Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9 year old with adhd and anxiety is similar. Much better now that we understand the diagnosis and have medication. Focus on getting an eval so you know what he and you need next.
Curious whether you medicated the anxiety or ADHD or both?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 9 year old with adhd and anxiety is similar. Much better now that we understand the diagnosis and have medication. Focus on getting an eval so you know what he and you need next.
Curious whether you medicated the anxiety or ADHD or both?
Anonymous wrote:My 9 year old with adhd and anxiety is similar. Much better now that we understand the diagnosis and have medication. Focus on getting an eval so you know what he and you need next.
Anonymous wrote:My 9 year old with adhd and anxiety is similar. Much better now that we understand the diagnosis and have medication. Focus on getting an eval so you know what he and you need next.
Anonymous wrote:Hi Op, what you describe does definitely have similarities to my son with ADHD. Medication helped him the most of anything, by far. ADHD is a disorder of regulation, this can include regulation of emotion. What do you mean he is disciplined after saying he wants to die? I'm thinking (hoping) you meant the opposite, maybe I read that wrong.
Glad you are getting support as parents. Also recommend Dr. Shapiro and his course. I haven't done the support groups but some people like them a lot https://www.parentchildjourney.com/
As much parent training/coaching as you can get will help. You will have to discipline him differently.
But really, I would put MOST of my energy on getting a diagnosis. with the mentions of harming himself I would probably personally get a full neuropsych. But it is pretty much impossible to do that quickly without paying a hefty price. But it is probably worth it if you can find a way to swing it. You need a correct diagnosis so you can get on the correct medication and the right supportive therapy.
Good luck, it is so hard, I hear you.
Anonymous wrote:Hi Op, what you describe does definitely have similarities to my son with ADHD. Medication helped him the most of anything, by far. ADHD is a disorder of regulation, this can include regulation of emotion. What do you mean he is disciplined after saying he wants to die? I'm thinking (hoping) you meant the opposite, maybe I read that wrong.
Glad you are getting support as parents. Also recommend Dr. Shapiro and his course. I haven't done the support groups but some people like them a lot https://www.parentchildjourney.com/
As much parent training/coaching as you can get will help. You will have to discipline him differently.
But really, I would put MOST of my energy on getting a diagnosis. with the mentions of harming himself I would probably personally get a full neuropsych. But it is pretty much impossible to do that quickly without paying a hefty price. But it is probably worth it if you can find a way to swing it. You need a correct diagnosis so you can get on the correct medication and the right supportive therapy.
Good luck, it is so hard, I hear you.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds a lot like what we went through at age 9. Hang in there! It can get better.
In-person therapy is probably best. Virtual was a disaster for us, but in-person with the right person was helpful. It's good to combine with some parent sessions, and that can be virtual.
Our kid was diagnosed with autism, ADHD, and anxiety. It's still hard to know what is in the driver's seat at any moment, but the inflexibility and the emotional regulation challenges were helpful for us to see through a diagnosis. DBT-C was also recommended to us as a person above noted, but we had a very hard time finding it for a kid younger than a teen. You might have better luck. It sounds useful.
What is the camp like? Is there a lack of structure? If he does better at school, it could be useful to try to find an alternative camp (unlikely to be possible, I know) and/or talk with the organizers about accomodations. He may need more structure or clearer rules or better previewing of what's coming next. There might also be some conflict you don't know about going on with other kids that is leading to him being stressed.
He is probably holding it together in public and losing it at home as a safe space. The more you can try to build the relationship and use incentives and benefits rather than punishments, the better. Of course, discipline is required, but you may need to tread carefully first to get him to a better place.
I would mention the part about wanting to die to your ped and make sure the therapist knows. Depression could be involved, too. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What does he get frustrated with?
His triggers seem to be any time we tell him to stop doing something. Like if he’s being silly and we ask him to stop. It’s like we’re hurting his feelings. He’s highly sensitive.
What do you mean by discipline?
Taking things away from him.
What do you mean by set him off?
He essentially explodes - throws things, hits, etc.