Anonymous wrote:Op here - so we have been waking up dd 30 mins earlier and that has definitely helped.
The morning routine was just an example of things that set her off. She is also in general very negative about herself. She constantly says she is stupid or she hates herself. But when I ask why she can’t articulate it. And she mostly does it with me. Rarely with anybody else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - I feel like all the therapy hasn't done anything. When she starts to spiral she refuses to do any of the techniques that she has been taught. When she talks calmly with her therapist she knows all the right things to say, how to do the techniques and her therapist always says she is doing great.
She is just such a moody, anxious child and I know that my reaction makes it worse but there is just so much I can take before I lose it. It makes me hate being a parent.
While there may be other issues (and I would recommend going forward with a meeting with a psychologist for an evaluation), what you are describing sounds like anxiety.
When someone has severe anxiety and reaches a crunch point, rationality goes out the window and they may be unable to access appropriate techniques - especially when they are young. This will get better as she gets older and matures (although it may/will get worse during puberty). For now, firm guidelines and allowing her to experience misses (going to school with messy hair or missing breakfast) will get her where she needs to go (both physically and metaphorically - experiencing consequences and realizing that it isn't dire is how people, including anxious people, learn resilience).
OP - yes I definitely think she has anxiety. My husband does as well. I just am not sure if therapy is flushing money down the toilet or if we should keep doing it. I would like her to try medication but DH is against and I am not really even sure what kind of medication would help a 9 year old. Should we do more intensive therapy? In patient? More times a week?
Your husband needs to get over his medication issues and you need to discuss options with a therapist. It is ludicrous to be where you are and not be discussing medication options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - I feel like all the therapy hasn't done anything. When she starts to spiral she refuses to do any of the techniques that she has been taught. When she talks calmly with her therapist she knows all the right things to say, how to do the techniques and her therapist always says she is doing great.
She is just such a moody, anxious child and I know that my reaction makes it worse but there is just so much I can take before I lose it. It makes me hate being a parent.
While there may be other issues (and I would recommend going forward with a meeting with a psychologist for an evaluation), what you are describing sounds like anxiety.
When someone has severe anxiety and reaches a crunch point, rationality goes out the window and they may be unable to access appropriate techniques - especially when they are young. This will get better as she gets older and matures (although it may/will get worse during puberty). For now, firm guidelines and allowing her to experience misses (going to school with messy hair or missing breakfast) will get her where she needs to go (both physically and metaphorically - experiencing consequences and realizing that it isn't dire is how people, including anxious people, learn resilience).
OP - yes I definitely think she has anxiety. My husband does as well. I just am not sure if therapy is flushing money down the toilet or if we should keep doing it. I would like her to try medication but DH is against and I am not really even sure what kind of medication would help a 9 year old. Should we do more intensive therapy? In patient? More times a week?
No OP - do not continue on a path that isn’t working or go straight to heavy duty medication. There is specific therapy for child anxiety that focuses on parental reactions called SPACE. Start there. There may be more going on than anxiety but you need to start with evidence based therapies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - I feel like all the therapy hasn't done anything. When she starts to spiral she refuses to do any of the techniques that she has been taught. When she talks calmly with her therapist she knows all the right things to say, how to do the techniques and her therapist always says she is doing great.
She is just such a moody, anxious child and I know that my reaction makes it worse but there is just so much I can take before I lose it. It makes me hate being a parent.
While there may be other issues (and I would recommend going forward with a meeting with a psychologist for an evaluation), what you are describing sounds like anxiety.
When someone has severe anxiety and reaches a crunch point, rationality goes out the window and they may be unable to access appropriate techniques - especially when they are young. This will get better as she gets older and matures (although it may/will get worse during puberty). For now, firm guidelines and allowing her to experience misses (going to school with messy hair or missing breakfast) will get her where she needs to go (both physically and metaphorically - experiencing consequences and realizing that it isn't dire is how people, including anxious people, learn resilience).
OP - yes I definitely think she has anxiety. My husband does as well. I just am not sure if therapy is flushing money down the toilet or if we should keep doing it. I would like her to try medication but DH is against and I am not really even sure what kind of medication would help a 9 year old. Should we do more intensive therapy? In patient? More times a week?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trust your gut and get the neuropsych. Pediatricians and therapists are not trained to diagnose. You know what you see.
Yes they are trained to diagnose. But a neuropsych takes 6months/year and provides zero therapy. Save the time and money and go straight to therapy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - I feel like all the therapy hasn't done anything. When she starts to spiral she refuses to do any of the techniques that she has been taught. When she talks calmly with her therapist she knows all the right things to say, how to do the techniques and her therapist always says she is doing great.
She is just such a moody, anxious child and I know that my reaction makes it worse but there is just so much I can take before I lose it. It makes me hate being a parent.
While there may be other issues (and I would recommend going forward with a meeting with a psychologist for an evaluation), what you are describing sounds like anxiety.
When someone has severe anxiety and reaches a crunch point, rationality goes out the window and they may be unable to access appropriate techniques - especially when they are young. This will get better as she gets older and matures (although it may/will get worse during puberty). For now, firm guidelines and allowing her to experience misses (going to school with messy hair or missing breakfast) will get her where she needs to go (both physically and metaphorically - experiencing consequences and realizing that it isn't dire is how people, including anxious people, learn resilience).
OP - yes I definitely think she has anxiety. My husband does as well. I just am not sure if therapy is flushing money down the toilet or if we should keep doing it. I would like her to try medication but DH is against and I am not really even sure what kind of medication would help a 9 year old. Should we do more intensive therapy? In patient? More times a week?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a little surprised at the responses here. It seems everyone, including you OP, is trying to find some diagnosis. She is fine usually but has random outbursts, so what? you are freaking out because she gets up at 6:45 and can't get out of the shower by 7:10?? i'm sorry but that is an aggressive schedule. No way wants to wake up and be go go go from the minute they open their eyes. Some people might be ok with this but many are not and clearly your daughter has the kind of temperament where she needs to transition and take her time to wake up. Stop labeling her based on that frustration. Wake her up earlier, go to bed earlier, and/or shower at night. Your schedule is the problem.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:DD is 9 and has been in virtual therapy every other week for the past 3 years. She has anxiety and is prone to outbursts when things are not going her way. I have repeatedly asked her pediatrician and therapist if they think she has signs of ADHD, autism, any other neurocognitive disabilities and they all say no. I would like to get a neuropsych evaluations but my DH doesn't think she needs it because her pediatrician and therapist have not recommended it.
Example of her outbursts - she is very slow in the mornings. We need to leave at 7:30am for school. I woke her up at 6:45am this morning and she went into the shower. She didn't get out of the shower until 7:10am and the needed to change and eat. Usually this is fine but this morning her hair "wasn't perfect" and she kept trying to get it smoothed out and getting more and more upset. It culminated with her downstairs yelling that I couldn't get her hair perfect, screaming on the floor, hitting her head and saying she was stupid and an idiot.
I try my hardest not to react but of course I am human as well. I have 2 other kids I need to get up and out the door and I didn't want them to be late for school. I always feel like I am trying to mitigate any possible obstacles in her life so she doesn't have huge emotional breakdowns, which I know isn't the best course of action. I am at a loss as to what to do. She is very well behaved at school, never has this type of reaction, her teachers all tell me she is polite, helpful and does her work. Her test scores are high and her grades are always very good. She is exhausting and makes if difficult for me to parent. I did not want to start my Monday this way and has made the beginning of the week miserable for everyone in the house.