Anonymous wrote:Nothing to do with T20. My Ivy kid is on no meds and my T100 has anxiety and adhd.
Anonymous wrote:Yes and not just at t20. If a school has less than a 40% admit rate and has a generally UMC population, I estimate at least 1/3 of students are on some kind of medication.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, yeah. Record numbers of anxiety, depression, and ADHD. They're all on something.
Maybe parents should stop trying to produce little walking college application kids from the time they're 10 years old. They're all burnt out and medicated by the time college rolls around.
ADHD does not belong in that list. Parental pressure cannot cause ADHD.
Anonymous wrote:Yes and not just at t20. If a school has less than a 40% admit rate and has a generally UMC population, I estimate at least 1/3 of students are on some kind of medication.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you seeing a lot of college students in the top 20 schools on meds/antidepressants these days?
The Adderall use on college campuses, both prescribed and illicit, is out of control. When I was a kid, my ADHD "medicine" was my old man's belt, and it was damned effective, with no side effects other than a sore behind.
Hi, I’m a woman who wasn’t diagnosed with adhd until I was 40, even though I always knew. ADHD meds changed my life. It’s nothing that parents can beat out of you.
Right there with you, sister.
(And to the PP — if your old man’s belt cured you, then it wasn’t actually adhd. Ask me how I know).
Anonymous wrote:I mean, yeah. Record numbers of anxiety, depression, and ADHD. They're all on something.
Maybe parents should stop trying to produce little walking college application kids from the time they're 10 years old. They're all burnt out and medicated by the time college rolls around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you seeing a lot of college students in the top 20 schools on meds/antidepressants these days?
The Adderall use on college campuses, both prescribed and illicit, is out of control. When I was a kid, my ADHD "medicine" was my old man's belt, and it was damned effective, with no side effects other than a sore behind.
Hi, I’m a woman who wasn’t diagnosed with adhd until I was 40, even though I always knew. ADHD meds changed my life. It’s nothing that parents can beat out of you.
Right there with you, sister.
(And to the PP — if your old man’s belt cured you, then it wasn’t actually adhd. Ask me how I know).
Anonymous wrote:I mean, yeah. Record numbers of anxiety, depression, and ADHD. They're all on something.
Maybe parents should stop trying to produce little walking college application kids from the time they're 10 years old. They're all burnt out and medicated by the time college rolls around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No idea but my incoming Yale freshman daughter is on Prozac and it has quite literally changed her life. It’s not always a bad thing, you know. Some people are born with chemical imbalances.
Not born, made. Stress and trauma changes the brain. It's a lot of consistent and heavy stress to compete and position yourself as a young teen to get entry into Yale so a lot of this could be based on what she was subjecting herself to in terms of pressure and added stress. Prozac can be life changing but it's only a temporary fix. After some years of great improvement, your brain needs new meds to maintain the effect.
Speaking from direct experience and wishing your daughter the best!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you seeing a lot of college students in the top 20 schools on meds/antidepressants these days?
The Adderall use on college campuses, both prescribed and illicit, is out of control. When I was a kid, my ADHD "medicine" was my old man's belt, and it was damned effective, with no side effects other than a sore behind.
Hi, I’m a woman who wasn’t diagnosed with adhd until I was 40, even though I always knew. ADHD meds changed my life. It’s nothing that parents can beat out of you.
Anonymous wrote:No idea but my incoming Yale freshman daughter is on Prozac and it has quite literally changed her life. It’s not always a bad thing, you know. Some people are born with chemical imbalances.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. It's ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Some people are born with chemical imbalances.
The chemical imbalance theory has been pretty well debunked by now, even among mainstream psychiatrists.
Anonymous wrote: Some people are born with chemical imbalances.