PrincessKsMom
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- Joined
- Feb 9, 2008
- Messages
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Hoping someone would be willing to share their experiences with me regarding teen anxiety and panic attacks, whether by responding to this post or by IM.
Background: DH, his mom and his grandmother all suffer from depression, anxiety, agorraphobea... I have seen instances of this in my DD. A few years ago she went away to an academic program in Washington, DC which she begged to go to. Within 2 days we had to go pick her up. Vomitting, crying, pleading for us to pick her up, no sleep, etc. There wasn't anything that triggered this. Her roommates were great and helped her through it. I would stay on the phone with her for hours on end trying to calm her, nothing worked. This is something she begged to go to, not something we made her go to. I just assumed it was that she just wasn't ready to be away from home.
The next instance was 2 years ago. A few schools merged (hers being one). Again, vomitting, crying, pleading to stay home, etc. The merged school was in her old school building, she knew 1/4 of the kids, a few of the teachers, etc. Multiple calls from school that she was vomitting and we needed to pick her up. Days of calls from school. Within an hour or two of her getting to school. I went to school and explained to her teacher, the nurse and the principal what it was and that she was being seen by her pediatrician. Multiple visits to her pediatrician, who even gave her something for the vomitting that they give to cancer patients -- nothing worked. I also told the school they weren't doing her any good by allowing her to leave. She needed to tough it out and find out she could do it and nothing bad was going to happen. I told they I realized it was a distraction and apologized for the disruption, but they needed to let her clean herself up and go back to class. If she knew there was a way out, she'd take it. After about a week or so, she settled in and was over it and back to normal. And this is why I made the difficult decision of sending her to the local public high school with her best friend, instead of her going to the local girls' Catholic school with her other friends. Thankfully she is in class with a few friends, so she's not completely alone. She needs to start to deal with changes now, not when she goes off to college. She needs to build her self-confidence and self-reliance skills, as well as social skills.
And now we come to high school. It's 2-1/2 weeks before school and the vomitting and crying has begun. She tells me it's not about school, but I know better. I know it's normal for people to get anxious and nervous about new situations, but not to this extent. I'm concerned about putting her on meds because they can have serious side affects in teens. She freaks every time I mention going to a doctor or therapist. I know it's just a matter of time and she'll settle in, but I'm not mentally prepared for the next month or so.
I am solidly entrenched in the "buck up and deal" camp. I will not and cannot feed into her anxiety. I have compassion and my heart breaks for her. I spend many hours crying too, but not near her. She tends to feed off the anxiety of others. Has flown to Disney multiple times, but the first time my mom came with us (who doesn't like to fly), DD was anxious and wanted to know if we could drive (from NJ). Once my mom was able to hold her anxiety back, DD was fine and neither have had an episode since (two more trips). As I mentioned, her dad's side of the family has these issues as well, but they tend to use them as an excuse to be irresponsible. It becomes a convenient crutch and I don't want that for my child.
So does anyone know of an therapies, can you share your history with prescription therapies, etc.
Background: DH, his mom and his grandmother all suffer from depression, anxiety, agorraphobea... I have seen instances of this in my DD. A few years ago she went away to an academic program in Washington, DC which she begged to go to. Within 2 days we had to go pick her up. Vomitting, crying, pleading for us to pick her up, no sleep, etc. There wasn't anything that triggered this. Her roommates were great and helped her through it. I would stay on the phone with her for hours on end trying to calm her, nothing worked. This is something she begged to go to, not something we made her go to. I just assumed it was that she just wasn't ready to be away from home.
The next instance was 2 years ago. A few schools merged (hers being one). Again, vomitting, crying, pleading to stay home, etc. The merged school was in her old school building, she knew 1/4 of the kids, a few of the teachers, etc. Multiple calls from school that she was vomitting and we needed to pick her up. Days of calls from school. Within an hour or two of her getting to school. I went to school and explained to her teacher, the nurse and the principal what it was and that she was being seen by her pediatrician. Multiple visits to her pediatrician, who even gave her something for the vomitting that they give to cancer patients -- nothing worked. I also told the school they weren't doing her any good by allowing her to leave. She needed to tough it out and find out she could do it and nothing bad was going to happen. I told they I realized it was a distraction and apologized for the disruption, but they needed to let her clean herself up and go back to class. If she knew there was a way out, she'd take it. After about a week or so, she settled in and was over it and back to normal. And this is why I made the difficult decision of sending her to the local public high school with her best friend, instead of her going to the local girls' Catholic school with her other friends. Thankfully she is in class with a few friends, so she's not completely alone. She needs to start to deal with changes now, not when she goes off to college. She needs to build her self-confidence and self-reliance skills, as well as social skills.
And now we come to high school. It's 2-1/2 weeks before school and the vomitting and crying has begun. She tells me it's not about school, but I know better. I know it's normal for people to get anxious and nervous about new situations, but not to this extent. I'm concerned about putting her on meds because they can have serious side affects in teens. She freaks every time I mention going to a doctor or therapist. I know it's just a matter of time and she'll settle in, but I'm not mentally prepared for the next month or so.
I am solidly entrenched in the "buck up and deal" camp. I will not and cannot feed into her anxiety. I have compassion and my heart breaks for her. I spend many hours crying too, but not near her. She tends to feed off the anxiety of others. Has flown to Disney multiple times, but the first time my mom came with us (who doesn't like to fly), DD was anxious and wanted to know if we could drive (from NJ). Once my mom was able to hold her anxiety back, DD was fine and neither have had an episode since (two more trips). As I mentioned, her dad's side of the family has these issues as well, but they tend to use them as an excuse to be irresponsible. It becomes a convenient crutch and I don't want that for my child.
So does anyone know of an therapies, can you share your history with prescription therapies, etc.


This was in the early 1960s when the medical community knew FAR less than what they know now. My pediatrician told my mom that I was "just one of those people who produced to much adrenaline when they got nervous" and that's why I got sick. The adrenaline then feeds into it more causing all those feelings. He basically said, way back then, that I was born that way, wired that way, and there really wasn't much to do about it.
Being private is something I've never felt the need for. I don't want her to feel any shame. If you have a problem, you get help and deal with it. I don't believe in sweeping things under the rug. It only breeds more loneliness and a sense of shame. Sometimes I share too much. 