School. What amount of school she has gotten this year has been so sporadic that she and I are both a little panicked. We keep picking up and then she tanks and we lose a day, and then a sister has a doctor's appointment, or Caroline has one of her many, many doctor appointments etc. Or like today when I slept so poorly last night that I was a complete zombie and had to take a nap, but couldn't sleep because I had to take lunches to my younger kids. The whole afternoon I just felt sick from the lack of sleep. Then Caroline really took an emotional dive when her sisters got home. The first blow was when my oldest declared that two boys were vying to take her to the senior prom. Then she did something that Caroline viewed as a selfish snub. She began to absolutely fall apart. She kept saying her life was so awful, and she would never have friends, and she will fail in school again, and she just wants to live far away from her sisters because she feels so alone. She was explosive and angry and just desperate, crying that she just wanted to go to heaven.
I feel like everyday is a battle to keep her alive, not just getting her through sixth grade or these tumultuous middle school years. I truly feel like I am constantly trying to keep her from killing herself before her life gets better. Yes, she has had an awful six years of being asked to leave schools, losing friends, hospitalizations that gave her PTSD from the incompetency of the staff, the rejection of her sisters, the loss of a childhood from age 7 to almost 13 now.
She stopped playing at the age of 10. She just lost that ability to imagine and pretend and just relax and play. Instead, she was driven to manufacture great "projects" that would have such a stranglehold on her she could do nothing else. Our next door neighbor thought it was just brilliance, but I knew, from my mother's heart, that she was not free to play anymore. Something had taken over her mind and now she could only perform missions. I feel even sadder now as my 9 and 11 year old girls play for hours with their barns and horses, making up wonderful adventures. The contrast is stark and heartbreaking.
I am so tired of being on this rescue mission day after day. Rescuing her from scholastic failure, from failure to even keep one friend, from failure at home with her shattered relationships with her sisters, from the failure to live a full life and have hope that things will get better. Everything about her is awkward, painfully so. She has no fashion sense, so she will leave the house looking pretty odd, which doesn't help other girls to like her. She doesn't know how to manage her curls, and so she looks disheveled and unkempt, even though I try to help her. She doesn't carry herself with any sort of poise at all--in fact she kind of stomps and throws herself along in a way that sometimes reminds me of cerebral palsy. I think it is the sensory integration disorder she has. I have spent so much money on trying to help her look more "in" because she has so little going for her in terms of social skills, but nothing lasts long. She just goes back to being sloppy and disheveled. I love her so much. She is the apple of our eye. It is very painful to see her struggle with every aspect of her life. Please pray for our struggler.
5 comments:
Thank you for sharing your story. I am also a mom to a bipolar kid and I feel your pain.
*L*
njmomblog.wordpress.com
Hi there! I am glad you foubd this blog. It is good to know that others out there really understand our lives, isn't it?
This is so my girl. Med from age 7, she is 10 now, and even though she is a beautiful girl, she won't let me fix her hair, and she has her own ideas of fashion.....jeans rolled up above her knees, a belt cinched tightly a few inches above her waist....i want to fix the awkwardness and sensory integration for her, but she doesn't want me to touch her.
Reading your last post about strep and the antibiotics and the backsliding....have you heard of PANDAS?
mamtufour, yes the sensory thing seems to go along with bp disorder, Aspergers, autism, etc. Caroline has grown out of the sensory thing for the most part. She still doesn't want to wear anything that isn't soft and comfy.
Yes, I have heard of PANDAS and if I had known about it when she was three, by which time she has been on 31 antibiotics for ear infections and sinus infections, we might have pursued a different course. But here we are and the meds work very well so we can only c onclude she is now bipolar.
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