ADHD and the Holidays
This post can be found at: http://jozikids.co.za/blog/2009/11/27/adhd-and-the-holidays/
ADHD and the holidays
By Angel Swemmer, a mom to a teenage-almost-adult ADHDer and what I write is purely my opinion on things I feel strongly about, based on my experience as an ADHDer parent. Author of the blog Angelsmind
Are you dreading the holidays?
Does the thought of spending time with friends and family scare the bejeebers out of you?
Well, if your ADHDer is anything like mine, then he (or she) is a handful at the best of times and I don’t blame you.
Like me, you probably also have- or have had- a dilemma with friends and family battling to deal with your ADHDer, or struggling to understand that ADHD is a disability. And if you medicate your ADHDer then you’ve probably also had flak for doing so. Maybe your parents or family members “…don’t believe in ADHD…” and don’t agree with how you are treating the condition. Perhaps you even have close family and friends whom you haven’t even told about your child’s ADHD- for whatever reason…
The holidays make all this a lot more difficult than usual.
As it is, a simple Sunday lunch with the family can be a nightmare for ADHDers and their parents. In the holidays- even if you do not actually go away- you will most likely be spending a lot of time with close friends and family over the silly-season, so you can multiply the nightmare comparison by a factor of 10, at least.
You’d think an ADHDer would thrive in this season of noise and colour and excitement, but what it really does is make them needier
when it comes to their demand for immediate gratification- and it makes them come across as even more hyper and disruptive than usual. ADHDers battle socially. They don’t read social cues and they cannot read body language. The bright lights, colours, crowds and the pressure to meet holiday deadlines and interact socially, quickly sends an ADHDer’s brain into overload. And this is when they become difficult to handle even for people who love and understand him.
One of the first things that fall by the wayside when Christmas holidays start is the daily routine. You sleep late, eat later, eat “junk”, shop, gallivant, visit friends and family, and in some families you no longer medicate* your ADHDer.
Read the rest of the article here: http://jozikids.co.za/blog/2009/11/27/adhd-and-the-holidays/


It brings tears to my eyes to think of all the times he tried so hard to please his teachers, parents, and elders and, try as he might, he just couldn’t. I don’t want to go back there. That feels like parenting failure.



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