wrote:A family member and his parents went through this; they said he was just unmotivated. He barely graduated from high school and joined the army, where they were able to determine he has learning problems. After serving his enlistment, he's gotten more support from the VA than he's ever gotten from his parents, who are UMC and still in denial.
If he had been evaluated, tested, and the problem figured out ... he would be doing so much better now.
She is the child and you are the parent OP. Get her help and figure out what the problem is, instead of punishing her. If she doesn't know how to fix what's wrong, punishment will do no good.
Anonymous wrote:Parenting sounds sub par to me—you need to figure out the issue, instead of just taking crap away. My guess is that her issues have been going on a long time and you’ve really dropped the ball here.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds exactly like my child who is a Junior, he is SLD (slow processing), ED (depression) and ADD. He takes medicine and sees a psychologist 2 times a week and we just started a behavior plan for him. I't is working, he is making it to class he will earn a reward when DC makes it to the goal of 10 on time arrivals. It had gotten bad, due to DC avoiding class, the work is too hard but he still needs to show up.
Take her to be evaluated, she is showing you that there is a problem,