Guest guest Posted October 20, 2000 Report Share Posted October 20, 2000 In a message dated 10/19/2000 7:10:03 PM Eastern Daylight Time, jlbaldini@... writes: << I've been doing Tae Bo for about 3 months now. I initially started doing it right before my boyfriend and I broke up. Things were really tense and up in the air between us and I started the exercise to help relieve the tension. Good thing, because less than 2 weeks later he broke up with me. I am so glad I found Tae Bo because after 6 1/2 years with that man, I could have easily became an emotional wreck after our break up. But, Tae Bo has helped see me through the worst of the angst. After the break up, I continued with Tae Bo to help me feel better about myself - I didn't realize how much my self esteem had suffered in that relationship until I got out. All I can say is WOW!! Tae Bo works!!! I feel stronger and more confident and as a bonus, I've lost weight all which works to help me continue getting stronger, happier and become an all-around better person! >> you are definitely a Tae-Bo hero in the making, not just another fan(atic) When you make an emotional connection with Tae-Bo, it sticks. Barb who made that emotional connection from the beginning Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2000 Report Share Posted October 20, 2000 Welcome Jen, Glad to see there are a whole bunch of us " Addicts " here in the world. D (ilvamzn) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2000 Report Share Posted October 20, 2000 In a message dated 10/19/2000 9:18:43 PM Eastern Daylight Time, slowens@... writes: << - In tae-bo_onegroups, " Baldini " <jlbaldini@h...> wrote: > In fact, I'm so addicted that I had to join this > list because the message boards just weren't enough for me anymore! LOL > With the lags in between postings and the no new posting weekends, I just > wasn't getting enough of my Tae Bo family. >> Welcome, Jen! You will love it here. A lot of joined egroups for the same reason - for more updated posting and because we're taebo addicts. It sounds like you are doing taebo for all of the right reasons. Elena Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2000 Report Share Posted October 20, 2000 Welcome I'm sure you'll enjoy being with us all from you post, looking forward to hearing more from you Jill who's not sure if we've got another on the list, I know there's Jenn and Jenni > hello everybody - > > I just wanted to say hi and introduce myself. My name is , but you > can call me Jen, or hey you. I answer to just about anything. :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 5, 2009 Report Share Posted April 5, 2009 Welcome to the group, . Our son often used " games " to distract himself from the onslaught of OCD thoughts. He was able to immerse himself in them to the point that he could shut the OCD out, to some degree. Do you think that might be part of it for your son? Of course, there is always the " just loving games " thing too. And for boys, especially, it is a real social thing. The better you are at them, the more respect you seem to get. Hard combination to treat BP/OCD. You said he is being treated. With meds? CBT/ERP (cognitive behavioral therapy/exposure and response prevention) therapy? How are those working for him? So many in here have had a rough time with the balance needed, individually, concerning medication treatment with those two things. If you are disjointed, you will fit right in. lol Oh boy, know about the whole their reaction/your reaction thing. One thing that helped us quite a bit with that, was learning to see that it was OCD, then blaming it instead of our son. That put us all on the same side against the OCD, rather than him feeling we were blaming him. It can be awfully convoluted at times. And our son is a teen now, so you throw that into the mix and it gets even more confusing, as you are probably experiencing since he is 14. But, we all just do our best. We are homeschoolers too (10 years of homeschooling). One rule we had to implement was, no games of any sort, until all the schoolwork is done! Otherwise, he would never get to the schoolwork. It's easy for them to put it off when they only have to answer to mom and dad. lol Boy, you throw those teenage years in and they lose motivation too. Glad you found us. ) BJ - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 5, 2009 Report Share Posted April 5, 2009 Welcome to the group, ! You're in good company here . . . you aren't the only mother in the group whose child has multiple disorders and has lived to tell about it. So far we are fortunate in that my daughter is 9 and has only mild OCD. She occasionally has episodes that interfere with her school work but has not required any special accomodations. When her OCD is flaring she will sometimes beg to be homeschooled but we've never needed to take that step. I hope you're able to get some good help here and find some things that help your son manage and become a super chef! Beth Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 6, 2009 Report Share Posted April 6, 2009 Hi , I just wanted to say, " Welcome " I have three kids, and my two youngest, ages 12 ,and, 7 ,have also been diagnosed with OCD and Bipolar. They have ADHD also, but I was told this was a part of the bipolar. Your description of your son sounds like my kids!This group offers a lot of support ! Well, I have to run! Just wanted to give you a quick welcome!!!! Hugs Judy ________________________________ To: Sent: Sunday, April 5, 2009 1:03:37 AM Subject: Introducing myself Hi, everyone, I'm and I just found this group today. DH and I are parents to one 14 year old boy with Bipolar & OC Disorders, as well as ADD. DS has been under treatment for BP and OCD for three years, and had had them for at least a year before we first got treatment. He had a meltdown and started talking about wanting to die (he was ten or eleven at the time). We took him to the ER at a local hospital and they admitted him to a psych ward for about a week. That's when we found out about the BP & OCD. He began treatment and counseling and improved. Over the intervening time we've adjusted meds and tried to work on coping skills. We home school. B/c of the disorders we are behind three years in grade level. DS is a very smart kid, so the fact that we've lost so much time due to the OCDs is extremely frustrating to us parents. DS doesn't seem to care about school, whether he does it or not. He'd rather play online games than work on his education. We're trying to get him to see that if he wants to become a chef like he's said for several years, he NEEDs to focus on the foundation of education. Arg. I'm sorry. This is really disjointed. I just kind of leapt in here and started writing. :-) I'll just say that I am really glad to have found this group and I hope that I (and DH) can learn some things that will benefit our son and our family, and our lives, which at present are under quite a bit of stress due to DS's OCDs and reactions, and our reactions to that. Sometimes seems like a vicious circle. Thanks for bearing with me, all. I will say that I have a habit of filling the bill for " resident ditz " -so, heads up. I'm off to a running start with this post, a 'run-on " narrative. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 8, 2009 Report Share Posted April 8, 2009 Hi Sandy! My OCD son, , is also gifted with Aspergers; he's 20 yrs now. I joined this group when his OCD began back in 6th grade. I have 2 other sons, ages 20/twin and 24. If I understand, her OCD began earlier but did get worse when her brother was sick around Christmas? Wanted to say that 's OCD hasn't been - from what I can figure out - the PANDAS type (and I did wonder and think about when it started, etc.) but his OCD does get worse with fevers and worsened with strep, etc. When his OCD began so long ago (after he began 6th grade), I just could not recall his being sick or his brothers around that time. He had his OCD tendencies at younger ages, before all the sudden compulsions, rituals seemed to pop up overnight and be 24-hour/day in 6th grade. Certainly not ruling out PANDAS/PITANDS in your daughter's case though. Just wanted to comment about and the increases when sick. 's a patient type personality, so haven't had to deal with rages or behavior (a bit of temper when OCD is bugging him - or me bugging him about OCD, LOL). Others parents here are also having to deal with contamination fears and handwashing, etc. luckily didn't deal with that. Would be willing to choose just 1 fear/issue to work on? Something that seems easiest to try. It might be just trying to " hold out " longer before washing, when she feels contaminated, just trying to hold out 10, 15, 20 seconds, a minute...see if she can increase the time or something. There are some non-SSRI meds that others may be able to tell you helped with OCD. My mind is a bit " blank " right now...but why am I thinking Abilify...? Anafranil also treats OCD and isn't an SSRI. I know there's others too. Just some quick thoughts. I hate she's not able to get to school or work at home right now! But, sigh, school will still be there! I really had to help that first year, even did his writing for him for his work! > > Hi, > > I am mom to , 15, adopted from Korea at 5 months, gifted with aspergers syndrome, sensory sensitivities and now pretty severe OCD. Her problems in general started at 12 with stomach problems, then sensory problems. The OCD developed about a year ago and then, right before Christmas became so severe that she could not do her cyber school any more. She is now on a medical leave from school. She does not appear to have obsessions so much as compulsions. All centered around contamination. She cannot touch most things. And cannot stand Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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