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re: 12 Year Old Girl with BPD

Posted on 4/29/24 at 3:01 pm to
Posted by Aubie Spr96
lolwut?
Member since Dec 2009
41275 posts
Posted on 4/29/24 at 3:01 pm to
quote:

Kid called your bluff.



We threw the toys away. It was no bluff. You, like everyone else that hasn't dealt with it, have no idea what you are talking about.


If the child doesn't respond to the punishment and correct the behavior, then there is nothing you can do legally as a parent to alter the behavior. The child literally becomes unparentable. You are under the impression that the child is rational, they are not. There was never any reasoning with my daughter. You were wasting your time.

Oh, the school? They don't care. They are there for the normal kids. They just wanted the troubled kids to GTFO. Police? Yeah, forget them too. Unless your kid is killing someone, they just pass the offense along to the parents. Doctors? Yeah right. In Alabama at the age of 13, you are in control of your medical care. So, if the prescribe some medications or therapies, the 13+ year old kid has to agree to participate. Think about that. The medical system expects the irrational child to make rational decisions on their mental health. It's amazingly stupid.

Again, I'm praying for the OP's family and hope that they are able to find the right place to help their daughter.
Posted by kingbob
Sorrento, LA
Member since Nov 2010
67234 posts
Posted on 4/29/24 at 3:12 pm to
I have met many people who I saw as behaving irrationally. Not one of them saw themselves that way. They all had an internal logic system to rationalize their decisions. Learning their system is the only way to motivate someone whose system is vastly different from yours.

I was driven by fear as a child. I had an external motivation because I would be physically punished brutally for anything short of perfection. The constant (and very real and acted on) threat of physical violence kept me in line for a good while. It didn’t make me healthy, but it helped me hide my mistakes until I got to a point in life where that external fear was no longer looming over me and I couldn’t hide my deficiencies any longer. I couldn’t understand that most of my peers, as a kid, didn’t live with a figurative omnipresent sword of Damocles over their heads. Once I learned that they had something else entirely driving them, I started to understand other people better.

I have met people driven by revenge, guilt, shame, pleasure, challenge, attention, etc. You cannot understand how to motivate someone whose driving force is substantially different from yours until you truly learn their system. This is incredibly difficult to do.
This post was edited on 4/29/24 at 3:24 pm
Posted by lsunutinno
Dome Island
Member since Nov 2004
1302 posts
Posted on 4/29/24 at 3:21 pm to
I'm with ya Aubie. If you don't live it, you just can't even imagine it. The stories that parents that have gone though it are just about unbelievable (maybe more so with ASPD males).
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