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really bad night
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<blockquote data-quote="TeDo" data-source="post: 580013" data-attributes="member: 15799"><p>Buddy is 100% right. This does sound a lot like Q's seizures and some of his medication reactions. My difficult child 1 had similar reactions to Prozac and Risperdal. I understand the violence AND the overwhelming guilt they feel after a rage. difficult child 1 always remembered what he did during a rage but admitted that "Something was making me do it. It was like being a puppet on a string." Your difficult child is lucky that you have the frame of mind you have. Way too many parents and other "authority" figures seem to automatically jump the the "bad boy" mentality. You really should be talking to your neuro about all this. I HOPE he/she is a good one that actually LISTENS to you. If not, you should think about finding one that does.</p><p></p><p>{{{{HUGS}}}} to you AND your DS13. He's going to be devistated when he finds out what he did. It might help to come up with a plan to replace them in a realistic timeframe BEFORE he wakes up, if you can. I know that always helped difficult child 1, knowing what the plan and timeframe was. In our case, nothing expensive was broken so I replaced them since it wasn't intentional.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TeDo, post: 580013, member: 15799"] Buddy is 100% right. This does sound a lot like Q's seizures and some of his medication reactions. My difficult child 1 had similar reactions to Prozac and Risperdal. I understand the violence AND the overwhelming guilt they feel after a rage. difficult child 1 always remembered what he did during a rage but admitted that "Something was making me do it. It was like being a puppet on a string." Your difficult child is lucky that you have the frame of mind you have. Way too many parents and other "authority" figures seem to automatically jump the the "bad boy" mentality. You really should be talking to your neuro about all this. I HOPE he/she is a good one that actually LISTENS to you. If not, you should think about finding one that does. {{{{HUGS}}}} to you AND your DS13. He's going to be devistated when he finds out what he did. It might help to come up with a plan to replace them in a realistic timeframe BEFORE he wakes up, if you can. I know that always helped difficult child 1, knowing what the plan and timeframe was. In our case, nothing expensive was broken so I replaced them since it wasn't intentional. [/QUOTE]
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