KristenFNJ
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2011
- Messages
- 148
{{{hugs}}} all around... there is no greater roller coaster than having a special needs kid! And mine *only* have adhd, I can imagine how much more complicated and stressful it is to be trying to identify co-existing disorders and figure out how to treat what first! My close friend's daughter has Tourette Syndrome and it's associated disorders (ADHD, OCD, Intermittent Explosive Disorder), so I have an idea of how difficult it all is.
I wanted to drop in and share some resources that I've found helpful with adhd, since I saw that was in the thread title... hopefully there will be some information that can help you as it has and continues to help me! I feel like I recall S&P being pretty strict about websites in posts, so I'm trying to play it kind of safe so I don't get kicked off! (Hopefully any mods would know this is all out of helpfulness and not trafficking or sales-driven!)
"addforums" is a huge message board covering every imaginable topic related to ADHD from medications to co-existing conditions to school/IEP issues... lots of commiseration and ideas. There is a sub-forum for Autism/ASP/PDD. There are some posts by a member who goes by "dizfriz" that are particularly enlightening when it comes to our kids and adhd (it's a "sticky" under general parenting), I recommend to seek those out even if you aren't compelled to delve into the rest of the forums. (the name in quotes is a dot com)
I also found a lot of information on "help4adhd" particularly putting layman's terms to the special education definitions. There is a message board there too, in fact that is where I read several posts from young adults stating how miserable they were throughout their childhoods when their parents wouldn't medicate them and now that they're doing well on medication they wish they could have their childhood back... of course, that's not always the case, for sure! But it certainly shed a very different light on the prospect of medicating my boys! It's a perspective that doesn't always rise to the surface, and I appreciated that. (the name in quotes is a dot org)
I also joined CHADD (Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorders) and took the Parent-2-Parent training. Lots of beneficial material there too. In fact, the emails I got from CHADD led me to getting myself diagnosed with ADD last year, imagine that after 38 years! (the initials plus dot org)
Anyway, I hope that there is some helpful information there as you all are wading through everything. Your kids are all so very lucky, not because it all goes right the first time, but because you all tirelessly plug away at seeking out what's best for them.
I wanted to drop in and share some resources that I've found helpful with adhd, since I saw that was in the thread title... hopefully there will be some information that can help you as it has and continues to help me! I feel like I recall S&P being pretty strict about websites in posts, so I'm trying to play it kind of safe so I don't get kicked off! (Hopefully any mods would know this is all out of helpfulness and not trafficking or sales-driven!)
"addforums" is a huge message board covering every imaginable topic related to ADHD from medications to co-existing conditions to school/IEP issues... lots of commiseration and ideas. There is a sub-forum for Autism/ASP/PDD. There are some posts by a member who goes by "dizfriz" that are particularly enlightening when it comes to our kids and adhd (it's a "sticky" under general parenting), I recommend to seek those out even if you aren't compelled to delve into the rest of the forums. (the name in quotes is a dot com)
I also found a lot of information on "help4adhd" particularly putting layman's terms to the special education definitions. There is a message board there too, in fact that is where I read several posts from young adults stating how miserable they were throughout their childhoods when their parents wouldn't medicate them and now that they're doing well on medication they wish they could have their childhood back... of course, that's not always the case, for sure! But it certainly shed a very different light on the prospect of medicating my boys! It's a perspective that doesn't always rise to the surface, and I appreciated that. (the name in quotes is a dot org)
I also joined CHADD (Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorders) and took the Parent-2-Parent training. Lots of beneficial material there too. In fact, the emails I got from CHADD led me to getting myself diagnosed with ADD last year, imagine that after 38 years! (the initials plus dot org)
Anyway, I hope that there is some helpful information there as you all are wading through everything. Your kids are all so very lucky, not because it all goes right the first time, but because you all tirelessly plug away at seeking out what's best for them.