Anonymous wrote:Military School - he needs to get it together and touchy feely psychobabble will not help. He needs to own himself and his mistakes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We were in your shoes five years ago.
We changed the way we approached the situation by accepting weed/vaping/drinking was beyond our control. We confiscated and expressed our concern, but did not punish. Instead of always being upset with him, we tried to emphasize our love for him even though it was very difficult at times. We encouraged him with ways to manage the ADHD w/o the meds and really tried to show compassion when he found himself in messes because of it instead of being angry with his carelessness which was really the ADHD. With the sleep/eating/exercie habits, I tried to encourage better habits by reminding him and encouraging him, but I don't think it changed much.
How’s he doing now?
Doing great in college. Nicotine vaping has stopped. Still using weed, but it seems to be more social, not daily. Our relationship is much better, I think the separation made us appreciate each other more. Has had repeated episodes of depression, but he is much more proactive about seeking therapy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We were in your shoes five years ago.
We changed the way we approached the situation by accepting weed/vaping/drinking was beyond our control. We confiscated and expressed our concern, but did not punish. Instead of always being upset with him, we tried to emphasize our love for him even though it was very difficult at times. We encouraged him with ways to manage the ADHD w/o the meds and really tried to show compassion when he found himself in messes because of it instead of being angry with his carelessness which was really the ADHD. With the sleep/eating/exercie habits, I tried to encourage better habits by reminding him and encouraging him, but I don't think it changed much.
How’s he doing now?
Anonymous wrote:Deal with the ADHD, depression, and learning disabilities first. Medication, therapy, and tutoring if he needs it. If he’s already on meds, he needs a medication tweak. Common as they go through puberty, hormone levels are changing and they’re also getting physically bigger and might need a larger dose as a result. If he’s not on meds he needs to get on them ASAP. Go through a child psychiatrist, not just a GP. Also consider he may have some undiagnosed anxiety along with his ADHD and depression. Does he have an IEP and/or 504 plan? You might want to post on the SN forum. He is entitled to accommodations through the schools.
I think after you get his mental health under control, some of the other issues (pot, drinking, vaping) may stop or lessen. He won’t be trying to self medicate anymore if his mental health is more under control through prescription meds and therapy. I might also consider home-schooling for a time. You can go through a program like K-12 and he can do some work online. I think that might help get the physical health issues under control because he won’t be physically around so many kids and their associated germs at school. I myself had a period of bad illnesses in high school - I think some kids get sick with something, and then get sick again and again while their immune system is weakened and they just never have a chance to recover. And that can definitely have an adverse affect on their mental health!
Anonymous wrote:We were in your shoes five years ago.
We changed the way we approached the situation by accepting weed/vaping/drinking was beyond our control. We confiscated and expressed our concern, but did not punish. Instead of always being upset with him, we tried to emphasize our love for him even though it was very difficult at times. We encouraged him with ways to manage the ADHD w/o the meds and really tried to show compassion when he found himself in messes because of it instead of being angry with his carelessness which was really the ADHD. With the sleep/eating/exercie habits, I tried to encourage better habits by reminding him and encouraging him, but I don't think it changed much.
Anonymous wrote:My son is 16. He needs a major detox and wellness reboot. We are dealing with the following:
Nicotine addiction
Marijuana use -
Some drinking
Getting sick all the time - flu, now may have mono, chronic mouth infections, stomach issues
Off and on depression
Learning disabilities and adhd
Poor nutrition
Poor sleep
He’s also recovering from several serious fractures from an accident a few months ago
What would you do. I’ve tried most of the traditional ways of helping him with the above (therapy, boundaries, consequences, meds). I’m afraid he spiraling and we need to have a real reboot. I’m not sure inpatient treatment is what’s needed but wishing there was some kind of very healthy, holistic place to send him to help get a reset, so he can realize how much better life is when you treat your body and mind well
Anonymous wrote:Lots of great answers. I would also consider considering his spiritual health and if connecting to God/other spiritual truths could be helpful (not in a legalistic, bashing way of course but in an accepting love/worth kind of way).