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Out of anwers. What should we do with SS.

Ninji's picture

https://www.steptalk.org/node/237739

I blogged a few times last year about my SS threating to kill people at his school. The link above is the only one I could still find.

I had an hour and a half conference with two of SS's teachers, the guidance counselor, two behavior specialist and some other woman on Friday. They want me to take SS and get him "diagnosed"

After that meeting, I received an email from SS's teacher explaining that during recess he didn't want to play a certain game that everyone was participating in. Apparently, he ran away from the area and the teacher went after him. She goes on to say that she had a 15 minute conversation with him where he went back and forth between crying, laughing and dry heaving. He then when on to say that he wanted to "hurt or murder someone out there". All over a game that he didn't want to play.

Last year we grounded SS' from EVERYTHING. He did extra chores and was pretty much on lock down. It didn't stop him from throwing tantrums and threating to kill people.

I have no idea what else to do. I know that I am going to have to just break down and schedule some appointments for SS. DH JUST started back to work and only got a paycheck for two days last week.

I love SS. I really do. But raising him has been really really hard. If just ONE of his parents stepped up and helped out it would really be great.

Last week I got an email from the teacher about him throwing a tantrum during library time. While I was trying to ask him what happened, DH was playing around with a new item he got in the mail distracting SS like he's SS's annoying older brother.

I feel like a single parent to a child that isn't mine.

Comments

DaizyDuke's picture

helping him right now is enabling his parents to be crap parents.

this. your DH, BM, teachers, administrators etc. seem perfectly content to continue to let YOU handle this kid that is NOT yours. Beyond ridiculous.

nengooseus's picture

Full psychological testing is a great place to start. If there is anything going on, the process can suss it out, as long as everyone is on the same page. My SS8 has done 2 rounds of full testing with no conclusion other than that his parents can't agree on anything. Objective testing is inconclusive, and DH's and BM's versions of reality are different. Based on DH's observations, SS is on the autism spectrum, with BM's, he's perfectly normal (you know, except that he makes himself throw up, he diddles his hair all day and other sensory-seeking activities).

His teacher was the "tie breaker" last year, but she clearly felt he was ADHD, which didn't jibe with either parent, so there was no diagnosis, and the child is just as off as he always was with absolutely zero progress. According to him, he "just needs to focus."

I will say that I had issues with my bio DD and threatening to kill people when she was mid-elementary school. She's bright beyond her years, so I was able to sit her down and tell her in no uncertain terms that those words were a problem and she needed to stop. (I make it sound like it was a calm and rational conversation, even though it wasn't!) She did, and all is well, but she's on the explosive side, too. She doesn't talk about her feelings--good or bad--and then something happens and she just breaks. There's always something that sparks it.

A good developmental pediatrician or child psychologist will help you to deal with the skid--and help you with how to have the school deal with him, too.

nengooseus's picture

Oh! And to add how much I agree with the others...

Not your monkey! I have a hard time with this, too, but skids are not my monkeys. If they're F-d up beyond belief, that's on their parents, and I can't make them be rational humans--even DH.

My comments were geared toward the idea that you're stubborn and you want to help this skid because his parents suck. If you don't want to keep at this, you have no obligation to.

Ninji's picture

Should I take him to a pediatrician first and get a recommendation? I'm not sure what my first step should be.

nengooseus's picture

That would be a good place to start. You may or may not need a referral for insurance, so it's a great idea to get the primary care doc on board.

Be prepared. These appointments can be hard to come by. In my area, it's a 6 month wait or more to get in! But finding a reputable child psych who can do testing is super hard, too.

ACTUALLY! If they school is wanting him to be tested, you should be able to request an IEP meeting in which their full team would discuss the issues and they may do the assessment themselves. My guess is that he's not "bad enough" for them to do the referral themselves, which is why they suggested you do it privately, but it's worth the ask.

secret's picture

you might be able to privately talk to the teacher, off the record, and say that since the parents are so odds with each other that you feel the teacher is the child's best chance at getting the help...when you ask for the referral, I mean...

Ninji's picture

They were talking about a "504" I'm not entirely sure what it means for SS to be in this program but I know that they give him more "changes" than other kids when it comes to things like suspensions.

nengooseus's picture

A 504 plan is an accommodation of a disability. If he were diagnosed with something, the school would document the accommodation with a 504.

And IEP is an individualized educational plan, which is a plan to intervene to help a student learn. It sounds like maybe his learning isn't an issue, it's just the behavior.

Peridwen's picture

504 plans are less regulated and require less documentation. They are usually used in students who have a disability and need accommodation in a normal classroom, but don't require a specialized curriculum for teacher. For example, SD12 (ADHD) has a 504 plan that gives her extra time on standardized tests, and a private test area. She's also allowed to type her homework rather than write it out so she can use the autocorrect feature.

Because 504 plans are not as regulated, it's easier to change them or phase them out, however it also means that if the teacher doesn't want to follow the 504 plan, it's difficult to force the issue. 504 plans are good for students who may need temporary assistance with the goal of ending special services during the school career. IEP is usually used for those students who will likely not be able to ever manage without special assistance during their school career.<- this is how SD12's therapist explained it to us, as a simplistic term.

MoominMama's picture

Doesn't sound like an AS spectrum problem to me. Surely something like that would have been picked up at some earlier point? I think this child is really struggling and has crap parents as you say, probably never had good boundaries or was taught how to cope with his feelings and control anger.

You cannot fix this. You are not the parent and why are YOU getting emails from the school anyway? I know you are trying to help but if the parents are actively working against you and don't care then you are just flogging a dead horse. It's very sad. Your SS needs to have a full psychological evaluation and they need to have therapy and parenting classes. Nothing will help until these issues are addressed.

Ninji's picture

I've been doing the parenting since SS was in kindergarten and the teacher said he would fail 1st grade if he didn't learn how to read. I taught him to read that summer.

I probably can't fix it but at least I'm trying to do something.

MoominMama's picture

I understand and it shows your good heart but really.... not your kid not your problem.

24 years as a SM's picture

I am surprise the schools haven't called the police to have him taken in for a mental eval. Where I live the schools are mandated to call the police anytime a kid threatens to kill someone at the school. The police take the kid to the hospital for a mental health eval, most of the time the kid is on a 72 hour mental hold. The unfortunate part is you better hope the medical insurance covers the cost or you end up with a huge bill.

Ninji's picture

That's one of the things I'm really worried about. I don't think they are going to as accommodating once he hits jr high next year.

24 years as a SM's picture

My grandson had this happening to him, after some kid over heard part of a conversation he was having with a friend at recess. The only problem was, my grandson was talking with his friend about an Edgar Allan Poe's poem The Tell-Tale Heart, this was one of the books they were reading for his English class.
My grandson spent 72 hours in a juvenile mental ward for nothing. No one at the school or the sheriff's department would listen to him or my son. The hospital bill was over $8,000 for B*llsh*t.

lieutenant_dad's picture

Has the school threatened suspension or expulsion yet? I'd be surprised if that hadn't been discussed since he is threatening violence at school. Or the school, for better or worse, isn't taking the threats seriously.

In this situation, though, there is only so much you CAN do. You can schedule the appointments, but if one of the bios doesn't sign off on the paperwork, your SS won't get services.

If he is truly a danger to himself or others, and if no one of authority is willing to take an actual step to get him help, it may be time to start formulating an exit strategy. I could not, and would not, live with a child who threatens harm that isn't being adequately cared for. That's too much liability on my head if something were to happen, and I'd rather be as far away as possible.

If you feel it necessary, reach out to the resources provided and get appointments set up. Get one of his parents (preferably his dad) to sign off on treatment. If everyone is going to keep their heads in the sand, exit the situation. Live apart. Do NOT put yourself in danger, either physically or by association, with this mess. Something has to change, and if it isn't your SO's response to a serious situation, then it needs to be yours.

Best of luck.

Lit&#039;l Bit's picture

Sorry Long....you can PM me if you want.

What about scheduling a regional center evaluation. Look them up in your area. Like most have said your hands are pretty much tied as he is not your child. The struggle I would have with this is that I am aware of the kids problem/issues and know something needs to be done.

With my own child he was threating suicide and hurting someone else. I took his little a$$ to the ER where they talked to him and decided he need to be evaluated. He spent 7 days in a mental behavioral hospital. It was the hardest thing I ever had to do and it was the longest week ever. I was a freaking Zombie but it had to be done. He was in 6th grade and was being bullied by students and teachers. From there he received home hospital education because I refused to allow him back into the special Ed class with the teacher that was a bully.

He was put on Medicine and when he went back to school he was given a behavior plan in his IEP. He was in special ed since preschool. I ended up getting an education lawyer to show the school I wasn't screwing around. We did not need to use the lawyer but lost our retainer fee. I was getting calls daily. They were telling me I needed to punish him at home for chit he was getting punished at school for. Stuff like leaving the classroom and other crap that had they the school had control of the situation wouldn't have happened. I had a school psychologist telling me that if I had better control of my son he wouldn't be having problems at school. I told him I didn't have problems at home because my son knew who the boss was. It was horrible. I had to pick him up from school early at least twice a week. He was already in a self contained special Ed class. So I got the lawyer because they screwed up on his IEP and had him listed as a speech disability when I had given them documentation for a dx of Autism 4 years prior. I called an emergency IEP meeting and told them my educational attorney and son's therapist would be present. Prior to the IEP meeting they ask me what I expected the outcome to be. I told them I wanted them to pay for my son to go to a NON Public school. $46,000 to $64,000.00 per year and this was 7th grade meaning they would have to pay for his education for the next 5 years. Son was reading at 4th grade level he is able to learn they just didn't know how to teach him.

I got what I wanted. Despite all of the crap my son graduated this past June (On Time when he was supposed to.) with a high school diploma not a HS certificate BS that they like to try to get you to agree too. Because it requires hard work on both the student and teachers to achieve this.
The school district my son was in is one of the biggest in the county they are #2 in the nation. You would think that they would be better at educating our kids. I had to spend 7yrs plus 3 yrs. preschool to fight the school district to do right by my son. It took getting a lawyer for them to listen to me. They would have been hung by their you know what's if our lawyer had continued. She was going for restitution and suing the teacher that bullied my son. It would have been ugly and probably on the national news.

Lit&#039;l Bit's picture

Just to add.. My own Mom and his Dad weren't on board at first. I was fighting them too but in the end I was correct.

FieryEscape's picture

Personally I think you need to stop trying to fix this child and force his parent to. Why didn't your DH talk to the school/teachers ?

Maybe the kid is a budding psycho or maybe he is just attention seeking . My exSDthen9 was an extreme attention seeker - to the point of lying about being bullied at school to ge other kids in trouble. She got caught in a huge lie at school and the school recommended counseling . That was a wake up call to her parents .

notsurehowtodeal's picture

I live in Colorado and when I hear stories like this I always think of Columbine. I don't think it is ever too soon to intervene when a kid is talking about killing
class-mates.

Do you have a "children's hospital" or a "university hospital" in your area? They might have special mental health divisions that could be helpful.