Anonymous wrote:Until you can get professional help, and to save your sanity, you might sit down with her when she is calm and say that you have noticed that she is very focused on things being fair. You can say that this is a sign that she is growing up and learning to analyze things. There are always things that aren’t fair, or don’t seem fair, and part of growing up is to realize and accept it and cope with it. So she can have a minute to tell you about what she feels about anything, but then she needs to use a coping skill. She needs to think of three things that make her feel better, like reading, playing outside, or doing art, and then move on and stop the complaining. If she can’t stop, she can write it down, but you can’t listen to it over and over. Set a limit on the fussing while allowing her to feel the feelings and provide a notebook for an outlet or direct her to an activity. It must be miserable to feel like this. I would also start a tradition of having the family members all say something they are grateful for each day at dinner.
Anonymous wrote:We have an evaluation scheduled, but not for a while. My eight year old is analyzing everything in our lives for fairness over the past few days and using it as an excuse to cry, get furiously angry, tell us that we mistreat her compared to her sibling… it goes on and on. She was telling me today that I am a bad person and her dad is good. She feels that her dad spends too much special time with the sibling (dad and sibling have some newly aligned interests this year). She was telling me that she has mostly enemies at school because people don’t like her and therefore she doesn’t like them. The venting is endless. I can’t seem to stop listening. She seems so miserable, but I don’t want to feed whatever this is. We are clearly feeding it. Ugh. I want to be able to help her reset.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds like my anxiety/ADHD child. IMO, the ADHD presents in this situation as being unable to move on (redirect attention) from something that is somewhat irritating and ruminating on it makes it seem like a much bigger issue. And the anxiety is at play in the over developed sense of justice and always looking for a way they are excluded or slighted in some way.
Meds and parent training were a huge help. And therapy for our kiddo, but parent training honestly was more helpful. Also learn about validation. Validating your child’s feelings - not that their interpretation of the situation is valid, but how they feel about it is. “I can see how hard it is to feel left out when dad and sister go ice skating. It must be tough to watch them get ready and go off without you.” No rationalizing “but remember dad took you to the park yesterday” or fixing it “you and I can bake together.” This was a huge change in parenting style for me, but my DC really responds to it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds like my anxiety/ADHD child. IMO, the ADHD presents in this situation as being unable to move on (redirect attention) from something that is somewhat irritating and ruminating on it makes it seem like a much bigger issue. And the anxiety is at play in the over developed sense of justice and always looking for a way they are excluded or slighted in some way.
Meds and parent training were a huge help. And therapy for our kiddo, but parent training honestly was more helpful. Also learn about validation. Validating your child’s feelings - not that their interpretation of the situation is valid, but how they feel about it is. “I can see how hard it is to feel left out when dad and sister go ice skating. It must be tough to watch them get ready and go off without you.” No rationalizing “but remember dad took you to the park yesterday” or fixing it “you and I can bake together.” This was a huge change in parenting style for me, but my DC really responds to it.
+1. Our child was similar. We were surprised by the ADHD diagnosis as we thought ADHD presented differently (we just didn't know what we didn't know) but parent training and meds really help. I wouldn't go the therapy for the kid route at 8 years old but YMMV.
In the meantime, check out parent training sites. ADHD Dude works for us but we have a boy and the ADHD Dude somehow knows exactly how we parent and it's freaky.
I've never paid for anything from ADHD Dude, but his free stuff works just great.
On another note, I have to say that I found the empathizing and constant emotional validation just fed the beast of resentment and obsessing over perceived slights. I would say "That must be hard for you," ONCE and nothing else. And then I would disengage, not try to fix, not dismiss, but just let her sit with it. Fundamentally, that's the only thing that will make it ok. She has to learn that it's part of life and that's it an OK part of life.
I read the Explosive Child and tried to follow it for a few years and all I got was an angry dysregulated kid who was being catered to way too much. It's an extremely easy trap to fall into. ADHD Dude pulled me out of that trap and things are a lot better now.
10=rough times
13=much better in school and at home (showing actual self-esteem)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds like my anxiety/ADHD child. IMO, the ADHD presents in this situation as being unable to move on (redirect attention) from something that is somewhat irritating and ruminating on it makes it seem like a much bigger issue. And the anxiety is at play in the over developed sense of justice and always looking for a way they are excluded or slighted in some way.
Meds and parent training were a huge help. And therapy for our kiddo, but parent training honestly was more helpful. Also learn about validation. Validating your child’s feelings - not that their interpretation of the situation is valid, but how they feel about it is. “I can see how hard it is to feel left out when dad and sister go ice skating. It must be tough to watch them get ready and go off without you.” No rationalizing “but remember dad took you to the park yesterday” or fixing it “you and I can bake together.” This was a huge change in parenting style for me, but my DC really responds to it.
+1. Our child was similar. We were surprised by the ADHD diagnosis as we thought ADHD presented differently (we just didn't know what we didn't know) but parent training and meds really help. I wouldn't go the therapy for the kid route at 8 years old but YMMV.
In the meantime, check out parent training sites. ADHD Dude works for us but we have a boy and the ADHD Dude somehow knows exactly how we parent and it's freaky.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds like my anxiety/ADHD child. IMO, the ADHD presents in this situation as being unable to move on (redirect attention) from something that is somewhat irritating and ruminating on it makes it seem like a much bigger issue. And the anxiety is at play in the over developed sense of justice and always looking for a way they are excluded or slighted in some way.
Meds and parent training were a huge help. And therapy for our kiddo, but parent training honestly was more helpful. Also learn about validation. Validating your child’s feelings - not that their interpretation of the situation is valid, but how they feel about it is. “I can see how hard it is to feel left out when dad and sister go ice skating. It must be tough to watch them get ready and go off without you.” No rationalizing “but remember dad took you to the park yesterday” or fixing it “you and I can bake together.” This was a huge change in parenting style for me, but my DC really responds to it.