Chris:
Thank you for your kind words in my journal and congrats on 15 down and such a sunny attitude.
Within my program we have done a great deal of studying about ADD/ADHD and how to motivate students with these challenges. (My cousin, my former brother-in-law, and my 7 year old niece all have varying degrees of ADHD also and I've been exposed to different meds and solutions for them all my life).
Moms and daughters have issues with power struggles regardless of the ADHD challenges. Its such a part of growing up. Even at age 41, I still struggle with wanting to be the "little girl" and not take on adult responsibility. The teenage girl just wants to be treated as an adult but isn't quite sure she wants that responsibility either. So my advice is to take DD out shopping or to lunch and have a real low-key talk about your hopes for her are and your expectations, and then ask her what she hopes for and what her expectations are for herself. You can set some short term goals that you will help to remind her about and give her some that she can help remind you about. Take a good 5 minutes to check in at an agreed to time in the evening and chat. The most important thing with ADD/ADHD is not to be overwhelmed with too many things to accomplish and to make them bite size so there is success each day. (Sounds like good advice for the rest of us too, right?) Success builds confidence and more success. Negativity or lack of success makes it harder to succeed. And one more thing, individuals with ADD/ADHD are usually very intelligent...imagine the coping skills you would have to develop in order to just get by. Play to the strength that your DD can probably learn something in half the time it would take her friends without such challenges. Meds or no meds, this is not something she will not grow out of, she will have to learn to use it to her advantage to live with the rest of her life. And I know that it can be done.
To more success!
-Laurie
Thank you for your kind words in my journal and congrats on 15 down and such a sunny attitude.
Within my program we have done a great deal of studying about ADD/ADHD and how to motivate students with these challenges. (My cousin, my former brother-in-law, and my 7 year old niece all have varying degrees of ADHD also and I've been exposed to different meds and solutions for them all my life).
Moms and daughters have issues with power struggles regardless of the ADHD challenges. Its such a part of growing up. Even at age 41, I still struggle with wanting to be the "little girl" and not take on adult responsibility. The teenage girl just wants to be treated as an adult but isn't quite sure she wants that responsibility either. So my advice is to take DD out shopping or to lunch and have a real low-key talk about your hopes for her are and your expectations, and then ask her what she hopes for and what her expectations are for herself. You can set some short term goals that you will help to remind her about and give her some that she can help remind you about. Take a good 5 minutes to check in at an agreed to time in the evening and chat. The most important thing with ADD/ADHD is not to be overwhelmed with too many things to accomplish and to make them bite size so there is success each day. (Sounds like good advice for the rest of us too, right?) Success builds confidence and more success. Negativity or lack of success makes it harder to succeed. And one more thing, individuals with ADD/ADHD are usually very intelligent...imagine the coping skills you would have to develop in order to just get by. Play to the strength that your DD can probably learn something in half the time it would take her friends without such challenges. Meds or no meds, this is not something she will not grow out of, she will have to learn to use it to her advantage to live with the rest of her life. And I know that it can be done.
To more success!
-Laurie
