Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On a related note how tf do you stay calm during these (somewhat absurd) meltdowns? I have a hard time with this. The first few minutes I can be empathetic and calm but eventually i want to scream.
Walking away is good advice but hard AF to implement for some of us. Just keep doing your best. It gets easier to walk away as they get older.
Anonymous wrote:For our kid, stimulants made him really on edge and he fell apart like that at home. It gradually got worse over several months, so it was hard to figure out that it was the medication. Guanfacine ER has helped a lot, but every kid is different.
It’s not just hard work though. It’s education on the actual diagnosis which everyone else on this thread is discouraging.Anonymous wrote:I have a ten year old who’s similar. It’s hard. I have found that the more work I do on myself, the more I learn about ADHD in kids, the more I learn about RSD, PDA, etc., the better it gets. It’s nothing my kid does, it’s about building a world for them that doesn’t cause them to be in burnout all the time. Your kid does great at school where the stress and being told what to do and holding it in all day causes her to have nothing left at home. I don’t have a silver bullet, we are still struggling, but understanding what’s going on lightens the psychological load on the whole family. My spouse isn’t that great at approaching the child with curiosity and empathy and that harms the family and their relationship with the kid, but me working very hard at it has helped significantly.
Anonymous wrote:On a related note how tf do you stay calm during these (somewhat absurd) meltdowns? I have a hard time with this. The first few minutes I can be empathetic and calm but eventually i want to scream.
Anonymous wrote:For our kid, stimulants made him really on edge and he fell apart like that at home. It gradually got worse over several months, so it was hard to figure out that it was the medication. Guanfacine ER has helped a lot, but every kid is different.
Anonymous wrote:This is not normal for children that age, not normal for ADHD kids, and definitely not normal for an ADHD girl of that age. There is something else going on - severe anxiety, severe OCD, or in many cases ADHD + Anxiety + OCD = Autism. But if she and the other posters prefer the à la carte approach to diagnosis so be it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who’s going to tell OP? Probably autism. It presents differently in girls and she may have been overlooked.
Why are people so quick to diagnose autism? Emotional dysregulation is a core ADHD symptom. ADHD itself is a self-regulation disorder. It's well documented.
Anonymous wrote:On a related note how tf do you stay calm during these (somewhat absurd) meltdowns? I have a hard time with this. The first few minutes I can be empathetic and calm but eventually i want to scream.