Anonymous wrote:Schizophrenia can emerge in males from ages 15-23. He's in the right age range. And usually the first symptoms are irritability and insomnia not hallucinations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schizophrenia can emerge in males from ages 15-23. He's in the right age range. And usually the first symptoms are irritability and insomnia not hallucinations.
My son developed psychosis from smoking weed. Drug test him stat. He started acting paranoid and hearing voices.
Anonymous wrote:Schizophrenia can emerge in males from ages 15-23. He's in the right age range. And usually the first symptoms are irritability and insomnia not hallucinations.
Anonymous wrote:There are medical conditions that could result in unexplained weight loss, disrupted sleep, and low motivation/fatigue. Have you done any bloodwork?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s enough red flags that you should search his room thoroughly for any drug paraphernalia. Does he have access to any prescription medication that he should not have? I truly hope that’s not what’s going on but these behaviors are very worrisome. But at the very least he needs to be in class every day or have serious consequences at home. You can check your router for any unknown device devices connecting to your network. Do you require he keeps his phone in your bedroom at night time? If not you should start.
I will search his room tomorrow when he is at his lacrosse practice. I am also ordering a drug test for him to take if this continues. He is not on any prescription drugs. I take anti-depressants (bupropion) but I keep them locked away in my room.
When I have spoken to him about his absences, he becomes cagey, and says that he is in school and his teachers are marking him absent. However, I know I need to lay the law down. I will be discussing this with DH when he gets home.
He keeps his phone in his room at night.
Oh gosh. I am a teacher and I had a student pull this with his mom. I kept calling home and leaving messages, and he kept telling her that he was in class and I was just inexplicably not seeing him and then taking time to call home. Yeah, no, no teacher is going to make that mistake.
Maybe you can say, "I've asked the school to call me immediately the next time you are absent from a class. I'll come down to school and pull you out of class, and then we can talk to the principal about why your teachers keep making this mistake."
Good luck, OP. He's starting to fall through the cracks and you need to catch him.
Anonymous wrote:Those were the exact same behaviors my son started exhibiting at age 15. Like to a T. It was not drugs or vaping. It was the onset of bipolar 2, which came with the most serious crushing depression and self injurious behavior and serious (not cry for help) suicide attempts as well as violence towards others.
Anonymous wrote:Gaming
Also schizophrenia can start this way.