Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was like this as a kid. It morphed into relationships. It's the ADHD. We hyper focus on one relationship due to the inability to maintain several relationships. She will grow out of it, rejection won't kill her. As she grows older she will learn the social cues that come along with relationships.
Why did you revive this thread? It's from 2021.
Anonymous wrote:OMG take the phone away! No 12 year old needs a phone 24-7. Set some boundaries on phone time, or disable texting so that she can only practice it under supervision when you log her in.
Anonymous wrote:In person. Only wants to hang out with that person and 24/7. Constantly texting them and wanting to hang out. Way beyond normal. Doctors say targeting the flexibility and taking social skills classes will help. I’m looking for success stories since we are at the early stages of interventions and she’s not responding. DD won’t or can’t acknowledge the issue at the moment but she’s not in total denial about the ASD. I don’t intervene in these friendships. I feel terrible for both DD and the targeted friend. It’s exhausting for all of us.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like she would benefit from the "social thinking" program.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, DS was like this. He eventually decided he wanted to change because he couldn’t keep any friends. We hired a social skills coach that he met with weekly which helped a lot with understanding categories of friends, how often to text, social cues, etc.
There were enough opportunities for him to interact with kids at school so we decided against the social skills group. 1:1 coaching worked best since he could practice what he learned in real life.
He’s 16 now and has a handful of friends and a lot of acquaintances. The hard part now is he knows what do to in scenarios he’s encountered before or been coached on. It’s brand new social scenarios that are a challenge because he doesn’t have those instincts to know what to do.
He’s ok with making mistakes and just learns from it for next time.
Anonymous wrote:I was like this as a kid. It morphed into relationships. It's the ADHD. We hyper focus on one relationship due to the inability to maintain several relationships. She will grow out of it, rejection won't kill her. As she grows older she will learn the social cues that come along with relationships.
Anonymous wrote:I was like this as a kid. It morphed into relationships. It's the ADHD. We hyper focus on one relationship due to the inability to maintain several relationships. She will grow out of it, rejection won't kill her. As she grows older she will learn the social cues that come along with relationships.
Anonymous wrote:My ADHD son has the opposite problem. There is a girl who has a crush on him. She likes him one day then hates him the next day. He comes home with letters and drawings from her. She kicked him a few weeks ago and nothing was done because he is seen has a kid with some behavior problems who must have done something to upset her. Recently, she got him in trouble at school by lying about him. He missed some recesses but now I am concerned she might get really mad and try to get him suspended. His sister is sort of friends with this girl. She told our daughter that she is sorry about lying and wants to apologize to him next week. His sister has saved some screenshots of messages where she said she is sorry that he got in trouble because of those lies. We are saving the letters and drawings also just in case. My son said he wanted to change schools because of this. This girl lives with her grandma and may not have a lot of supervision. I am trying to figure out how best to intervene for my son because he does not have the skills to deal with this. OP’s situation might be very different but I think parents or grandparents should try to limit obsessive behavior because it can be stressful for the kids who are on the receiving end of the obsession.
Anonymous wrote:My ADHD son has the opposite problem. There is a girl who has a crush on him. She likes him one day then hates him the next day. He comes home with letters and drawings from her. She kicked him a few weeks ago and nothing was done because he is seen has a kid with some behavior problems who must have done something to upset her. Recently, she got him in trouble at school by lying about him. He missed some recesses but now I am concerned she might get really mad and try to get him suspended. His sister is sort of friends with this girl. She told our daughter that she is sorry about lying and wants to apologize to him next week. His sister has saved some screenshots of messages where she said she is sorry that he got in trouble because of those lies. We are saving the letters and drawings also just in case. My son said he wanted to change schools because of this. This girl lives with her grandma and may not have a lot of supervision. I am trying to figure out how best to intervene for my son because he does not have the skills to deal with this. OP’s situation might be very different but I think parents or grandparents should try to limit obsessive behavior because it can be stressful for the kids who are on the receiving end of the obsession.