Anonymous wrote:HFA could very well be in the mix. My inattentive, asocial, ADHD/HFA kid is majoring in international affairs, with a concentration in security policy. He would be an ideal analyst working in an security organization, government agency or think tank, talking with other experts about global or domestic security threats, cyber or actual terrorism, etc.
My husband also has an inattentive, asocial ADHD/HFA profile and has a PhD in bioinformatics. He’s worked in cancer research for many years analyzing large data sets on supercomputers.
The lesson I’ve learned from these two is that they absolutely need to work in topics they’re passionate about. They cannot function in any other sphere. The job will pay what it pays. Maybe you can steer them when they’re young to influence their topics of interest.
I entirely agree that such kids need to be pushed to excel and their weaknesses bolstered as much as possible so that their achievements help counterbalance their poor social skills. At a certain level of functioning and expertise, you’re seen as «quirky » and people will accommodate you somewhat to access what you have to offer. Below that, you’re just seen as plain weird and no one will want to work with you. It takes a lot of work to develop just enough awareness in that individual so they package themselves this side of crazy.
Sorry to be blunt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the worst combo, IMO.
I’d focus on getting him social skill help. That means you’re going to have to do what you don’t want to do, which is kill the electronics at home and really take the time to work on this. Whatever age he is, he’s too young for you to just give up on this part of him.
DP here. My son is an 18-year-old college student with HFA, and we had very strict "electronics at home" rules. He had hours and hours and hours of social skill help while he was growing up. We did not "give up on this part of him," but the reality is that he will always have relatively poor social skills compared to his neurotypical peers.
So I'm in the same boat, OP. I'm not sure where he will end up. Right now, he is majoring in Biology, which doesn't seem like it will lead to a good career. However, he loves learning about animals and nature. Maybe he will be able to do some some of field work? Except he hates bad weather. Ha! He is above average academically, but not talented enough for a CS or math/actuary degree -- he is missing the ability to see things logically, I think. I tried to steer him into Accounting, but he says is it boring.
Lol. I assume OP would have divulged it in the OP if her child were dealing with HFA. She didn't.
Lol? Really, PP?
Yes. You’re trying to hijack a response that includes some very good advice for 95% of kids in this situation - which is that the family needs to put some muscle into dealing with their kid before they send him out into the world, where this kind of personality oftentimes has disastrous results. Especially when the expectation/hope is that the child will be high earning and professionally successful.
+1000
Lots of entitlement and narcissism among booksmart but low EQ young adults. Resentment that they aren't earning $200k/year by age 30, which everyone told them that they'd end up doing because "ooooo Larla is so smart!"
OP, inattentive ADHD is simply NOT an excuse for your kid to have poor social skills. If your kid had something like HFA then I'd understand, but inattentive ADHD is NOT a death sentence for low EQ. Make sure your kid gets medication, executive functioning coaching, and arguably most important, a few years playing a team sport (no cross country or tennis!) and a job waiting tables.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the worst combo, IMO.
I’d focus on getting him social skill help. That means you’re going to have to do what you don’t want to do, which is kill the electronics at home and really take the time to work on this. Whatever age he is, he’s too young for you to just give up on this part of him.
DP here. My son is an 18-year-old college student with HFA, and we had very strict "electronics at home" rules. He had hours and hours and hours of social skill help while he was growing up. We did not "give up on this part of him," but the reality is that he will always have relatively poor social skills compared to his neurotypical peers.
So I'm in the same boat, OP. I'm not sure where he will end up. Right now, he is majoring in Biology, which doesn't seem like it will lead to a good career. However, he loves learning about animals and nature. Maybe he will be able to do some some of field work? Except he hates bad weather. Ha! He is above average academically, but not talented enough for a CS or math/actuary degree -- he is missing the ability to see things logically, I think. I tried to steer him into Accounting, but he says is it boring.
Lol. I assume OP would have divulged it in the OP if her child were dealing with HFA. She didn't.
Lol? Really, PP?
Yes. You’re trying to hijack a response that includes some very good advice for 95% of kids in this situation - which is that the family needs to put some muscle into dealing with their kid before they send him out into the world, where this kind of personality oftentimes has disastrous results. Especially when the expectation/hope is that the child will be high earning and professionally successful.
+1000
Lots of entitlement and narcissism among booksmart but low EQ young adults. Resentment that they aren't earning $200k/year by age 30, which everyone told them that they'd end up doing because "ooooo Larla is so smart!"
OP, inattentive ADHD is simply NOT an excuse for your kid to have poor social skills. If your kid had something like HFA then I'd understand, but inattentive ADHD is NOT a death sentence for low EQ. Make sure your kid gets medication, executive functioning coaching, and arguably most important, a few years playing a team sport (no cross country or tennis!) and a job waiting tables.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the worst combo, IMO.
I’d focus on getting him social skill help. That means you’re going to have to do what you don’t want to do, which is kill the electronics at home and really take the time to work on this. Whatever age he is, he’s too young for you to just give up on this part of him.
DP here. My son is an 18-year-old college student with HFA, and we had very strict "electronics at home" rules. He had hours and hours and hours of social skill help while he was growing up. We did not "give up on this part of him," but the reality is that he will always have relatively poor social skills compared to his neurotypical peers.
So I'm in the same boat, OP. I'm not sure where he will end up. Right now, he is majoring in Biology, which doesn't seem like it will lead to a good career. However, he loves learning about animals and nature. Maybe he will be able to do some some of field work? Except he hates bad weather. Ha! He is above average academically, but not talented enough for a CS or math/actuary degree -- he is missing the ability to see things logically, I think. I tried to steer him into Accounting, but he says is it boring.
Lol. I assume OP would have divulged it in the OP if her child were dealing with HFA. She didn't.
Lol? Really, PP?
Yes. You’re trying to hijack a response that includes some very good advice for 95% of kids in this situation - which is that the family needs to put some muscle into dealing with their kid before they send him out into the world, where this kind of personality oftentimes has disastrous results. Especially when the expectation/hope is that the child will be high earning and professionally successful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the worst combo, IMO.
I’d focus on getting him social skill help. That means you’re going to have to do what you don’t want to do, which is kill the electronics at home and really take the time to work on this. Whatever age he is, he’s too young for you to just give up on this part of him.
DP here. My son is an 18-year-old college student with HFA, and we had very strict "electronics at home" rules. He had hours and hours and hours of social skill help while he was growing up. We did not "give up on this part of him," but the reality is that he will always have relatively poor social skills compared to his neurotypical peers.
So I'm in the same boat, OP. I'm not sure where he will end up. Right now, he is majoring in Biology, which doesn't seem like it will lead to a good career. However, he loves learning about animals and nature. Maybe he will be able to do some some of field work? Except he hates bad weather. Ha! He is above average academically, but not talented enough for a CS or math/actuary degree -- he is missing the ability to see things logically, I think. I tried to steer him into Accounting, but he says is it boring.
Lol. I assume OP would have divulged it in the OP if her child were dealing with HFA. She didn't.
Lol? Really, PP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the worst combo, IMO.
I’d focus on getting him social skill help. That means you’re going to have to do what you don’t want to do, which is kill the electronics at home and really take the time to work on this. Whatever age he is, he’s too young for you to just give up on this part of him.
DP here. My son is an 18-year-old college student with HFA, and we had very strict "electronics at home" rules. He had hours and hours and hours of social skill help while he was growing up. We did not "give up on this part of him," but the reality is that he will always have relatively poor social skills compared to his neurotypical peers.
So I'm in the same boat, OP. I'm not sure where he will end up. Right now, he is majoring in Biology, which doesn't seem like it will lead to a good career. However, he loves learning about animals and nature. Maybe he will be able to do some some of field work? Except he hates bad weather. Ha! He is above average academically, but not talented enough for a CS or math/actuary degree -- he is missing the ability to see things logically, I think. I tried to steer him into Accounting, but he says is it boring.
Lol. I assume OP would have divulged it in the OP if her child were dealing with HFA. She didn't.
Anonymous wrote:He just needs to stay low to mid level, so he can avoid politics, interactions, etc
Actuary
Data analyst/ data science
Software engineer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the worst combo, IMO.
I’d focus on getting him social skill help. That means you’re going to have to do what you don’t want to do, which is kill the electronics at home and really take the time to work on this. Whatever age he is, he’s too young for you to just give up on this part of him.
DP here. My son is an 18-year-old college student with HFA, and we had very strict "electronics at home" rules. He had hours and hours and hours of social skill help while he was growing up. We did not "give up on this part of him," but the reality is that he will always have relatively poor social skills compared to his neurotypical peers.
So I'm in the same boat, OP. I'm not sure where he will end up. Right now, he is majoring in Biology, which doesn't seem like it will lead to a good career. However, he loves learning about animals and nature. Maybe he will be able to do some some of field work? Except he hates bad weather. Ha! He is above average academically, but not talented enough for a CS or math/actuary degree -- he is missing the ability to see things logically, I think. I tried to steer him into Accounting, but he says is it boring.
Anonymous wrote:He just needs to stay low to mid level, so he can avoid politics, interactions, etc
Actuary
Data analyst/ data science
Software engineer
Anonymous wrote:This is the worst combo, IMO.
I’d focus on getting him social skill help. That means you’re going to have to do what you don’t want to do, which is kill the electronics at home and really take the time to work on this. Whatever age he is, he’s too young for you to just give up on this part of him.