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General Parenting
Totally drowning as a parent
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<blockquote data-quote="AppleCori" data-source="post: 729786" data-attributes="member: 16024"><p>It seems like your son has several things going on with him. Will he be able to support himself and live on his own as an adult? Rather than reunification, I might want to talk to them about finding him a permanent, supervised living situation for adults with disabilities and sex-offender tendencies. </p><p></p><p>I think the professionals are short-sighted on this. Your daughter loves her brother but, as she goes through puberty and comes into a greater understanding of what happened to her, she might have some different insights.</p><p></p><p> It just seems like they are not looking out for her best interests.</p><p></p><p>I have pondered your question, but I just don’t see how even a 100% guarantee that this will never happen again would be enough to allow him back into the home where your daughter lives.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AppleCori, post: 729786, member: 16024"] It seems like your son has several things going on with him. Will he be able to support himself and live on his own as an adult? Rather than reunification, I might want to talk to them about finding him a permanent, supervised living situation for adults with disabilities and sex-offender tendencies. I think the professionals are short-sighted on this. Your daughter loves her brother but, as she goes through puberty and comes into a greater understanding of what happened to her, she might have some different insights. It just seems like they are not looking out for her best interests. I have pondered your question, but I just don’t see how even a 100% guarantee that this will never happen again would be enough to allow him back into the home where your daughter lives. [/QUOTE]
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