Don't listen to people telling you that it's a lack of discipline. It can be something completely different. For example, my mom has always been so obsessive with my CF, everything was always about my CF, she saw me more for my disease than for who I was as a person. It was oppressive. She was very controlling. It was very hard and had a devastating effect on my psych. I can't bear anything like that anymore and I am pretty sure that it's why I kind of "run away from my therapies" while I live with her, yet am right on them when I live on my own. There are strongly negative emotions attached to my therapies, emotions that make me want to escape, run away, emotions that make me feel like I have had enough of it for my whole life, that I was nothing to do with all of this anymore, that I <em>just can't do them for better, more important, life saving reasons : to protect my sanity</em>. As long as I don't feel that I am left alone in PEACE, in full control, I can't. As if not doing them was a defense mechanism against an overcontrolling obsessive mother. Yeah, I think that's exactly it. A defense mechanism against an overcontrolling obsessive mother. 17 years of psychologists never figured that out. No wait... one did... but my mom didn't listen. Anyway... just to say that it can be something completely different than what it looks like. In any case, don't worry, she KNOWS it's important (oh, how my mom, the doctors, psychologists, physical therapists, dieticians, nurses loved to remind me that it was important to do my therapies, as if I was a full blown retard and didn't know about it. You have no idea how frustrating that was). It's something else.