Expert advice for parenting
your ADHD children — forging powerful connections and becoming a positive life
coach.
Parenting children with attention deficit
disorder (ADHD) brings more ups and downs than a roller coaster.
One day you’re basking in your child’s
creativity, the next you’re worried about his social isolation and discipline
problems at school. You do everything you can think of to help your son or
daughter, yet wonder if you could do more.
What does it take to be a good, even great, parent
of an ADD child? How can you create an environment that helps your special,
wonderful child overcome the obstacles in his path?
Let me suggest four strategies:
1. Forge connections
Once you’ve taken care of your child’s safety
and feeding, your top job as a parent is to help her feel connected. By this, I
mean creating an environment in which she feels part of something big and warm
and benevolent. Reading to your child is a great way to create connections.
Sharing a bedtime story each evening (and doing a little cuddling in the
process) lets you create a special, “slowed-down” time together, and, of
course, it’s a great way to build your child’s vocabulary.
Don’t assume you have to give up this ritual
once your child is reading on his own. You can
continue it well into his teens.
How else can you create connections? Consider
getting a family pet. And encourage contact between your child and his extended
family. Frequent visits or calls from relatives extend a net of warmth and
caring around your child. One of my favorite research studies showed that the
single best predictor of happiness in adulthood is whether a person regularly
shared family dinners when growing up.
2. Stay positive
It’s too easy for parents to focus only on the
problems associated with ADHD. Yes, children with ADHD lose things. Yes, they
often forget to turn in their homework. Yes, they are easily frustrated. But
constantly harping on your child’s shortcomings only undermines his
self-confidence and optimism.
Try focusing on the positives for a change. What
is it that your son does well? What hidden (or not-so-hidden) strengths does
your daughter have? One mom I know used to say that her daughter had trouble
seeing the fish in the aquarium at the doctor’s office — because she was
so fascinated by the tiny fish eggs clinging to one leaf of an aquatic plant.
Well, that daughter is now hoping to use her ability to see the unusual to
launch a career in fashion design.
3. Be a coach
Helping your child grow into a happy, successful
adult involves more than giving her medication each day. It means helping her
find success and confidence in relationships and activities that she enjoys.
Medication can be instrumental in helping her apply the brakes to her race-car
brain. But medication alone is never enough.
Certain issues will persist throughout your
child’s school career — and, in all likelihood, her whole life. I’m
talking about practical matters, like getting along with others, planning each
day, and staying motivated in the face of setbacks. As a parent, you must be
ready to help your child in these areas. Medication is not the whole treatment
for ADHD. Never was, never will be.
4. Allow time for play
Parents sometimes fear that their child won’t
“keep up” or develop friendships unless he is signed up for several organized
activities — sports, clubs, and so on. But kids need some time for
unstructured play. It shows them that they can learn to create joy all by
themselves — a skill that will help them preserve the positive energy of
childhood into their adult years. So pick a couple of things your child loves,
then give him the gift of time.
Posted by Kids Are Special in ADHD
For further reading:
- Sensory Strategies for Kids with ADHD
- Recognizing ADHD Warning Signs in Kids
- Does My Child Have ADHD?
- 8 Ways to Help Kids with ADHD Succeed in School
- Natural Alternatives to Treat ADHD in Children
- My Kids, ADHD and Frozen Food
- ADHD: What Parents Need to Know
- Not all children can learn in the same way: Kids with ADHD need movements
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