@mumofthree This sounds a lot like trauma. My son has had similar problems, and a classmate of his had a seizure, after a school shooting.
Even before my kid experienced the shooting he had issues. I can't say exactly why. He was diagnosed with autism late-14. One thing I noticed, he's just got a sensitive nervous system. Once puberty hit he couldn't mask or keep up socially.
School can be really traumatizing for kids on the spectrum. In addition, being biracial probably led to being treated differently. Some of the physical stuff could be somatic. It's the stress. You need to lower her everyday stress load.
I totally understand the burn out. So many times I felt like running away from home because it was all so painful and nothing I did helped. At a certain point I stopped trying to fix things so much and practiced non judgmental listening. Please don't assume she is being purposely manipulative. Kids, and adults, often do things to get their needs met without consciously scheming. They lack awareness and like a crying baby are doing what they can to get what they need.
When a problematic behavior happens, try to find the root. Validate her feelings. Suggest ways to cope, calm down, etc. Tell her you love her everyday. Find ways to compliment her and encourage her interests. But set boundaries. Especially the blaming. If the older daughter says she's messaging her, talk to her about it. Resolve the issue the best you can. Ask her to come to you and not tell the sister she is going to harm herself. That's her way of getting attention. How else could she get attention or vent?
And give yourself grace. Sometimes you just need a break. You won't do everything perfectly. What can hubby do to help? Maybe family counseling could help.
But things get better. My son is leveling out finally and I think going 100% virtual was the right move. Also he started thinking about college and making plans for the future.
Even before my kid experienced the shooting he had issues. I can't say exactly why. He was diagnosed with autism late-14. One thing I noticed, he's just got a sensitive nervous system. Once puberty hit he couldn't mask or keep up socially.
School can be really traumatizing for kids on the spectrum. In addition, being biracial probably led to being treated differently. Some of the physical stuff could be somatic. It's the stress. You need to lower her everyday stress load.
I totally understand the burn out. So many times I felt like running away from home because it was all so painful and nothing I did helped. At a certain point I stopped trying to fix things so much and practiced non judgmental listening. Please don't assume she is being purposely manipulative. Kids, and adults, often do things to get their needs met without consciously scheming. They lack awareness and like a crying baby are doing what they can to get what they need.
When a problematic behavior happens, try to find the root. Validate her feelings. Suggest ways to cope, calm down, etc. Tell her you love her everyday. Find ways to compliment her and encourage her interests. But set boundaries. Especially the blaming. If the older daughter says she's messaging her, talk to her about it. Resolve the issue the best you can. Ask her to come to you and not tell the sister she is going to harm herself. That's her way of getting attention. How else could she get attention or vent?
And give yourself grace. Sometimes you just need a break. You won't do everything perfectly. What can hubby do to help? Maybe family counseling could help.
But things get better. My son is leveling out finally and I think going 100% virtual was the right move. Also he started thinking about college and making plans for the future.