Adult ADHDParenting ADHD ChildrenADHD TreatmentADHD and Learning DisabilitiesAttention Deficit
Page 1 of 1 1

active forum Post Reply

Thread : Child learning to deal with Father of ADD  
14 Aug 2008 @ 1:49 PM
Mamma D Join Date: Thu 14th Aug 2008
Threads: Posts:
Child learning to deal with Father of ADD

Looking for some Thought's on how to help my 17 Y/o Daughter to deal with the trials and tribulations of living with an unmedicated ADHD Father. She is having difficulty accepting that the speak or act before you think behavior as being part ADD instead of being hurtful / unthoughful / disregard for others feelings.

Thanks for any and all input

Quote

22 Aug 2008 @ 3:16 PM Reply # 1
Mom of 2 ADHD'ers Join Date: Tue 12th Aug 2008
Threads: 5 Posts: 9
Time, forgiveness, and understanding

I'm actually a non-ADHDer dealing with a husband, son, daughter, and father-in-law who have ADHD. It is difficult to accept the impulsiveness, quirkyness, and forgetfulness as anything more than bad behavior and lack of motivation because that's what I've always been told.

The way I have coped is to seek out information such as when I learned that there is quantifiable differences in the brain waves of the ADHD and non-ADHD brain. Basically, there a 3 types of brain waves: the first 2 being related to sleep and day dreaming, the third, is the fastest and related to focusing. Not surprisingly, the ADHD brain doesn't reach the 3rd stage of brain waves enough, often being stuck in the slower day-dreaming brain waves. For me, that helps me to get past the "if you cared about me you'd be less ..." etc, and say "I know you have a condition which makes it hard to _ and I forgive you." Still I demand an attempt at less impulsiveness etc, like I tell my son "ADHD is a challenge, not an excuse". My husband is a good example of the ADHD'er that isn't letting his condition control the outcome of his life. His symtoms do crop up from time to time, and he get's frustrated with them, but they don't interfere with the happiness or success of his life.

I think time will make things better, knowledge will give insight, and if both parties make an attempt to meet halfway, even better. I feel that if it gets really bad between daughter and dad, it has more to do with her being a teenager than dad being an ADHDer. Good luck!

Quote

Last edited by Mom of 2 ADHD'ers : 22 Aug 2008 @ 3:17 PM. Reason:
Page 1 of 1 1

active forum Post Reply

« Previous Thread | Next Thread »

Local Time : 22 Nov 2008 7:44 AM
(Sat, 22 Nov 2008 12:44:31 GMT)

Copyright © 1998 - 2007 New Hope Media LLC. All rights reserved. Your use of this site is governed by our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.
ADDitude does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. The material on this web site is provided for educational purposes only. See additional information.
New Hope Media, 39 W. 37th Street, 15th Floor, New York, NY 10018