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Well I just posted earlier about how great my son did meeting with his

teacher yesterday after not going to school last week. I said you

never know when the bomb would hit, didn't think it would be this fast.

Tonight he had a major rage again, been 4 days without meds so I can't

blame it on that. Threw things on the floor, screamed, etc. Who is

this child, not mine 5 months ago? Anyway, later it came out he can't

stand school, he can't write and that is all they do. Cant do division

even though last year he knew his math facts better than anyone.

Begged me to homeschool which I would be terrible at. Total melt down

again. I have no idea if I will get this child back in school tomorrow.

Then tonight they had the parent open house, the teacher talked about

the writing prompts, all very emotional, your happiest time, your most

embarrassing, saddest, funnest. My son struggled last night filling

out this sheet to answer those questions and to be honest I couldn't

think of some either. Tonight at the open house I just about lost it

thinking his most embarrassing time is every day and of course he

doesn't want to talk about that, its too weird, real and fresh, his

funnest time, well its been a long time since he has had one of those,

he doesn't like to do anything with his fears, what makes him laugh,

he says nothing only he makes others laugh (he is the class clown).

Then the teacher used examples like child getting a soccer goal, my

son won't play sports or had any great accomplishment this last 6

months. Ugg!! So now I know why writing might be hard not to add just

the penmanship part is hard for him.

Sorry to vent on your guys, but this is so depressing and such a

incredible roller coaster ride. I don't meet with his doctor until

next week about starting new meds. I feel like I am constantly on hold

for the next bomb and then when it hits it takes a couple of days to

get back on my feet. Then to top it off, I haven't been able to do my

work because of all this and my husband is holding back money which I

need for therapy, ugg!

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Adele~

I'm so sorry. I really feel for you because this all sounds very familiar to

me. My son won't go to school and would be horrified if he was asked to write

about those topics. My son is also the class clown. My son thinks he's weird

because all guys his age have trophies in their rooms of sports they've

participated in----but not him. He attempted sports at a young age but his

anxiety always held him back and therefore he quit trying and we quit pushing

it. He loves art and music and just hasn't ever met another guy friend who

likes those same things.

I hope tomorrow is a better day for you, and if he doesn't want to go to

school---don't stress about it yet. My son has missed 15 days so far this year.

YIKES!

Glenda

adelem1232000 <adelem@...> wrote:

Well I just posted earlier about how great my son did meeting with his

teacher yesterday after not going to school last week. I said you

never know when the bomb would hit, didn't think it would be this fast.

Tonight he had a major rage again, been 4 days without meds so I can't

blame it on that. Threw things on the floor, screamed, etc. Who is

this child, not mine 5 months ago? Anyway, later it came out he can't

stand school, he can't write and that is all they do. Cant do division

even though last year he knew his math facts better than anyone.

Begged me to homeschool which I would be terrible at. Total melt down

again. I have no idea if I will get this child back in school tomorrow.

Then tonight they had the parent open house, the teacher talked about

the writing prompts, all very emotional, your happiest time, your most

embarrassing, saddest, funnest. My son struggled last night filling

out this sheet to answer those questions and to be honest I couldn't

think of some either. Tonight at the open house I just about lost it

thinking his most embarrassing time is every day and of course he

doesn't want to talk about that, its too weird, real and fresh, his

funnest time, well its been a long time since he has had one of those,

he doesn't like to do anything with his fears, what makes him laugh,

he says nothing only he makes others laugh (he is the class clown).

Then the teacher used examples like child getting a soccer goal, my

son won't play sports or had any great accomplishment this last 6

months. Ugg!! So now I know why writing might be hard not to add just

the penmanship part is hard for him.

Sorry to vent on your guys, but this is so depressing and such a

incredible roller coaster ride. I don't meet with his doctor until

next week about starting new meds. I feel like I am constantly on hold

for the next bomb and then when it hits it takes a couple of days to

get back on my feet. Then to top it off, I haven't been able to do my

work because of all this and my husband is holding back money which I

need for therapy, ugg!

---------------------------------

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countries) for 2¢/min or less.

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In a message dated 9/6/2006 11:37:13 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,

g_mart1971@... writes:

Tonight at the open house I just about lost it

thinking his most embarrassing time is every day and of course he

doesn't want to talk about that, its too weird, real and fresh,

Adel

On the plus side, you know the teacher is understanding & will work with you

(after your meeting went so well with her & your son), she may not be

realizing that this is a problem for your son. Say something to her about it.

Use

it as an example of the type of thing you need to have her make exceptions

on for him.

Maybe your son could use his 'creative writing' skills and make something up

for these stories. Or ask if he could pick different subjects.

You could also have a heart-to-heart with your son & tell him that you want

to be sure he understands that everything can be worked with - instead of

letting himself get so upset & not say anything to you, to *please* give you a

chance to help him work things out..... chances are there's always a way to

work things out so they're ok for him.

Sometimes kids get so upset over things like this at school because they

feel " this is it... what the teacher says... I have no choice " and they panic.

Remind him that, while his teacher is understanding & wants to work with them

so he's comfortable at school - she may *not* be aware of every little thing

that's going to be a road block for him -- so he needs to be the one to come

home & talk to you about it so it can be addressed.

LT

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Thanks Glenda,

Yes your son sounds exactly like mine. Too bad we don’t live near each other

so they could hang out together.

Thanks for the encouragement. I am waking up feeling a little better, I get

so tired of being up and positive and then down and depressed.

Hang in there yourself!

Adele

_____

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Glenda ez

Sent: Wednesday, September 06, 2006 11:31 PM

Subject: Re: writing problems

Adele~

I'm so sorry. I really feel for you because this all sounds very familiar to

me. My son won't go to school and would be horrified if he was asked to

write about those topics. My son is also the class clown. My son thinks he's

weird because all guys his age have trophies in their rooms of sports

they've participated in----but not him. He attempted sports at a young age

but his anxiety always held him back and therefore he quit trying and we

quit pushing it. He loves art and music and just hasn't ever met another guy

friend who likes those same things.

I hope tomorrow is a better day for you, and if he doesn't want to go to

school---don't stress about it yet. My son has missed 15 days so far this

year. YIKES!

Glenda

adelem1232000 <adelemcarolina (DOT) <mailto:adelem%40carolina.rr.com> rr.com>

wrote:

Well I just posted earlier about how great my son did meeting with his

teacher yesterday after not going to school last week. I said you

never know when the bomb would hit, didn't think it would be this fast.

Tonight he had a major rage again, been 4 days without meds so I can't

blame it on that. Threw things on the floor, screamed, etc. Who is

this child, not mine 5 months ago? Anyway, later it came out he can't

stand school, he can't write and that is all they do. Cant do division

even though last year he knew his math facts better than anyone.

Begged me to homeschool which I would be terrible at. Total melt down

again. I have no idea if I will get this child back in school tomorrow.

Then tonight they had the parent open house, the teacher talked about

the writing prompts, all very emotional, your happiest time, your most

embarrassing, saddest, funnest. My son struggled last night filling

out this sheet to answer those questions and to be honest I couldn't

think of some either. Tonight at the open house I just about lost it

thinking his most embarrassing time is every day and of course he

doesn't want to talk about that, its too weird, real and fresh, his

funnest time, well its been a long time since he has had one of those,

he doesn't like to do anything with his fears, what makes him laugh,

he says nothing only he makes others laugh (he is the class clown).

Then the teacher used examples like child getting a soccer goal, my

son won't play sports or had any great accomplishment this last 6

months. Ugg!! So now I know why writing might be hard not to add just

the penmanship part is hard for him.

Sorry to vent on your guys, but this is so depressing and such a

incredible roller coaster ride. I don't meet with his doctor until

next week about starting new meds. I feel like I am constantly on hold

for the next bomb and then when it hits it takes a couple of days to

get back on my feet. Then to top it off, I haven't been able to do my

work because of all this and my husband is holding back money which I

need for therapy, ugg!

---------------------------------

Messenger with Voice. Make PC-to-Phone Calls to the US (and 30+

countries) for 2¢/min or less.

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Share on other sites

Thanks,

I did email the teacher this morning and she did tell us at Open House that

they could write on any subject, which I did tell me son. I do understand

the power of communication with the teacher and school. Your right he gets

so worked up that he doesn't see a way out. I got so upset last night that

he could see it, he then changed his tone and agreed to go to school. Woke

up in a pretty good mood and made it to school. Whew!! Every day out that

door is huge!

We have a appointment with his therapist and look forward to talking with

him about that.

Thanks for your help

Adele

_____

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of jtlt@...

Sent: Thursday, September 07, 2006 6:46 AM

Cc: adelem@...

Subject: Re: writing problems

In a message dated 9/6/2006 11:37:13 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,

g_mart1971 (DOT) <mailto:g_mart1971%40> com writes:

Tonight at the open house I just about lost it

thinking his most embarrassing time is every day and of course he

doesn't want to talk about that, its too weird, real and fresh,

Adel

On the plus side, you know the teacher is understanding & will work with you

(after your meeting went so well with her & your son), she may not be

realizing that this is a problem for your son. Say something to her about

it. Use

it as an example of the type of thing you need to have her make exceptions

on for him.

Maybe your son could use his 'creative writing' skills and make something up

for these stories. Or ask if he could pick different subjects.

You could also have a heart-to-heart with your son & tell him that you want

to be sure he understands that everything can be worked with - instead of

letting himself get so upset & not say anything to you, to *please* give you

a

chance to help him work things out..... chances are there's always a way to

work things out so they're ok for him.

Sometimes kids get so upset over things like this at school because they

feel " this is it... what the teacher says... I have no choice " and they

panic.

Remind him that, while his teacher is understanding & wants to work with

them

so he's comfortable at school - she may *not* be aware of every little thing

that's going to be a road block for him -- so he needs to be the one to come

home & talk to you about it so it can be addressed.

LT

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Hi Adele, I'm glad things seem a bit better today!

Reminded me of when my oldest son (21) was in elementary school.

They had to write a paper about the beach, like a trip they had

taken. Well, he'd never been to a beach, we couldn't/can't afford

it. So he was upset, I felt bad, but since he basically knew what

was *at* the beach, he could come up with something. (since then,

he's been lots of times with other families and we made it twice

when the twins were young). Other things like that have popped up

over the years between my 3 sons & schoolwork, but we managed

somehow. I can't recall the topic now but had a similar

problem (my OCD son) and he will not lie so coming up with something

wasn't working for him; and I don't recall now what he ended up

writing/doing.

Glad he made it to school and was feeling better about today!

>

> Thanks,

>

> I did email the teacher this morning and she did tell us at Open

House that

>

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Hi Adele,

I can relate to what you're going through. I haven't followed e-mails

for a while, so other than your recent post, I don't know your son's

circumstances. My son started 5th grade last Wednesday. Today he

went back for the first time since the 1st day. He's seeing the p-doc

tomorrow b/c one or more of his meds (risperdal, lamictal, ativan) has

caused a " cognitive dulling " effect that makes it extremely difficult

for him to read and almost impossible for him to do math problems.

Math was always his strongest subject. When he tried to focus long

enough to answer homework questions RE his favorite activities, foods,

subjects, etc., he spelled even simple words incorrectly, he reversed

letters, used no capitals or punctuation, etc.

Could your son's difficulties be caused by a medication? Overwhelming

OCD thoughts can also use up all one's mental energy so there's no

room left for reflection.

I was able to get to go to school today since I spoke to his

teacher and guidance counselor yesterday. Until his meds are stable

and he's able to think clearly, they are going to refrain from asking

him any questions (except in the unlikely event that he raises his

hand.) He's also going to participate in a small group of kids who

receive Title 1 extra help with math. If this doesn't help, I will

have a tutor help him until he's able to catch up. I'm not aware of

extra help being available without an IEP for writing. Rather than

home schooling, maybe your son could have a 504 plan that accomodates

his current writing difficulties. If things get really bad for my son

and he becomes completely unable to go to school for a long period,

I'm prepared to fight for the school to provide a tutor to come to the

house to help him in all subjects. Although the school will probably

not willing do this, I'm under the impression that they have a legal

obligation.

Good luck.

Tamara

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Thanks Tamara,

I am so sorry your son was having problems going to school also. That is

awesome that he went today, way to go!! My son has actually been off

medications for 4 days now and in some ways doing better except for a

incident yesterday. We just met with his therapist today and he suggested

seeing if he can do a lot of his writing by typing. For him so much of it is

the physical part of it. He started taking meds last year for ADD and it

helped tremendously but now he isn't taking the Adderal because of the OCD.

That is hard place to be for all if your child misses a lot of school. Your

kind of caught without a plan. Hopefully you are on the first step to going

back all year. My son went to school today also and I think had a good day,

yeh!! I am just going to cross my fingers and see what happens. I hate how

with this you constantly get caught off guard and never when the bad will

hit.

Thanks for the suggestions and good luck tomorrow!!

Adele

_____

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of cleopatra_lily

Sent: Thursday, September 07, 2006 12:32 PM

Subject: Re: writing problems

Hi Adele,

I can relate to what you're going through. I haven't followed e-mails

for a while, so other than your recent post, I don't know your son's

circumstances. My son started 5th grade last Wednesday. Today he

went back for the first time since the 1st day. He's seeing the p-doc

tomorrow b/c one or more of his meds (risperdal, lamictal, ativan) has

caused a " cognitive dulling " effect that makes it extremely difficult

for him to read and almost impossible for him to do math problems.

Math was always his strongest subject. When he tried to focus long

enough to answer homework questions RE his favorite activities, foods,

subjects, etc., he spelled even simple words incorrectly, he reversed

letters, used no capitals or punctuation, etc.

Could your son's difficulties be caused by a medication? Overwhelming

OCD thoughts can also use up all one's mental energy so there's no

room left for reflection.

I was able to get to go to school today since I spoke to his

teacher and guidance counselor yesterday. Until his meds are stable

and he's able to think clearly, they are going to refrain from asking

him any questions (except in the unlikely event that he raises his

hand.) He's also going to participate in a small group of kids who

receive Title 1 extra help with math. If this doesn't help, I will

have a tutor help him until he's able to catch up. I'm not aware of

extra help being available without an IEP for writing. Rather than

home schooling, maybe your son could have a 504 plan that accomodates

his current writing difficulties. If things get really bad for my son

and he becomes completely unable to go to school for a long period,

I'm prepared to fight for the school to provide a tutor to come to the

house to help him in all subjects. Although the school will probably

not willing do this, I'm under the impression that they have a legal

obligation.

Good luck.

Tamara

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