Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We encouraged her to talk to a counselor. She refused because “I don’t have depression and I’d you force me to do that I’ll go home”. We haven’t abandoned her. We’ve tried to support her. But she doesn’t want to be supported, she wants to deny that there is anything wrong. So here we are.
This is manipulative b.s.
Send her home before she does something drastic that harms your family, house, car, pets, etc.
Depression doesn't have people cause harm. You are getting your mental health conditions confused.
She doesn't want to say anything as when she did she wasn't supported so she is right to just say she's ok now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We encouraged her to talk to a counselor. She refused because “I don’t have depression and I’d you force me to do that I’ll go home”. We haven’t abandoned her. We’ve tried to support her. But she doesn’t want to be supported, she wants to deny that there is anything wrong. So here we are.
This is manipulative b.s.
Send her home before she does something drastic that harms your family, house, car, pets, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wish her well and send her off - dont get dragged into more drama.
This. She's the one that said she was depressed, which is a clinical condition, not the winter doldrums. At worst, you are putting your family (mostly the vulnerable children) at risk. At best, she will find another way to ditch your family like the AP who wanted to rematch for warmer weather. It's not going to last the year. Send her home.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We encouraged her to talk to a counselor. She refused because “I don’t have depression and I’d you force me to do that I’ll go home”. We haven’t abandoned her. We’ve tried to support her. But she doesn’t want to be supported, she wants to deny that there is anything wrong. So here we are.
Anonymous wrote:Wish her well and send her off - dont get dragged into more drama.
Anonymous wrote:Technically, AP is an adult, and no one is stopping her from seeking treatment on her own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here with an update. Au pair, after finally talking to her parents, is now adamant that she’s not depressed and doesn’t have depression at all, and tells the LCC that now we are just twisting her behavior to say it all looks like depression. Au pair says “it is winter blues” and “my parent say I don’t have depression and everyone who knows me well says I don’t have depression”. This is now flipping back on us because au pair is telling LCC that (five months in) she is not feeling welcomed by our family (which is the same thing she said about her first host family, where she lasted two months).
Somehow, this is coming back to bite us and now we are being portrayed as a bad host family that is misconstruing the words and actions of our (fluent in English) au pair, making up this business about depression, and really not just being welcoming enough.
I think its sad between you and the LLC, that neither one has done anything to support her and get her treatment. She may be fluent but she may not fully grasp it as well as you think. But, either way, other countries treat depression differently which is why her parents are saying that and you either rematch as you don't want to help/deal with her or you get her help. You don't sound very welcoming or supportive.
What treatment would you suggest for a person in denial and blaming the host family?
Pull the plug. It’s already headed down the drain and you don’t want to see what more manipulative behavior your AP will come up with if you let her stay...
She wasn't in denial until everyone dismissed her. She asked for help, her parents dismissed her and LCC and host parents refused to help.
Huh? Blame everyone else for AP’s current denial? Absurd. Technically, AP is an adult, and no one is stopping her from seeking treatment on her own.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand how they check these things. Our au pair has a history of situational depression and was treated for it. On the agency interview forms it says no such history. I don’t think it would be outcome determinative, but we would have wanted to know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here with an update. Au pair, after finally talking to her parents, is now adamant that she’s not depressed and doesn’t have depression at all, and tells the LCC that now we are just twisting her behavior to say it all looks like depression. Au pair says “it is winter blues” and “my parent say I don’t have depression and everyone who knows me well says I don’t have depression”. This is now flipping back on us because au pair is telling LCC that (five months in) she is not feeling welcomed by our family (which is the same thing she said about her first host family, where she lasted two months).
Somehow, this is coming back to bite us and now we are being portrayed as a bad host family that is misconstruing the words and actions of our (fluent in English) au pair, making up this business about depression, and really not just being welcoming enough.
I think its sad between you and the LLC, that neither one has done anything to support her and get her treatment. She may be fluent but she may not fully grasp it as well as you think. But, either way, other countries treat depression differently which is why her parents are saying that and you either rematch as you don't want to help/deal with her or you get her help. You don't sound very welcoming or supportive.
What treatment would you suggest for a person in denial and blaming the host family?
Pull the plug. It’s already headed down the drain and you don’t want to see what more manipulative behavior your AP will come up with if you let her stay...
She wasn't in denial until everyone dismissed her. She asked for help, her parents dismissed her and LCC and host parents refused to help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here with an update. Au pair, after finally talking to her parents, is now adamant that she’s not depressed and doesn’t have depression at all, and tells the LCC that now we are just twisting her behavior to say it all looks like depression. Au pair says “it is winter blues” and “my parent say I don’t have depression and everyone who knows me well says I don’t have depression”. This is now flipping back on us because au pair is telling LCC that (five months in) she is not feeling welcomed by our family (which is the same thing she said about her first host family, where she lasted two months).
Somehow, this is coming back to bite us and now we are being portrayed as a bad host family that is misconstruing the words and actions of our (fluent in English) au pair, making up this business about depression, and really not just being welcoming enough.
I think its sad between you and the LLC, that neither one has done anything to support her and get her treatment. She may be fluent but she may not fully grasp it as well as you think. But, either way, other countries treat depression differently which is why her parents are saying that and you either rematch as you don't want to help/deal with her or you get her help. You don't sound very welcoming or supportive.
What treatment would you suggest for a person in denial and blaming the host family?
Pull the plug. It’s already headed down the drain and you don’t want to see what more manipulative behavior your AP will come up with if you let her stay...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here with an update. Au pair, after finally talking to her parents, is now adamant that she’s not depressed and doesn’t have depression at all, and tells the LCC that now we are just twisting her behavior to say it all looks like depression. Au pair says “it is winter blues” and “my parent say I don’t have depression and everyone who knows me well says I don’t have depression”. This is now flipping back on us because au pair is telling LCC that (five months in) she is not feeling welcomed by our family (which is the same thing she said about her first host family, where she lasted two months).
Somehow, this is coming back to bite us and now we are being portrayed as a bad host family that is misconstruing the words and actions of our (fluent in English) au pair, making up this business about depression, and really not just being welcoming enough.
I think its sad between you and the LLC, that neither one has done anything to support her and get her treatment. She may be fluent but she may not fully grasp it as well as you think. But, either way, other countries treat depression differently which is why her parents are saying that and you either rematch as you don't want to help/deal with her or you get her help. You don't sound very welcoming or supportive.