Anonymous wrote:op - these are all good ideas!
I actually did the shared story last night after writing this post bc I felt awfully guilty about saying no. i wish i weren't so exhausted by bedtime and could just deal
Anonymous wrote:Op - he doesn’t want to be read to (that would be easy) he wants a full made up story. Even if we went somewhere and get home super late
Anonymous wrote:Op - he doesn’t want to be read to (that would be easy) he wants a full made up story. Even if we went somewhere and get home super late
Anonymous wrote:Op - he doesn’t want to be read to (that would be easy) he wants a full made up story. Even if we went somewhere and get home super late
Anonymous wrote:Op - he doesn’t want to be read to (that would be easy) he wants a full made up story. Even if we went somewhere and get home super late
Anonymous wrote:I still read to my almost 12yo, she’s an only so not sure when it will stop lol. Realistically though it’s probably only 5 nights a week I read. If we’re home late or something I don’t do it. She’s ok on the nights I don’t read. She had adhd, I’m not sure what audhd is, thought it was a type at first but PPs have used it too.
Anonymous wrote:I use a book of really short stories for this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow what’s wrong with you?
I don’t care how tired you are you read to your child
It is the single most important thing a parent can do
Do you have an audhd child? Do you understand how it’s likely a prolonged battle just to get the kid through the nightly routine and to bed and it can be 10:00 and your kid may have fought you tooth and nail over every blasted thing for hours and you just want a few minutes to yourself before going to sleep yourself and the demand to be read to comes after hours and hours of not listening?
Give yourself a break, OP. Do it when you can. Forgive yourself when you can’t. Hang in there.
Anonymous wrote:My kid does this but it's not because he wants THE STORY, it's because he wants me as white noise. It's his way of self-soothing in a transition. He pays no attention to the plot and he couldn't say what's happening in the story if I asked. I usually read a bit then leave the room when he's halfway out. If he says something I say I'm going to the bathroom and will be right back, which is, of course, not true.