Monday, September 6th, 2010 at
6:04 pm
Mary Martin asked:
My 10 year old son wets the bed. We tried all the cures–nasal spray, etc. but the doc says time is the only foolproof cure and that most kids stop before puberty. Anyway, my question is about going green. He’s been wearing Goodnites, the pullups for bedwetters, but we’re going green so I want him to wear cloth diapers and plastic pants. He’s reluctant. It takes more to pin them on, whereas the Goodnites he just slipped on and off. If he wakes up in the middle of the night and hasn’t wet, going to the toilet is tough because he has to unpin the diaper and then repin it when he’s done. and all this in a groggy state. Also they’re a lot thicker than Goodnites, so it makes him waddle. But we only have one planet and we have to protect it! I know it’s hard for him to think about the global ramifications; he’s worried about things closer to home. So how can I get him to see how going green is an important thing that personally effects each and every one of us?
Monday, September 6th, 2010 at
5:32 am

Mar.R asked:
My husband has Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome. He’s constantly upset or in a panic and I don’t think I can cope with it anymore. He’s getting help from both a psychiatrist and a psychologist and he’s on medication for anxiety. He still needs constant support and reassurance in everything he does, or he has a panic attack. He’s had several psychogenic seizures, which scare the crap out of all of us, and that he’s still getting treatment for.
He can’t sleep for more than two hours without waking up, and he has nightmares that are so bad he wets the bed. Two weeks ago he wet the bed four times in one night, and by the fourth time when he was up screaming and crying while I was trying to help him get changed, I lost my temper with him and started yelling. Then I went down stairs to sleep on the couch. I know it was an awful thing to do, but when he has panic attacks its like he has the emotional stability of a three year old. His thoughts are clouded, and when I came back to our room the next morning to see if he was okay, he was still sitting against the wall where I left him looking terrified.
Has anyone else cared for someone with PT SD? How do I cope with him, and what can I say to make him understand I’m not angry with him? Any other comment? I need HELP!
No, he’s not a soldier. I won’t go in to detail, because it makes me sick to think about it -but he was raised in foster care and the family that took him in did some terrible things. It was over 20 years ago, but he’s just begun suffering because of it recently.
Do people really think he needs to be committed? I think he should be at home with his family. If he moves into a hospital ward can I stay with him?
Saturday, September 4th, 2010 at
2:13 am
anonymous asked:
its been 4 days since our dog was spayed and tonight she has ‘wet the bed’ twice while sleeping. what is the treatment and how long does it take to WORK???
Friday, September 3rd, 2010 at
5:54 pm

heather asked:
I have been dating my boyfriend for over a year now. My boyfriend has been divorced for over a year now…the relationship was long ended before I came into the picture, but they were living together until the ex wife could get her affairs in order to leave. I’ve spent time with my boyfriend’s son and things have been pretty good, until recently. The child is extremely disrespectful (to anyone, not just me), defiant, and down right unruly. He has nightmares, (occasionally) issues with wetting the bed (at times, he still wears a ‘pull up diaper), violent outbursts (kicking pets and kicking people), and is very ‘mouthy’. He recently has decided to not want to play a sport that he used to love last year. He is 6 & 1/2 yrs old….he is also an only child. He lives with the ex wife in a small cramped apt filled with clutter and disorganization. My boyfriend is living in a house, that is ‘clutter free’. The child was seeing a ’social worker’ but is no longer in treatment (due to insurance issues on the social workers part). My boyfriend is actively looking for a psychologist for his son to go to. In the meantime, what role can I play in this part? The child is comfortable speaking to me about things, but at times like I said earlier can be extremely rude and defiant towards me. I am doing my best to be there for my boyfriend during this tough time with his child. I think I’m just more concerned/confused about things….is all of this just ‘normal’ 6yr old behaviour, or is this due to the divorce and the changes going on in his life? This child is also surrounded by older people that really aren’t choice people for him to be around…..no ambitions, no jobs, not exactly good role models. The child also doesn’t have many friends his own age, and has learned at a very young age that he ‘wants to take the easy road…sit around and get catered to’. My boyfriend is also very upset that his child has to go see a doctor, but I think that it’s good to get this taken care of now, at such a young age as opposed to waiting until he is a teenager. Is anyone else going thru this?? HELP!
@ michael: I can tell you that my boyfriend is quite stable (for the most part, but then again who really is stable all of the time?), but the ex wife is NOT! she is a woman in her mid 30’s who thinks she is in her early 20’s. I’m just curious if the child’s actions are due to his age and being a boy? or is it due to the divorce over a year ago? As far as i know, the ex & my boyfriend ‘get along’, but i’ve never met her or spoken to her, only go by what he tells me of her. I just want to make sure my boyfriend’s child is going to be ok, and again, how I can help everyone?
Friday, September 3rd, 2010 at
1:40 pm
linzyb24 asked:
My son wet the bed for a couple years. We ended up using a bed wetting alarm and after about 5 months, he was able to stay dry. Well he was dry for about 6 months and has started again. He is 7 yrs old and has been wetting now again for about a month. I am worried we may have to do this all over again and am wondering if a relapse is normal. Please advise!!
Friday, September 3rd, 2010 at
12:42 pm
Bridget asked:
My 11 year old sister still wets her bed.She tells me that she can’t feel anything. My mom and I are very worried about her. Aside from going to the doctor or using an alarm clock,is there a pill that can cure it?
Tuesday, August 31st, 2010 at
9:00 pm
Brittany asked:
Before we sleep at night we let our puppy outside to *** then we put him in his cage for the night. We’ve been working on potty training him for about a month now, so far so good for a basset hound. He barks at us to let us know he needs to go out now and we’ve gotten it down to maybe one pee-pee mishap in the house. We’re even at the point of not using the training pads anymore. However overnight he will wet his bedding. His last meal is at 6pm and his bedtime is 8pm with one more outside trip before my boyfriend and I go to bed yet 5am my boyfriend will let him out and we’ll find he has wet the bed. He did have a UTI two weeks ago we used meds to from our vet to cure that because he did *** every 15-20 minutes without water. Any ideas on how to teach our little puppy how not to wet his bed overnight?