Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Advice?
I haven't talked to my mom extensively about what is going on with my son, but she is aware that we are spending lots of time and effort trying to help him. Last month she came to visit, and got so frustrated with my son that she took him to his room and spanked him. Very hard. She couldn't understand why he wouldn't sit properly in his chair, couldn't keep elbows off the table, and wouldn't look her in the eye. The thing is, he can do these things now with the right words and help from us. He was just having a bad morning with her.
I was helping my daughter get ready, and heard him wailing in his room with her. I went nuts. This adds more context, and explains why I need to either set better boundaries, or simply come up with a different holiday plan.
jesus christ. that's borderline abusive. at best. that would be a total deal breaker for me, as in "Mom, you HIT MY CHILD and you may not be alone with him under any circumstances until I say otherwise. All the research shows that spanking is bad for kids, and this is my child. I get to choose how he is disciplined."
Seriously, that's a huge deal. I cannot imagine how scared your poor boy must have been.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why I never told anyone on our families that my child has adhd.
Me too. We never told anyone. Now that he is a teen we are so happy we kept his medical conditions to ourselves.
I would suggest as others have a heart to heart with your mom. Just say you only discuss ADHD with your doctor. Stay firm.
We also did not jump on medication. I wish we had my son on medication sooner. In the end medication was a lifesaver.
Good luck.
I agree. My son is a teen now. His health info is private. I am glad he has control over who he shares it with.
I keep my health info private too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After a long journey with lots of specialists, money, IEP, etc., we are now better equipped to help our son. (We are not medicating, and have chosen to do lots of therapy and educating ourselves on how to be his advocate and parent the best we can knowing how is brain works.)
My mother doesn't believe in ADHD, and thinks his problems are due to "poor parenting" on our part. She tells us, "He will grow out of this. You *people* over react to everything. He just needs discipline." Then she goes all FOX news and crazy shit on me, and tells me how different things were when she raised us.
Holidays are coming up, and quite frankly, I can't deal with her comments and treatment of him as we are just getting things on track. Not sure how to handle this situation.
Advice?
I don't see what the problem is. If you are not medicating, what is she objecting to exactly? Just say, "Yes, I agree, mom! He'll probably grow out of it. That's why we're not medicating him." And just bite the bullet and say that the therapy is to help you discipline him.
OP here. Thanks for all of the feedback everyone. To answer this PP's question, I guess I am hoping she will try to understand what we now know. We are not medicating because he is six, and we want to wait just a bit longer before we go this route. I am not anti medication.
I haven't talked to my mom extensively about what is going on with my son, but she is aware that we are spending lots of time and effort trying to help him. Last month she came to visit, and got so frustrated with my son that she took him to his room and spanked him. Very hard. She couldn't understand why he wouldn't sit properly in his chair, couldn't keep elbows off the table, and wouldn't look her in the eye. The thing is, he can do these things now with the right words and help from us. He was just having a bad morning with her.
I was helping my daughter get ready, and heard him wailing in his room with her. I went nuts. This adds more context, and explains why I need to either set better boundaries, or simply come up with a different holiday plan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well she is right.
Your poor parenting choices are preventing him from getting help. He needs medication. Get it for him. That's what a good parenting decision looks like.
Hello Pharmaceutical Rep! Nice to see you trolling here!
As an adult with ADHD, I am loving the fact that OP is NOT taking the easy road and going to straight to medication. Every road is different, but to me, that is what a good parenting decision looks like, It is tough to parent a child with ADHD. AS an adult who has been on the medication, I can honestly tell you I hated it. It literally took the joy out of my day. I was robotic. I have learned to deal with it in other ways. On good days, I work hard and focus. On other days - I give in to my ADHD and am all over the place.
Back to the OP's original post. I would honestly tell your mom that her comments are not showing great 'grandparenting' and that while she is always welcome to join you for the holidays, her comments are hurtful and not welcome. And should she start up with them, look at her straight on and let her know she is being hurtful and change the topic of conversation. Keep repeating until she gets a clue.
Anonymous wrote:Well she is right.
Your poor parenting choices are preventing him from getting help. He needs medication. Get it for him. That's what a good parenting decision looks like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with your mom. You should be glad that she cares enough to say her opinion. They are over diagnosing, and a lot of boys grow out of it. Ask the elderly who used to be teachers, they will tell you that boys out grow it. Find him a different school if that would help.
OP again. I love and trust my mom, but can't agree with her on this one. We have seen multiple specialists, all of whom tell us that he has special needs. And they are helpful, in that their guidance and therapy is making a difference. My oldest doesn't struggle with these issues, excels at everything, is well-mannered, and my mother points to her as an example of "how we did it right." Makes me crazy. We simply can't parent both kids the same.
And I will never believe in spanking, my mother's solution. It breaks my heart.
I don't know how you could trust your mom around your son. This would change my relationship with my mom forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with your mom. You should be glad that she cares enough to say her opinion. They are over diagnosing, and a lot of boys grow out of it. Ask the elderly who used to be teachers, they will tell you that boys out grow it. Find him a different school if that would help.
OP again. I love and trust my mom, but can't agree with her on this one. We have seen multiple specialists, all of whom tell us that he has special needs. And they are helpful, in that their guidance and therapy is making a difference. My oldest doesn't struggle with these issues, excels at everything, is well-mannered, and my mother points to her as an example of "how we did it right." Makes me crazy. We simply can't parent both kids the same.
And I will never believe in spanking, my mother's solution. It breaks my heart.
Anonymous wrote:This is why I never told anyone on our families that my child has adhd.