Anonymous wrote:I was one of the anti-medication people, specifically because I worried about the long term side effects of being on medication. After two years of discussing it with my doctor and my child (who wanted the meds) we put them on the medication.
It is LIFE changing. I can't speak to the success others have had, but I regret every day we didn't have them on the medication before.
Anonymous wrote:Like others on this thread, my son is autistic with ADHD and hasn't been able to tolerate any stimulant or non-stimulant ADHD medications. I wish he could and we've tried, but the side effects are horrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was one of the anti-medication people, specifically because I worried about the long term side effects of being on medication. After two years of discussing it with my doctor and my child (who wanted the meds) we put them on the medication.
It is LIFE changing. I can't speak to the success others have had, but I regret every day we didn't have them on the medication before.
Best thing I ever did for my kid. It was life changing for him in a very positive way. To this day he feels bad (he just graduated from college) when he hears of kids whose parents refuse to medicate even if their kid is constantly having their self-esteem take a hit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My long-time boyfriend had been medicated for ADHD as a child in the 90's, starting in elementary school. He often said that he credited that with laying the path to his future drug addiction. As an adult, he was still angry at his doctor for not telling him to avoid mixing coffee with Adderall, which he saw as the turning point where he started abusing drugs.
I know at least two other adults who have no thanks to their parents for getting them on stimulants as children.
That is a ridiculous excuse for addiction. In fact studies show that unmedicated adhd is at far higher risk for addiction
+1 C'mon. Anxiety, anger, & depression often accompany ADHD. Self-medicating those issues can lead to addiction. Blaming others for your own actions is a form of learned helplessness.
Anonymous wrote:I was one of the anti-medication people, specifically because I worried about the long term side effects of being on medication. After two years of discussing it with my doctor and my child (who wanted the meds) we put them on the medication.
It is LIFE changing. I can't speak to the success others have had, but I regret every day we didn't have them on the medication before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m an educator who has had a lot of conversations over the years with parents of confirmed or suspected ADHD children about medicating versus not. In the no medication camp I’ve heard a lot of concerns about side effects and over-medicalization of “normal” behavior. Few folks seem to mention the possible effects of not medicating ADHD. I’ve also talked to a lot of parents who see their own behavior in their kids. If the parent was unmedicated for ADHD, they often believe their kid can also make it through “just fine.” Also, some folks just don’t believe that ADHD is real. They’ll debate you on the whole premise of the disorder. They see it as natural behavior, especially amongst boys. They may also refer to labels for this and other challenges as a “crutch.”
+1. I've seen this too as an educator. The wheels usually fall off in middle school especially for boys.
NP. That sounds dire - but how can parents know if this will apply to any particular child? Our oldest was recommended meds in 2nd grade. We declined. He is now a rising 9th grader and while ES had good and bad years, MS was much better. Our youngest was recommended meds in 2nd grade and started taking them but while they help with staying in his seat and doing seat work, they haven't fixed all (or most) problems. Not sure when he'll stop taking them but it'll be great when it happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m an educator who has had a lot of conversations over the years with parents of confirmed or suspected ADHD children about medicating versus not. In the no medication camp I’ve heard a lot of concerns about side effects and over-medicalization of “normal” behavior. Few folks seem to mention the possible effects of not medicating ADHD. I’ve also talked to a lot of parents who see their own behavior in their kids. If the parent was unmedicated for ADHD, they often believe their kid can also make it through “just fine.” Also, some folks just don’t believe that ADHD is real. They’ll debate you on the whole premise of the disorder. They see it as natural behavior, especially amongst boys. They may also refer to labels for this and other challenges as a “crutch.”
+1. I've seen this too as an educator. The wheels usually fall off in middle school especially for boys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have nothing else to do other than watch instagram reels and then come to an anonymous internet forum to start flaming about it?
People have trepidation about giving psychiatric meds to underage children, especially when they don't know how side effects will unfold in each specific case. People have it hard having to parent SN kids in this society with little to no community supports and limited acceptance of neurodiversity.
ADHD specifically is often seen as a character or parenting failure because of how it presents. Not medicating or medicating can be judged by relatives, teachers, etc. Leave everyone be, their children, their choices, their social media feed (which is probably crafted to create outrage and increase views).
I agree until it affects other people. You have a right to parent your child however you please until it prevents my child from accessing a safe and appropriate education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My long-time boyfriend had been medicated for ADHD as a child in the 90's, starting in elementary school. He often said that he credited that with laying the path to his future drug addiction. As an adult, he was still angry at his doctor for not telling him to avoid mixing coffee with Adderall, which he saw as the turning point where he started abusing drugs.
I know at least two other adults who have no thanks to their parents for getting them on stimulants as children.
That is a ridiculous excuse for addiction. In fact studies show that unmedicated adhd is at far higher risk for addiction