Mezla PigDog, on 18 January 2026 - 08:43 AM, said:
Double post. Life has been pretty shite lately. My son has been having anxiety attacks. He's 9, he has nothing real to worry about. I don't THINK we have been terrible parents although I am sure we have our blindspots. I know anxiety is a thing that some people just have, it's how they are wired. I feel we could have handled it reasonably well except he throws up! So if he's at school he is sent home for 48 hrs, if he isn't with a parent he is sent home, or if he is out with us it's a bloody faff to sort it out and we're treading on eggshells all the time to avoid the puke. My nerves have been shredded. It's also got to be really bad for him physically to be throwing up so often. So our lives shrunk a lot while we tried to break the cycle of puking as the more he pukes, the easier it seems to come. Bless the little bugger, he's played football matches immediately after puking, been sent to holiday camps, trick or treat, aeroplane flights. He self-moderates by refusing breakfast a lot. He bounces back pretty quickly once he does puke but the build up is a nightmare as he doesn't want to puke, he doesn't even know why he feels sick, we don't want him to puke, but puking seems to be a release. We have been trying to break the cycle. Me and Mr PigDog haven't been getting along as we disagree with how to deal with it, which obviously helps nothing if not actively makes it worse. Everyone has an opinion on what to do but I'm the one the kid ultimately comes to for comfort.
Anyway, after 9 months of a lot of puking we're on about 12 months of it kind of being under control with occasional relapses. It has been replaced slightly with needing to wee but that's perfectly manageable! Physical causes have been ruled out so it's definitely psychological.
So now there is bandwidth to deal with the root cause of the anxiety. He's always been a high energy kid, not one for sitting down and he hates school work - anything where he has to hold a pencil is a battle. But he can do it. As the rest of his class settle down as they get older he is starting to stand out more. So his school last week said they think we should get him tested for neurodiversity. They don't lean towards a specific condition (which doesn't fecking help) but they think it's the only thing to explain what is going on. So we'll be doing that but if he does have something I expect it's borderline or otherwise we would have gone in that direction much younger. I'm leaning towards ADHD but he doesn't fit that many of the criteria (not that I'm an expert). However over diagnosis is a real thing now (not remotely criticising anyone with a diagnosis, it's just a big complicated thing). So I don't want him to be diagnosed with something he doesn't have. Or waste time going up a blind alley.
We had a good run at home over autumn so I kicked off looking for a new job because my current one makes me unhappy and I have been massively overworked now for years. It's a big task to look for a job, and work and parent and just generally do life. We have no family nearby (they wouldn't be helpful if they were) and friends he can go to are limited due to the puking.
So I'm climbing the walls basically. I know the right thing to do for each specific issue but there aren't enough hours in the frickin day.
I'm really sorry to read this, it's an awful lot for you all at once. I hope the job hunt goes well though, that's a huge part of your life to be making you unhappy.
I second a lot of what Cyphon has said above - one of my close friend's son is currently waiting for assessment for ADHD and dyslexia (though neuropsychology is her field and she thinks he is to quote her "a proper generalist" and has autism as well) - their process was also begun by the school flagging it to them and asking for it to be looked into at I think 6 in his case. It seemed to echo Cyphon's point about it being when higher expectations to sit still, calm down and do you work kick in. As amph said, the diagnosis (if one is applicable) is as much about accessing support that's available for him as anything else. From my limited anecdotal knowledge from friends who are parents of ND kids, the assessment for a child is much more behaviour and observation based and relies far less on reporting than my adult one for autism did (by it's very nature, for an adult it's a lot of self-reporting). I'm not saying providers who aren't thorough and are unscrupulous don't exist, but with a good one I'd suggest the chance of a false positive diagnosis isn't very high at all.
There are a lot of people being diagnosed as adults now because it was missed when they were children (particularly women, because until the mid-90s "only boys could have autism and ADHD" because there was no recognition of the presentation in girls being different) - and I think there are plenty of people for whom had it been picked up on earlier some aspects of their lives might have been easier.
I'm glad the vomiting seems to have calmed down for the most part though - that sounds so stressful for all of you.
This post has been edited by TheRetiredBridgeburner: 19 January 2026 - 08:32 AM