
Episode 60
What happens after high school?
One day they're toddlers and getting into everything and the next they're teens who you only see when they emerge to visit the fridge. They grow up so fast that it's never too early to start thinking about what's going to happen once they leave high school. Join Chrissy, Tracy, Perl and Christina to talk about what you should think about now, before your child with behavior or mental health challenges turns 18.
This Is Not What I Was Expecting · Tracy, Perl, Chrissy, Christina
June 20, 202434m 1s
Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (cdn.simplecast.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.
Show Notes
One day they're toddlers and getting into everything and the next they're teens who you only see when they emerge to visit the fridge. They grow up so fast that it's never too early to start thinking about what's going to happen once they leave high school. Join Chrissy, Tracy, Perl and Christina to talk about what you should think about now, before your child with behavior or mental health challenges turns 18. For one on one support at no cost to parents of children with behavior
and mental health challenges in PA visit:
https://www.paparentandfamilyalliance.org/one-on-one-help
Find out more about the PA Parent and Family Alliance and how you can
support our work at https://www.paparentandfamilyalliance.org/donation
To access any tip sheets and booklets we talk about visit:
https://www.paparentandfamilyalliance.org/helpfulresources
To be the first to know about our events, read stories of success from
families raising children with mental health challenges and more sign up
to join the Parent Alliance community:
https://www.paparentandfamilyalliance.org/join-the-community
Topics
teens with anxietyhigh school graduationbehavior problemsteen who won't listenparenting teensteens with adhdgetting ready for collegelife after high schoolteens and schoolparenting challengesparenting teens with special needs