Guest guest Posted December 23, 2003 Report Share Posted December 23, 2003 Wow! You have really been through the wringer! I'm so sorry that your son is having a difficult time, especially right now. I know that it is frightening to hear your child talk about suicide. My daughter, age thirteen, has tried to cut herself while in the shower and has used objects to make scratches and cuts on herself. She has also talked about wanting to kill herself. While we are not taking her lightly, we see it as a sign of the enormous amount of stress she is under and do not feel that she will actually commit suicide. I do call her doctor every time Hannah mentions it and we keep close tabs on her but we feel that it is more the OCD telling her that she will and not actual suicidal tendencies. I will have your family in my thoughts and will pray that you have some relief. Kelley in NV Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2003 Report Share Posted December 23, 2003 Shortly after posting yesterday, my wife called again to tell me DS had expressed that the thought of killing himself was rolling around in his head. he assured her he didn't really want to do it, but that the thought kept coming back. We called the therapist & psych and were recommended to take him to the Psych ER. After 4.5 hours, a brief assessment with a clinician, another brief assessment by a psych, consultation with his regular therapist & psych, they sent us on our way with no new light shed on things. We have an appointment @ 9a this morning. The psych we got came as the highest locally recommended by the OC Foundation local chapter. By the end of August past, he was on 150mg Zoloft & 100mg Wellbutrin. From Day One (almost 4 years ago) the Zoloft seemed like a good med for him, although OC rituals were becoming more noticeable despite the med. His psych at the time (different from now) didn't feel comfortable pushing to 200mg, changed to Prozac, changed to Luvox after 2 weeks, then we changed docs and got switched to Lexapro, now at 20mg. My wife and I are at odds because, while I KNOW he has OCD, I see a lot of his anxiety being a bit willfully manipulative, yet she continues to bend over backwards trying to accommodate. Somewhere between us is the medium we need. For his part, DS got more and more agitated the longer we waited yesterday, only showing his stress to us in anger, gritted teeth, and telling us he wanted to break the bench seat we were sitting on. He won't ever tell these feelings to the docs because he's " embarassed " . I tried to explain that if he doesn't tell the docs these things, they can't help him get better. He got angrier, told me I didn't understand and moved away from me. Xanax...started as a meltdown intervention prescription on an as needed basis, now a regular part of getting through ANYTHING. We were given the understanding that up to 2mg would be more than enough to help him calm. We usually don't get through a day without as LEAST 3mg. Rebound could be an issue I guess; we've never really talked about it. We've found we need to give DS the Xanax before a meltdown even starts to form. If we wait for it to start, it takes more Xanax and more time to get through it. Thanks to all of you for your messages of care and support! Bill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2003 Report Share Posted December 23, 2003 Just back from the doc/med appt... Boosting the Lexapro to 30mg, moving to try Remaron to help put him to sleep at bedtime, still holding out Xanax for other stressful times. We're told the Remaron might " zombie " him for the first couple of days, but then eh'll " get used to it " . All parties are convinced DS is NOT suicidal, just having obsessive thoughts. Reassured he wouldn't actually do anything because he's too scared of dying to even think of a way to do such. We're tired and feeling broken, but not beaten, not entirely anyway. I don't know where we go from here. We talked about DS's embarassment in even talking with his therapist. They felt that maybe yesterday morning was the pressure release from the struggle of holding himself together through all of the weekend's activities (previously noted). We talked about how none of this ever happened when he was on Zoloft, but that the OCD rituals had begun breaking through. The doctor was puzzled because she couldn't believe that the wrong (her opinion) meds seemed to have the right effect. If she doesn't see improvement over the next few weeks after increasing the Lexapro again, I think she'll (hesitantly) consider going back to Zoloft. So, now, tomorrow's Christmas Eve and I couldn't give two cares. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2003 Report Share Posted December 23, 2003 i am sorry to hear you are having such a hard time. My 17 yr old frequently has ocd thoughts that tell her that she might kill herself etc, these are very scary for us, but a pretty common ocd thought. We've been doing this four years now and no matter how intense the thoughts, she has never acted on them. You are in my thoughts, hang in it will get better! Lori Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2003 Report Share Posted December 23, 2003 Bill, You and your family will be in our prayers throughout the holiday. I am so sorry that his situation has gotten so hard on all of you. Please know that this is definitely the place to come and VENT as much as you need. You are very supported by people going through (unfortunately) very similar struggles. in AZ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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