Kids With ADHD Are Trying to Tell Us Something, And It’s Time For Us to Listen

I tell parents and educators all the time, our ADHD children are not horrible, undisciplined or unruly children, we have just created a world that no longer allows them to fit inside the box. Our goal as parents and teachers is to reexamine the box we are expecting our children to fit into. Standing outside of the box is not a bad thing, it is our future, but we just keep trying to squash them into a one size fits all box.

Children who truly have ADHD are some of the most creative and innovative people alive, but instead of focusing on what is going on inside their brain, we focus on what we see outside their brain. We focus on their behaviors. We worry about what others think. We worry about the schools they will not get into. We worry that they will end up failing.

But here is the irony: while we are worrying about their failure we have already set them up to fail.

Does this mean we should let our children run freely without any rules, routines or expectation? ABSOLUTELY NOT! All children need rules, routines and expectations to feel safe and secure, but we must stop setting them up for failure and begin helping them succeed. If you are the parent or the teacher of an ADHD child I challenge you to change the lens you are looking through. What changes can we make to help our ADHD children be accepted when they don’t fit inside the box?

  • We must allow them time to zip-line for part of the day.
  • We must allow them time to run, play and explore.
  • We must support their interests and help them foster their passions.
  • We must look at our education system.
  • We must stop giving our children mindless homework.
  • We must focus on their effort, find small successes and give them specific praise.

But, most importantly, we must think outside of the box and stop expecting everyone to fit into the same one.

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This post originally appeared at SusieGarlick.com, published with permission.


Susie Garlick
Susie Garlickhttp://susiegarlick.com
Susie started her career in the world of education teaching both 5th and 1st grade. Soon after she became a stay-at-home mom to her now 20-year-old son, 17-year-old daughter and 14-year-old daughter. During that time she went back to school, received a Master of Arts in Professional Counseling, wrote the book DiddleDots: Tips to Ease the Craziness of Parenting and began counseling at a private practice. She then opened her business, At the Parenting Place where she currently teaches parenting classes on Tuesdays spending the rest of the week as a K-8 school counselor in Phoenix, Arizona.

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