Anonymous wrote:Today I learned moms have a new title to rationalize lazy immature teens: executive function disorder. Or... maybe you just let your kid sit on their ass for too many years before addressing it and now it's baked into their character.
Anonymous wrote:All due respect the symptoms of Executive Function Disorder sound identical to what we used to just call flat out dumb. Who invented EFD? Is it in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5)?
Anonymous wrote:Today I learned moms have a new title to rationalize lazy immature teens: executive function disorder. Or... maybe you just let your kid sit on their ass for too many years before addressing it and now it's baked into their character.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. Ever test?
Look into executive functioning disorder
Executive functioning disorder is a made up thing for kids whose parents coddled and did everything for them and now they have no idea how to manage themselves, organize and focus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If school isn't his thing how about trade school?
Never understood people who say this. Lazy is lazy. A lazy unorganized unmotivated slacker isn't suddenly going to be an HVAC or plumbing wizard, are they?
Anonymous wrote:OP. Ever test?
Look into executive functioning disorder
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old/grade is this student? Is his attitude new or has it been going on a long time?
OP.
For ever? Thought he'd mature. Even when doing chores he's a drag ass with a dirty look on his face ... for as long as I can remember.
Well, have you tried telling him that the faster he makes good grades, gets a useful hobby, and gets into college, the faster he will be able to get the #&$# out of the house? If he just slacks along, he will be living with you on his case, for the foreseeable future. This motivated me like nothing else could.
Yes. He is obsessed about the idea of college and being out of the house. Not obsessed with effort to get there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old/grade is this student? Is his attitude new or has it been going on a long time?
OP.
For ever? Thought he'd mature. Even when doing chores he's a drag ass with a dirty look on his face ... for as long as I can remember.
OP- consider posting on the special needs board. Your son has ADHD- it affects global functioning. My guess is that much of his behavior is a result of ADHD and/or other related issues. I know this is frustrating. My son with similar issues will get into screaming matches with me over the most minor things. Last night- I was so relieved when he went to bed because he was unpleasant and refusing to do very simple things like brush his teeth or pack his (finished) homework into his backpack for school. (seriously, he spent an hour on homework then fought with me tooth and nail because he didn't want to go to the effort of putting it in folders to hand in at school). That is how executive functioning and ADHD work. Parents who have not dealt with it on this scale have no clue and will suggest some things that won't work or will cause major escalations. Go to the special needs board for advice that is helpful and sympathetic. You are not alone, you are not a terrible parent, your son is not doomed to failure, and your feelings of anger and frustration are natural and normal.
I'm sure some kids have ADHD. I don't see, however, how you can be so sure that OP's son has it. It's one thing to suggest to OP that she take her son to a professional to explore the possibility he has ADHD. It's another thing to proclaim with certainty that someone you don't know, have never met, has a disorder that -- even for professionals in the field -- is difficult to diagnose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old/grade is this student? Is his attitude new or has it been going on a long time?
OP.
For ever? Thought he'd mature. Even when doing chores he's a drag ass with a dirty look on his face ... for as long as I can remember.
OP- consider posting on the special needs board. Your son has ADHD- it affects global functioning. My guess is that much of his behavior is a result of ADHD and/or other related issues. I know this is frustrating. My son with similar issues will get into screaming matches with me over the most minor things. Last night- I was so relieved when he went to bed because he was unpleasant and refusing to do very simple things like brush his teeth or pack his (finished) homework into his backpack for school. (seriously, he spent an hour on homework then fought with me tooth and nail because he didn't want to go to the effort of putting it in folders to hand in at school). That is how executive functioning and ADHD work. Parents who have not dealt with it on this scale have no clue and will suggest some things that won't work or will cause major escalations. Go to the special needs board for advice that is helpful and sympathetic. You are not alone, you are not a terrible parent, your son is not doomed to failure, and your feelings of anger and frustration are natural and normal.
Anonymous wrote:He needs a job now and you need a firm boundary that he is out of the house and supporting himself at 18. Do not enable laziness.
And people, trade school is still fucking school. I come from a family of tradespeople. Lots of them were bad at academics. But they were not LAZY like OP's son. You cannot be lazy and succeed at trade school or in a trade, JFC.