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Ok, I have to leave...

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Abilify is mild. Of course my boyfriend Takes it. I take Rexulti. We are both alive and well. I work. I know you are talking about a child here but you might. Need them if taking her out her surroundings. ( she is really Acting. Out) but you are her parent so u know best. I'm typing on slow phone at work so forgive spelling.
 
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I seriously would not try at this time to talk and try to make any sense with her at this time. i would GO. to your mothers. get out. this is unhealthy. take care of yourself. your child is going to need you big time. everyone here has given great advice. do it. do not take another moment of this. surround yourself with people that make you want to be a better person at all times..... sending you all the strength that you will need if i could.
 
Makes sense to want to avoid kidney issues but if it’s physical injury to self others or trying Abilify, the med may be the better option.

Being around an abusive parent can lead to aggression problems in DD children (or any child) to worsen. That’s possible part of what’s leading to the home visit. Does the mental health team know about your wife's abusive behaviors?

Have you adopted the stepdaughter? If not, then when you divorce, her care will be totally up to her mom. It might be wise to tell the mental health team all you can so they can help her.

Don't ignore your wife's abusive behaviors for the sake of the kids.
 
Are you still in couple's therapy? If you are, that would be a safe place to tell her after you've made arrangements. You could also ask your therapist to come to the session.
 
Don't ignore your wife's abusive behaviors for the sake of the kids.
disclaimer -- I don't have kids so I could just be not understanding but I agree with @Justmehere . Staying with someone abusive for the sake of the kids has always sounded like an oxymoron to me. Why would you intentionally put your kids into a dysfunctional life? Isn't that kind of the opposite of what is safe for them and how so many people end here - on the forum? How does it benefit them to grow up with this is "just how mom/dad/grandparent/uncle/friend is" and teach them they have to adapt to the abuse? Wouldn't it be safer to remove them from the environment and teach them they DONT have to put up with this kind of behavior?

Otherwise it seems you are teaching them this is how relationships work. The only thing they will learn is that it doesn't matter that someone is abusive -- if you are in a relationship with them you stay. Especially if you have kids. And no - it doesn't matter if she doesn't treat them like that. They are still learning that when you are married and you get abused it's just how things work. What will you tell one of them when they end up in an abusive relationship? How will you convince them it is ok to leave if you didn't?

I'm honestly not trying to guilt you or anything like that because I know how hard it is to leave --especially when you have to add kids into the equation. It could be one of those devil you know type things -- safer to stay than to leave. I just don't understand (again, not a parent) how staying for their sake works out best for them.
 
I agree with @Freida. I always thought you should leave an abusive relationship "for the sake of the children" not the other way around.

Children need at least one stable healthy parent to make the hard choices and make sure they have the best environment to thrive in. That's what a good parent does. They put their feelings aside and do what is best for the children. The children should come first. Imo.

However, like Freida I don't have children but I have seen the fallout abusive relationships can have on the children involved. It follows them their whole life. It changes who they are supposed to be.

Good luck with everything!
 
@Freida @LuckiLee

For the sake of the children (leaving) assumes the abusive parent won’t seek out, or be awarded custody. At all. Much less full custody, whilst the non-abusive parent only has visitation.

Gets just a BIT more complicated when you envision actually having to hand over your child week in and week out to be abused, doesn’t it? Not able to protect them at all, much less have a say in how they’re raised at the other person’s home? (Because those rules & laws are set for normal divorces where differences of opinion are about snacks and religion; not DV & child abuse/neglect). As well as the huge amount of destabilisation for a child thrust in and out of two wildly different environments (abusive & not, without any kind of protective “normal”), years and tens of thousands of dollars of court battles, CPS investigations, police intervention, therapy ...

... divorcing an abuser means YOU will be free, but you’re abandoning your kids to be abused by order of the courts.

It’s a huge risk to take, when you know the abuser will go after custody.

And an incrediably hard decision.

All in a vacuum of support, because the general consensus is that all you have to do to escape abuse? Is leave. That’s where people’s understanding just stops. Leave, and it’s over, right? Not if you have kids the courts have ordered into the abuser’s care. Not for them, and not for you, as abusing your kids is the most common way abusers retain control over their exes.

(Well then call CPS. CPS wants 2 parent families. Removing a child from 1 parent -against court orders granting them custody- is a years long process that usually fails... and people just goggle. Because every parent’s 2nd greatest fear is having their kids taken from them, it doesn’t occur to people that the State tries really, really hard NOT to, and in the rare cases they do, nearly always gives them back. Foster parents know this, DV parents know this, but the rest of the country really seems to think “tell someone” & “leave” = the end of the story. So until your kids are grown? They will be being abused, and the idiot schools/doctors/etc. keep acting like this is a “new” thing where telling someone will make a difference, or not a thing at all and just a jealous ex, because the courts would never grant custody to an abuser, right??? :banghead: ).

People stay “for the kids” to try and protect them, to try and give them a decent life, to try and have some degree of control, and because they’re afraid of the very real possibility their abuser will be IN their life, the rest of their lives... without any recourse to escape them. Because they’ve taken your kids hostage. By court order.

It’s a very hard decision. And a huge risk. No one I’ve ever met has made that decision -to stay or go- lightly. Both options are potentially brutal.
 
divorcing an abuser means YOU will be free, but you’re abandoning your kids to be abused by order of the courts.
People stay “for the kids” to try and protect them, to try and give them a decent life, to try and have some degree of control, and because they’re afraid of the very real possibility their abuser will be IN their life, the rest of their lives... without any recourse to escape them. Because they’ve taken your kids hostage. By court order.
Ok -- that is terrifying!!!
Thanks for the reality check....cause...damn. :(
 
Abilify is mild. Of course my boyfriend Takes it. I take Rexulti. We are both alive and well. I work. I know you are talking about a child here but you might. Need them if taking her out her surroundings. ( she is really Acting. Out) but you are her parent so u know best. I'm typing on slow phone at work so forgive spelling.

Agreed.

You may be left with the choice of “medicate” or she could lose her freedom.

Losing freedom just to protect from the possibility of kidney damage? Yes, only the possibility....

She can have regular bloodwork done to determine her kidney functioning.

I know many are against medication, but at the end of the day, for many of us, taking medication gives us a new lease on life that therapy alone could never touch. I know she’s only 11, but if she’s this violent, it may be time to seriously consider medication, along with regular bloodwork.
 
Agreed.

You may be left with the choice of “medicate” or she could lose her freedom.

Losing freedom just to protect from the possibility of kidney damage? Yes, only the possibility....

She can have regular bloodwork done to determine her kidney functioning.

I know many are against medication, but at the end of the day, for many of us, taking medication gives us a new lease on life that therapy alone could never touch. I know she’s only 11, but if she’s this violent, it may be time to seriously consider medication, along with regular bloodwork.
I couldn't have said it better. Wonderfully put!
 
Personally I'd give the abilify a try at least, but I have no say in my stepdaughters medical care, and my wife is afraid of/hates most people in clinical positions. All i can do is Express concerns about my son's safety. It's almost like I have an automatic reaction to defend her beliefs even if I dont agree just to keep her from emotionally jumping on me. Things seem so messed up.
 
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