Probably. I think I know her.
Only in the very rare instance of a severely disabled child whose adoptive parents are unable to support.
Only the child.
No. The court cannot make a parent visit with the child. It can only make them pay child support.No. The court cannot make a parent visit with the child. It can only make them pay child support.No. The court cannot make a parent visit with the child. It can only make them pay child support.No. The court cannot make a parent visit with the child. It can only make them pay child support.
They are more likely to become a narcissist, but there are also a variety of other disorders often associated with such a childhood. In effect, while a higher rate are likely to develope such a disorder, it remains to be seen exactly what disorder they will develope in such a gap of love. However, with proper care they can grow up to be a functioning adult.
Only if the parent is the legal guardian of the child's person. If the child is a danger to herself or others, the parent can petition the courts for involuntary commitment.
The counselor will want the parent's permission to treat the child. Only the child's legal guardian can arrange for couseling.The counselor will want the parent's permission to treat the child. Only the child's legal guardian can arrange for couseling.The counselor will want the parent's permission to treat the child. Only the child's legal guardian can arrange for couseling.The counselor will want the parent's permission to treat the child. Only the child's legal guardian can arrange for couseling.
I've been fortunate to know four generations of my family, Narcisissim appears only in one generation. NOT speaking from genetics, only from personal experiences: narcissism does not appear to be hereditary. Quite the opposite -- children of a narcissist are usually the victims of the N parent's emotional extortion and abuse. They dwell on the few inconsequential things their child did not or could not do. The child is rarely good enough, smart enough, attractive enough. The child is constantly compared to the grandiose vision the parent has of him/her self. If anything can be pass down from a narcissist it would be low self esteem.
You can't EVER ensure a narcissist is "gone". But usually they are only out to get whatever benefits them. If he is showing interest in you and/or the child, that will disappear once he finds his next target.
Sole means being the only one. A child's sole parent is her only parent. See related question link.
On the child's Form 1040, 1040A, or 1040EZ. A separate tax return must be filed by the child (or for the child if the child is too young). A parent cannot report a child's W-2 income on the parent's tax return. The only time a parent can report a child's income on the parent's return is if the kiddie tax applies and the child's only source of income is interest and dividends.
Only a guardian or parent can do this.
If only one parent is living=- for example if the Mother had died in childbirth but the child survived, yes, this would be legitimate.