Anonymous wrote:Probably half of college kids acquire an adhd diagnosis by the time they graduate. It’s over diagnosed at an astounding rate.
Or maybe uninteresting reading and homework is hard for everyone to maintain focus on for the long hours needed to complete
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations. I was untreated too. Despite a high IQ, I barely finished college and impulsively married the wrong person who I’ve been dependent on because I’ve never been able to earn enough to support myself.
Anonymous wrote:So you "got over" your ADHD, no medication required? What sort of message are you trying to send here?Anonymous wrote:I'm 53 and I believe that, when I was in high school, i had adhd because i physically couldn't sit still long enough to read my homework.
However, 35 years ago, adhd wasn't diagnosed for every ailment the way it is today and I had to just deal with it. I was an awful student in high school and college, but eventually I learned to cope and I picked up several graduate degrees and became a tax lawyer.
All this by way of saying, you (parent) are not the same person you were when you were your junior year of high school, and your DC will change too. It's probably more important that your DC feels supported and loved than that they get an ACT score that will get them into a T25.
Anonymous wrote:So you "got over" your ADHD, no medication required? What sort of message are you trying to send here?Anonymous wrote:I'm 53 and I believe that, when I was in high school, i had adhd because i physically couldn't sit still long enough to read my homework.
However, 35 years ago, adhd wasn't diagnosed for every ailment the way it is today and I had to just deal with it. I was an awful student in high school and college, but eventually I learned to cope and I picked up several graduate degrees and became a tax lawyer.
All this by way of saying, you (parent) are not the same person you were when you were your junior year of high school, and your DC will change too. It's probably more important that your DC feels supported and loved than that they get an ACT score that will get them into a T25.
So you "got over" your ADHD, no medication required? What sort of message are you trying to send here?Anonymous wrote:I'm 53 and I believe that, when I was in high school, i had adhd because i physically couldn't sit still long enough to read my homework.
However, 35 years ago, adhd wasn't diagnosed for every ailment the way it is today and I had to just deal with it. I was an awful student in high school and college, but eventually I learned to cope and I picked up several graduate degrees and became a tax lawyer.
All this by way of saying, you (parent) are not the same person you were when you were your junior year of high school, and your DC will change too. It's probably more important that your DC feels supported and loved than that they get an ACT score that will get them into a T25.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're a tax lawyer, have you also been assessed for autism? Kidding, but not entirely kidding. Every tax lawyer I know should be assessed. (Mother of autistic child whose father is a tax lawyer.)
OP here - a perfect day for me would consist of reading statutes and regulations uninterrupted for 12 hours. So you're probably right, but I'm too old to care now.
Anonymous wrote:If you're a tax lawyer, have you also been assessed for autism? Kidding, but not entirely kidding. Every tax lawyer I know should be assessed. (Mother of autistic child whose father is a tax lawyer.)