This has all got a bit spiky.
In our case, we chose life rather than endless battles. I battled with my first DS. A fight for the EHCP, a fight to get what was described in the EHCP. Then eventually a fight to get him to school, then to find another school, now to get MH mentoring….etc. He is still “in the system” and his provision has been 1.5hr per week, with nothing in place for September (next week!) even after all those battles. They won’t call him “NEET” because he gets the 1.5hr. It’s insane.
It was all very exhausting. I am really good at being diplomatic, finding allies, reading up on the law, crafting letters, emails and complaints. But years of “fighting” has damaged us all.
With my second DS (14) and his MH, and home ed, it has been about acceptance. Not fighting for “professional” help or special provision that he doesn’t even want, and school outright refused to provide. I could have started fighting again…. I had a lot of evidence stacked against the school and their poor treatment of him. And If he wanted to do GCSEs, go to uni, persue a particular career, I would have done everything possible to get him along that path, but he doesn’t. He can change his mind on that in years to come if he wants.
We home ed and he is recovering. I would even say he is well. This wouldn’t be the case if he was returning to school next week.
MH is much more important than school and exams. School is a social construct, not a necessity. You don’t have to be in a school in order to learn. Schools can be very stressful, unpredictable and controlling environments. Sometimes the “specialist” schools can be even worse than mainstream (or they can be much better, it seems to be pot-luck). I enjoyed school very much, but my sons do not.
Life is very short and, as a family, we have chosen to spend every day 100% living it, not reading up about our rights, having meetings and fighting Local Authorities. It’s all a choice, unique to each family, and there are no rights or wrongs.