Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could go thread by thread in DCUM and tell you with 90+ percent accuracy which posters are going to have "friction" with their college-aged kids. It's not rocket science. Be supportive, be cool, have a sense of humor, don't nag. Even when you disagree, speak to them like they're intelligent adults, not recalcitrant toddlers. Do these things and magically the "friction" goes away.
So how do we magically make your hubris go away?
Anonymous wrote:Nearly all good. I can only complain that DC has developed a rather grating Midwest accent (rising inflection at the end of each sentence). Small stuff. Other than that, sunshine and roses. DC has matured so much and has many funny stories about college.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of it. My son with a serious mental illness is home from school. He’s decided to stop taking his medication and got a medical marijuana card. It took years to get him in a good place to be able to go to college and now this. I feel like he must hate me for doing this. I thought we were past the hard part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of it. My son with a serious mental illness is home from school. He’s decided to stop taking his medication and got a medical marijuana card. It took years to get him in a good place to be able to go to college and now this. I feel like he must hate me for doing this. I thought we were past the hard part.
This sounds tough for sure, but why assume he "must hate [you] for doing this"? Maybe there is something about the medication that he doesn't like? Presumably / hopefully he talked about the risks, pros, and cons of dropping the medication and substituting w/ marijuana with the healthcare provider who gave him the medical marijuana card? Regardless, I wouldn't take it as a personal slight to you.
That’s how it feels. I was a mess the last few days and he didn’t react at all. He has a diagnosis of psychosis and stopping his medication is one thing but adding cannabis to the situation is a recipe for disaster. He said he talked to the doctor on the phone for maybe 10 minutes and didn’t tell her anything at all about his mental health or medication. These people don’t ask for any medical records or take a history or anything at all. Just tell them you have anxiety and that’s it. He actually doesn’t have anxiety.
Who in your life can you count on to hear you and see you? Who offers wise counsel and/or unconditional support? Who has served as your emotional rock in the past? Please make a point to reach out to them if you haven’t. It doesn’t matter how long it’s been since you last connected. This is a tough, tough situation, and you need quality support.
Same goes for the PP whose daughter is insisting she had a difficult childhood. Find those people who love and support you, and who will make you feel grounded and sane and whole. This is hard, hard stuff. Please make sure you’ve got someone to lean on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean my oldest has spent the last couple of years conjuring a weird narrative about how she had a shitty childhood and bad parents and I suspect that’s being encouraged by a therapist. So that’s been fun.
I’m sorry to hear this. Another tough situation.
She didn't, of course. She's just always been drawn to tragedy -- goes out of her way to befriend people who've lost parents/siblings, the ones struggling with depression and suicide ideation (she went through a phase of that herself, hence the therapist). We, her parents, did divorce five years ago and so that's legit trauma we've tried to help her through. But that's the only real tragedy in her life. Otherwise, she's wanted for nothing, had loads of support growing up, was always encouraged and cheered through her various interests. She's high-achieving, etc. But has somehow decided we sucked. She loves to lecture us on how we parent her sister (who's now a college student herself), has a history of being easily aggrieved by alleged wrong-doing by other parties (i.e. teammates, other parents in marching band in HS, teachers ... ). A year ago she floated the question of whether she had been sexually abused to her uncle (she wasn't). It's the weirdest thing. It's like she wants to wallow in tragedy and doesn't really have any in her life so she is inventing it.
Anonymous wrote:I could go thread by thread in DCUM and tell you with 90+ percent accuracy which posters are going to have "friction" with their college-aged kids. It's not rocket science. Be supportive, be cool, have a sense of humor, don't nag. Even when you disagree, speak to them like they're intelligent adults, not recalcitrant toddlers. Do these things and magically the "friction" goes away.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of it. My son with a serious mental illness is home from school. He’s decided to stop taking his medication and got a medical marijuana card. It took years to get him in a good place to be able to go to college and now this. I feel like he must hate me for doing this. I thought we were past the hard part.
Anonymous wrote:I could go thread by thread in DCUM and tell you with 90+ percent accuracy which posters are going to have "friction" with their college-aged kids. It's not rocket science. Be supportive, be cool, have a sense of humor, don't nag. Even when you disagree, speak to them like they're intelligent adults, not recalcitrant toddlers. Do these things and magically the "friction" goes away.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of it. My son with a serious mental illness is home from school. He’s decided to stop taking his medication and got a medical marijuana card. It took years to get him in a good place to be able to go to college and now this. I feel like he must hate me for doing this. I thought we were past the hard part.