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I absolutely understand. Believe me.I totally get that @Zoogal. It would definitely have made things easier for you. I was just pointing out to Shimmerz and Albatross that privacy laws are there for a reason and it would be dangerous if every therapist assumed that every parent can be trusted.
But what if OP was an abuser or protecting an abuser?
it would be dangerous if every therapist assumed that every parent can be trusted.
No she didn't tell me but I have a feeling it was to protect me.@Zoogal - you may have been years away from receiving your own diagnosis but I'm sure you love and care for your daughter and would have made it your business to learn about this disorder and help your child appropriately. Not knowing must have been a disadvantage I'm sure.
Is there any reason your daughter gave you for why she didn't tell you all those years ago or sometime sooner?
@Zoogal,My 25 year old daughter just informed me today that she was diagnosed when she was 13. She never told me until today. She just started going to therapy again. Why wasn't I told as her parent by the person who diagnosed her?
I do have to say I am not surprised at all by the diagnosis just that she got it that young. We got it from the same person.
Thank you.@Zoogal,
I hope you do not blame yourself on this matter. Just as that person caused you as an adult that much damage, just imagine what he or she could have done to your daughter. She was probably too afraid or too dissociated to really take you on her side at that time. Hope you find respite, your child has been to therapy that long and that has something to do with you as the mother.
I am not accusing OP of anything bad,
I completely understand why she would want to know the diagnosis and why it would be helpful.
My point is, the therapist doesn’t always know where the parent lands on things.
Let’s take my case for instance.
I am not accusing OP of anything bad, so please don’t think that’s what I’m implying. I completely understand why she would want to know the diagnosis and why it would be helpful.
My point is, the therapist doesn’t always know where the parent lands on things. Let’s take my case for instance. I spilled about what was going on with my stepdad to a friend at school. After some run around at the school, CPS got involved. Whose the first person they contact? My mother. Whose the person they believe is going to do everything to protect me? My mother. Who do they trust to give them info and cooperate with them without being suspicious of her? My mother. When they put me in a room with a therapist and gave me the knowledge that she would know what was said, I shut down. Made up lies. Because I was TERRIFIED. I was destroying the family and she would have a front row seat to it. So I didn’t talk. She lied and made excuses, so they dropped it and she pulled me out of school and we went gallivanting around the country. Without a doubt, the abuse continued with her full knowledge of it. Her only concern was protecting him. But they trusted her, because she’s a parent, she’s a mother, so wouldn’t she be a person they could talk to about me? He knew everything I said, and you best believe it didn’t end up pretty.