Anonymous wrote:I mean, these are your genes. There is nothing you can do to prevent mental illness. You can talk about it and destigmatize treatments so suicide is less likely, though.
Anonymous wrote:Oh man I remember these days.
Anonymous wrote:Keep your DC off psycho active drugs. In my family several people have developed psychosis, depression and schizophrenia after using drugs - street drugs and prescription. They probably had the genetic predisposition for mental illness and the drug use pulled the trigger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm trying to figure out how you can confidently suss this out at 2.5 years old.
And I have an eerily simar background to yours including high IQ scores and a sibling that committed suicide in young adulthood (suspected undiagnosed bipolar).
My kids are bright and darling little gems but I wasn't worried about this at 2.5 and I'm still not worried about it years later. Their advanced reading and math is kind of like a cool party trick. Nothing more, nothing less.
“A cool party trick”? That so callous, PP.
And I believe I sussed out the best preschool for my DD’s personality at 2.5.
Some people worry more about genetic illnesses than others. You clearly aren’t in the worrying group. Good for you. Here’s your cookie.
DP here. Not callous as much as realist and humble. None of which describes you, PP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm trying to figure out how you can confidently suss this out at 2.5 years old.
And I have an eerily simar background to yours including high IQ scores and a sibling that committed suicide in young adulthood (suspected undiagnosed bipolar).
My kids are bright and darling little gems but I wasn't worried about this at 2.5 and I'm still not worried about it years later. Their advanced reading and math is kind of like a cool party trick. Nothing more, nothing less.
“A cool party trick”? That so callous, PP.
And I believe I sussed out the best preschool for my DD’s personality at 2.5.
Some people worry more about genetic illnesses than others. You clearly aren’t in the worrying group. Good for you. Here’s your cookie.
Anonymous wrote:I'm trying to figure out how you can confidently suss this out at 2.5 years old.
And I have an eerily simar background to yours including high IQ scores and a sibling that committed suicide in young adulthood (suspected undiagnosed bipolar).
My kids are bright and darling little gems but I wasn't worried about this at 2.5 and I'm still not worried about it years later. Their advanced reading and math is kind of like a cool party trick. Nothing more, nothing less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The preschool you select isn’t going to change his chances of developing mental illness unless it’s an abusive atmosphere.
I completely disagree. Preschool choice is vitally important with the child’s personality and intellect in mind.
Montessori or French preschool would have been a mistake for my perfectionist DD. She’s bright and serious. She needed free play and a warm, social atmosphere.