If she/he's not in treatment, get them to go. If they ARE in treatment and there is a worsening of symptoms, you may have to ask them to get a reevaluation on their treatment and/or medication. The best thing is to be understanding, honest, and tactful when telling them.
2006-12-23 15:09:51
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answer #1
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answered by Flea© 5
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If she is not seeing any help for this than I would defiently suggust to her to go and seek some proffesional help. As far as dealing with her problem I don't see how you can avoid the problem other than supporting her and looking at the good quality's that attracted you to her in the first place. I am sure that this must be hard on you but don't forget that she is the one dealing with the problem but I hope that you can focus on the good and not the bad and just show support and that's all you can do. Best of Luck.
2006-12-23 15:12:59
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answer #2
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answered by matthew 1
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Tell her it is becoming a serious problem and you think she may need to take some medication. I am on Luvox for it. Works okay, I'm alot better about it than I was.
2006-12-23 15:00:51
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answer #3
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answered by Amanda 6
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i take paxil for my ocd. suggest that your spouse see a psychiatrist.
2006-12-23 16:12:45
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answer #4
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answered by Cheshire Princess 5
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take them to a psychologist for medicine. this will help if you remind them to take the daily dose.
2006-12-23 15:06:04
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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