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Casey Anthony Bombshell!
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<blockquote data-quote="klmno" data-source="post: 434279" data-attributes="member: 3699"><p>Another thought/question. What would you do and what can one do if they know their child is a compulsive liar even as an adolescent? I know my difficult child has been lieing to me for several years. I don't believe he could do this to his child (murder), if he had one. But 1) what therapist could help with this problem or who could I take him to to "change" it? Who could Cindy have taken Casey to for this?, 2) If you know they lie and have all thru their teen years but also know that doesn't make them a murderer, what should or what can parents do when a major issue comes up and you think you are trying to do whatever it takes to get the kid to finally tell the truth so whenever that adult kid does come up with a story, you have no idea whether or not to believe it? This sort of internal struggle has to be what drove Cindy, if not George too, in how they dealt with Casey. They didn't want to beleive she killed their grand daughter- that her grand daughter was dead or that Casey could go that far. There really was no reason to think she would murder her own child. I think they were handling things the way they were early on to just try to get Casey to tell the truth and give them a lead of how to get Caylee back. Haven't we all tried every method under the sun at times trying to get a beleivable story out of our difficult children? Partly because we didn't want to accept the worst and partly because we want to beleive them and partly because we want them to finally realize how serious things have gotten and they need to just come clean?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="klmno, post: 434279, member: 3699"] Another thought/question. What would you do and what can one do if they know their child is a compulsive liar even as an adolescent? I know my difficult child has been lieing to me for several years. I don't believe he could do this to his child (murder), if he had one. But 1) what therapist could help with this problem or who could I take him to to "change" it? Who could Cindy have taken Casey to for this?, 2) If you know they lie and have all thru their teen years but also know that doesn't make them a murderer, what should or what can parents do when a major issue comes up and you think you are trying to do whatever it takes to get the kid to finally tell the truth so whenever that adult kid does come up with a story, you have no idea whether or not to believe it? This sort of internal struggle has to be what drove Cindy, if not George too, in how they dealt with Casey. They didn't want to beleive she killed their grand daughter- that her grand daughter was dead or that Casey could go that far. There really was no reason to think she would murder her own child. I think they were handling things the way they were early on to just try to get Casey to tell the truth and give them a lead of how to get Caylee back. Haven't we all tried every method under the sun at times trying to get a beleivable story out of our difficult children? Partly because we didn't want to accept the worst and partly because we want to beleive them and partly because we want them to finally realize how serious things have gotten and they need to just come clean? [/QUOTE]
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