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Parent Emeritus
Coping with addicted, homeless adult daughter
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<blockquote data-quote="Copabanana" data-source="post: 765999" data-attributes="member: 18958"><p>Hi Dad.</p><p></p><p>Please give yourself a break. Sometimes I dread when I see my son calling. Most of the time it's manipulation. That happens as early as a week into the month when his SSI money is gone. He decides he loves us and that we're "Family" when the money runs out. Yesterday I told him that. Even though my partner, M, was amenable to letting him return, I felt otherwise. I told him point blank that I knew it was manipulation. He responded with a text: "Please believe that I am never visiting you again, nor will you be visiting me." "Thank you for your kind thoughts" was my response. He did apologize.</p><p></p><p>I mean, Dad, we should be saying rah, rah, rah, when we're abused? Give.me.a.break. You're only human. </p><p></p><p>It needs to be okay that we feel what we feel and we think what we think.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Copabanana, post: 765999, member: 18958"] Hi Dad. Please give yourself a break. Sometimes I dread when I see my son calling. Most of the time it's manipulation. That happens as early as a week into the month when his SSI money is gone. He decides he loves us and that we're "Family" when the money runs out. Yesterday I told him that. Even though my partner, M, was amenable to letting him return, I felt otherwise. I told him point blank that I knew it was manipulation. He responded with a text: "Please believe that I am never visiting you again, nor will you be visiting me." "Thank you for your kind thoughts" was my response. He did apologize. I mean, Dad, we should be saying rah, rah, rah, when we're abused? Give.me.a.break. You're only human. It needs to be okay that we feel what we feel and we think what we think. [/QUOTE]
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Coping with addicted, homeless adult daughter
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