Guest guest Posted April 23, 2004 Report Share Posted April 23, 2004 Hi Gale, the therapist has failed to engage your daughter in therapy and is blaming Emma for her own lack of effectiveness...Emma after all is sick, she is suffering from untreated OCD which is an anxiety disorder. It's not too uncommon for a child (or adult for that matter) to be scared or otherwise reluctant at first to work toward getting better. An expert child therapist will expect this and have several tricks up his or her sleeve to get over that initial hump and engage the child in therapy. It's possible the therapist assigned homework too high on Emma's hierarchy for her to be successful at this point. Or the disorder may be interfering with Emma's ability to read the material the therapist assigned her. Various compulsions that make reading difficult or impossible are common in OCD. Or Emma may have obsessions similar to my daughter's, that if she does anything to threaten OCD, it will get much worse, or if she speaks her obsessional worries out loud, they will come true. You are lucky at least in that the therapist told you about her limitations rather than having you continue to bring Emma week after week for ineffective therapy. It may be that Emma's OCD is more severe than you realize. Sometimes there is much more going on than meets the eye, or that the child is willing/able to describe. I suggest you continue your search for an expert child CBT. Check out any nearby universities/med centers for either therapy or suggestions of practitioners in your area. It's not uncommon for there to be a poor fit with the first therapist but a great fit with the second (or third.) Please don't conclude from this experience that your child can't be helped by effective therapy. If you post your area, perhaps another list member can suggest the name of a therapist for you to contact. Good luck, Kathy R. in Indiana ----- Original Message ----- > Hi, all. I am so frustrated today. We just got back from the therapist who > told us that she thinks it's best not to continue with my daughter (Emma, > 13) for now, because there isn't the motivation to get better . . . > Apparently Emma has not been doing the " homework " or the reading that the > therapist has suggested. She said I'm wasting my money (no insurance) at > the moment. She suggested perhaps Emma go on some kind of medication to > lessen her anxiety, then try therapy again. Emma says NO WAY to any > medication. (Another fear.) So what do I do now?? Her OCD isn't severe, > but she's closing herself off from life because it's safer and more > comfortable. Any suggestions? > > --Gale in Illinois Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2004 Report Share Posted April 23, 2004 Gale, Your 13 year old sounds a lot like my 14 year old daughter had been for about 3 years. Her OCD had been diagnosed when she was 9. After we tried medication and therapy without much success (and both the p-doc and therapist said they were not seeing much change in her) she went off the meds and quit therapy. With some irritation and concern about her rituals and avoidances, we made it through about 3 years with no meds or therapy. During that time she often got mad at me whenever I wanted to discuss her OCD. Again, though, the OCD was not severe, and we just muddled along. Somehow this year the OCD flared up badly. Her rituals, avoidances, and anxiety all increased. We had some tearful times of me pointing out that she could not ignore it was OCD anymore. I was surprised that after 3 years of saying NO WAY to trying meds and doctors again, she reluctantly agreed. It may be that until the OCD gets to a certain point, your daughter is not going to admit she must deal with it. It is certainly better to tread OCD before it gets too severe, but it may have to get too a certain point of " inconvenience " before she is ready to face the problem, as with my daughter. I can't say this is the " right " way, but it is the scenario we went through. Good luck. Kellie - Missouri > Hi, all. I am so frustrated today. We just got back from the therapist who > told us that she thinks it's best not to continue with my daughter (Emma, > 13) for now, because there isn't the motivation to get better . . . > Apparently Emma has not been doing the " homework " or the reading that the > therapist has suggested. She said I'm wasting my money (no insurance) at > the moment. She suggested perhaps Emma go on some kind of medication to > lessen her anxiety, then try therapy again. Emma says NO WAY to any > medication. (Another fear.) So what do I do now?? Her OCD isn't severe, > but she's closing herself off from life because it's safer and more > comfortable. Any suggestions? > > --Gale in Illinois Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2004 Report Share Posted April 23, 2004 Kathy, thank you so much for your insightful reply. You said a couple of things I had not thought of before. Perhaps her OCD really IS more severe than I had thought. You also mentioned that reading compulsions are common. I'd like to learn more about this. My daughter did tell me that sometimes it's just " too much work to read " -- and she has always loved reading. She reads some parts over and over because she can't " get it " and has a specific rubbing pattern she does with her fingers on each page. We are about 60 miles SW of Chicago, near Aurora, Illinois. But her insurance said they'd only cover the first visit for OCD. That makes no sense to me. OK, so once she has a diagnosis, we can go home??? I don't know how you all cope with all this! --Gale in Illinois Mom to Emma, 14, OCD, and , 15, tormenter > Various compulsions that make reading difficult or impossible are common in > OCD. > > It may be that Emma's OCD is more severe than you realize. Sometimes there > is much more going on than meets the eye, or that the child is willing/able > to describe. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2004 Report Share Posted April 23, 2004 Kellie, thanks so much for your reply and sharing your experience. I know exactly what you meant by " with some irritation and concern about her rituals and avoidances. " LOTS of irritation here lately, and no less concern. I really don't know how long Emma has had OCD. How can you tell when strange behavior crosses the line into mental illness? So much of her struggle is internal. At the beginning of February, she read a novel in which the main character had OCD and recognized herself. She poured out " her own story " to me after that. I was astounded. I had no idea what she had (has) been struggling with. Every once in a while she will tell me that she remembers something specific from when she was much younger and says, " That must have been OCD. " She's learning to recognize it, at least. That's a good thing, right? The beginning of the cognitive part? You said, > it may have to get too a > certain point of " inconvenience " before she is ready to face the > problem, as with my daughter. Yes, I can see that happening here. --Gale in Illinois Mom to Emma, 14 (in June), OCD; and , 15, tormenter Re: Daughter won't do therapy . . . > Gale, > Your 13 year old sounds a lot like my 14 year old daughter had been > for about 3 years. Her OCD had been diagnosed when she was 9. > After we tried medication and therapy without much success (and both > the p-doc and therapist said they were not seeing much change in > her) she went off the meds and quit therapy. > > With some irritation and concern about her rituals and avoidances, > we made it through about 3 years with no meds or therapy. During > that time she often got mad at me whenever I wanted to discuss her > OCD. Again, though, the OCD was not severe, and we just muddled > along. > > Somehow this year the OCD flared up badly. Her rituals, avoidances, > and anxiety all increased. We had some tearful times of me pointing > out that she could not ignore it was OCD anymore. I was surprised > that after 3 years of saying NO WAY to trying meds and doctors > again, she reluctantly agreed. > > It may be that until the OCD gets to a certain point, your daughter > is not going to admit she must deal with it. It is certainly better > to tread OCD before it gets too severe, but it may have to get too a > certain point of " inconvenience " before she is ready to face the > problem, as with my daughter. > > I can't say this is the " right " way, but it is the scenario we went > through. Good luck. > > Kellie - Missouri > > > > > > > > > > Hi, all. I am so frustrated today. We just got back from the > therapist who > > told us that she thinks it's best not to continue with my daughter > (Emma, > > 13) for now, because there isn't the motivation to get better . . . > > Apparently Emma has not been doing the " homework " or the reading > that the > > therapist has suggested. She said I'm wasting my money (no > insurance) at > > the moment. She suggested perhaps Emma go on some kind of > medication to > > lessen her anxiety, then try therapy again. Emma says NO WAY to > any > > medication. (Another fear.) So what do I do now?? Her OCD isn't > severe, > > but she's closing herself off from life because it's safer and more > > comfortable. Any suggestions? > > > > --Gale in Illinois > > > > > Our list archives, bookmarks, files, and chat feature may be accessed at: http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group// . > Our list advisors are Gail B. , Ed.D., Tamar Chansky, Ph.D., Aureen Pinto Wagner, Ph.D., and Dan Geller, M.D. Our list moderators are Birkhan, Castle, Fowler, Kathy Hammes, Joye, Kathy Mac, Gail Pesses, Kathy , Vivian Stembridge, and Jackie Stout. Subscription issues or suggestions may be addressed to Louis Harkins, list owner, at louisharkins@... , louisharkins@... , louisharkins@... . > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 24, 2004 Report Share Posted April 24, 2004 Hi Gale, you wrote: > You also mentioned that reading compulsions are common. I'd like to learn > more about this. My daughter did tell me that sometimes it's just " too much > work to read " -- and she has always loved reading. She reads some parts > over and over because she can't " get it " and has a specific rubbing pattern > she does with her fingers on each page. *****Rereading is a common one, and the rubbing pattern could be one too. Finding reading to be too much work when she once loved to read is a big tip-off that OCD is involved now IMO. Basically all the typical issues in OCD can show up in reading--doubt (did I read that correctly, understand that thoroughly?), contamination (the book itself can be " contaminated " in the OCD sense), checking (did I skip a page, did my thoughts wander when I was reading that page), counting (words on the page for example), etc. My daughter avoided reading and TV for awhile for fear of being triggered by seeing or hearing a " bad word " (in the OCD sense.) I read of a man who had to find a " good " word somewhere in the text to " balance " having read a " bad " word...so if he read the word " death " (or any of a list of several " bad " words) he then had to find the word " life " . Imagine how that would slow down reading and comprehension, anyone would want to avoid such a chore. ERP can be effective in diminishing or eliminating reading compulsions. > We are about 60 miles SW of Chicago, near Aurora, Illinois. But her > insurance said they'd only cover the first visit for OCD. That makes no > sense to me. OK, so once she has a diagnosis, we can go home??? I don't > know how you all cope with all this! *****Insurance carriers are all so different, but I'd call your case manager at the company (or the administrative person where you work if it is a company plan) and explain the situation. Many times insurance companies will authorize treatment if challenged or questioned. Sometimes having the diagnosing doctor verifying that your child needs X number of therapy sessions works. It may be she only gets one visit on the medical side of your insurance, but has further benefits under mental health which is administrated by a whole different company. The " only one visit " thing doesn't make much sense anyway: the two treatments for OCD are therapy (a series of visits) and SSRI medication (which requires periodic doctor visits for management.) Good luck, the insurance situation for mental health services is a disgrace in this country IMO. The very last thing anyone needs when suddenly dealing with OCD in your child is to have to horse around to discover if and what any benefits might be. Can you image if we treated heart patients this way?!! Kathy R. in Indiana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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