Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. No food in his room. No one should have food in their rooms
2. Do not do things for him. He will have zero motivation to do it himself if he knows you will.
3. Spend a day with him and purge. It's a lot easier to get organized when you get rid of the stuff you don't need
4. Let him learn the consequences of what happens if he's so messy. Can't find his soccer jersey? Guess he can't play in the game. Can't find something so it makes him late? Well, too bad.
5. Like another PP said, a messy room doesn't hurt anyone. If you can get it reasonably under control, let go that it isn't completely clean. Your kid will be ok if he dresses himself for a week from a pile of clean clothes on his closet floor.
+1 to all this.
I had unmedicated ADHD (I have adult ADHD -- also unmedicated but diagnosed -- so I'm guessing I had it as a kid?) was in the gifted program at school and sound exactly like your son. Huge mess for a room. My parents did the above and it helped as much as it COULD be helped -- forced me to at least do the bare minimum. They backed off and let it be sort of a disaster at the time, and I appreciate that lack of micromanaging now as an adult (ugh, I hope I'm that cool when my now-little kids get to the teen years!).
That said, I became very tidy in college, especially when I studied abroad and lived with a tidy host family. I think that was a combination of growing up (it'll happen!), respecting a family that could kick me out, and the fact that the host family had a designated clean-up time (every Saturday morning) and everyone helped with all cleaning and chores at that time. So I think this is a teen thing and I would follow PP's advice pretty much to a T.
Anonymous wrote:1. No food in his room. No one should have food in their rooms
2. Do not do things for him. He will have zero motivation to do it himself if he knows you will.
3. Spend a day with him and purge. It's a lot easier to get organized when you get rid of the stuff you don't need
4. Let him learn the consequences of what happens if he's so messy. Can't find his soccer jersey? Guess he can't play in the game. Can't find something so it makes him late? Well, too bad.
5. Like another PP said, a messy room doesn't hurt anyone. If you can get it reasonably under control, let go that it isn't completely clean. Your kid will be ok if he dresses himself for a week from a pile of clean clothes on his closet floor.
, and the fact that the host family had a designated clean-up time (every Saturday morning) and everyone helped with all cleaning and chores at that time. So I think this is a teen thing and I would follow PP's advice pretty much to a T.Anonymous wrote:He has too many things in this room to manage. Can the desk/papers be moved to another location? Does he actually read those books anymore? Does he still have the devices the cords belong to? Do all the clothes fit and are for the right season?
Have had similar problems with DC and found that the amount of stuff is what is overwhelming. Purge, compartmentalize (not shelves, but entire activities out of the room). Let the room be the lair for rest and relaxation only.
And NO FOOD EVER.
Anonymous wrote:Hamper for dirty clothes?
Anonymous wrote:I am ready to get a dumpster and just haul everything out and start all over. Let me start by saying that I have taken many steps to help organize DS. I even labeled the shelves in his closet on where things go, so he can easily find things.
My 15 year old will not throw anything out. Anything. His trash can is always empty, but piles and piles of papers, magazines, device cables, devices, books, clothes, food, empty food packages, empty water bottles, pens, pencils, are strewn all over the floor on a regular basis. The only time this is not the case is when the cleaning lady comes. She is a saint and doesn't complain. I usually ask him to pick up before hand, but his approach is to pile all this stuff on top of his desk, which is piled high about 2 feet with books papers and junk and throw any clean clothes on the floor in his closet, rather than fold and put away. He has plenty of shelf space to put books and papers, but he doesn't use it. He will not let me help him organize anymore and will not throw anything out...even old papers from school.
When I do his laundry and ask him to put it away, nothing is put where it belongs, and consequently he can't find something important like a sports jersey or something he really needs. Socks end up on the t-shirt drawer, athletic shorts end up in the pajama drawer...nothing is where it belongs. It is really a problem to the point that i have started putting his stuff away for him because I can't take trying to help him find things or going out to buy new stuff because he lost them. By the way, we did try having him fold and put away, and that was even worse.
He has ADHD, and not medicated. Bright kid, good student getting mostly As in a challenging curriculum. Can't do meds because of side effects.
Please tell me I am not alone here, and if anyone has any suggestions on how to help this kid (who is beginning to resent me). I worry about how he is going to manage when he leaves home for college in a few years. Is there a professional I can hire to help him get organized? Should I cross post this on kids with special needs, or is this a universal issue among all teen boys?