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Children with ADHD. Real or bad parenting?

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  • BrilloPad
    replied
    Originally posted by SimonMac View Post
    Massive Fatty gets the respect he deserves on these forums given the tulip he gives others
    I was very pleased to be able to change someone's mind. Especially on an important a subject as Autism.

    MF is not the most abusive round here by any means.

    Leave a comment:


  • JohntheBike
    replied
    Originally posted by MarillionFan View Post
    Does it exist or do they just need a bloody good hiding?
    My daughter is about to get her MSc in Autism and my grandson is autistic. So I guess I have some exposure to the issues. ADHD is indeed a real condition and like any other condition has varying degrees of disability. My daughter believes that the "bad parenting" opinion is unjustified in most circumstances as is generally held by those who have little understanding of the autism family of disabilities. My grandson was incontinent up until he was about 8, he's 10 now, and detailed investigations revealed that he had and still has to a certain extent, a sensory issue. When he was a toddler, he fell in some stingy nettles and although obviously badly stung, he didn't cry or even remark about it. Little did we know at that time what was behind this.

    Leave a comment:


  • SimonMac
    replied
    Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
    We are currently going through a similar battle though our case is not as severe as yours.

    I'm not going to post similar details as its fodder for the usual retards(who should have been to a specialist school). Even a mod is having a pop - but that won't surprise you.

    If you want my help again just drop me a text. And the offer of access to one of the top specialists in the world still stands.
    Massive Fatty gets the respect he deserves on these forums given the tulip he gives others

    Originally posted by MarillionFan View Post
    Should it be a Mainstream but with a special provision, or does he need a Special School, one of those expensive schools with spaccy kids all the Sun Readers say are a waste of money or down to piss poor parenting.

    Leave a comment:


  • BrilloPad
    replied
    We are currently going through a similar battle though our case is not as severe as yours.

    I'm not going to post similar details as its fodder for the usual retards(who should have been to a specialist school). Even a mod is having a pop - but that won't surprise you.

    If you want my help again just drop me a text. And the offer of access to one of the top specialists in the world still stands.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    Originally posted by MarillionFan View Post
    I wish i'd just given him a bloody good hiding 7 years ago when I first posted this thread.
    It's good to admit you've only yourself to blame.

    Leave a comment:


  • MarillionFan
    replied
    Originally posted by MarillionFan View Post
    So been attending the special unit for the last theee months for one day a week. For the other days two hours a day in mainstream (last month 1.5 hours) to be upped 15 minutes a week.

    He doesn’t go in the class anymore sitting in a library with a 121. Not been to an assembly in a year and only just been allowed to have a playtime (we’d been picking him up just before). Can’t do clubs, can’t do lunchtimes, can’t do supermarkets, lost most of his friends now.

    His draft EHCP has come through. 20 hours one to one in mainstream. So now rejecting that. School says he will need to leave as he now isn’t getting the curriculum.

    With that draft I have now spent the last week having to visit special needs and behavioural schools. Some are like prisons, some like a one star motel Scooter would have stayed in, some religious, some normal looking.Quirky kids, slow kids, ADHD kids, kids wearing ear defenders, kids shouting, kids being restrained, loud kids, rude kids, special kids.

    The school we went to today is good, up until eleven. A lot of schools will keep them until 18, but this was for juniors and seemed the best fit. They can deal with kids flipping out.

    I asked how many kids went into mainstream when they leave this school. They said 4 in four years. 4! ******* four. I have to admit I cried.

    So a special school next. I know where this will eventually go. I hate this thread.
    So in Year 5 now. Formally recognized as 'disabled' albeit a hidden disability.

    Was at the local school fete at the weekend where my son used to go. All the parents discussing the secondary schools little Johnny will go to, the entrance exams, the scholarships, how good they are all sport etc

    At least two couples asked if DS1 was Ok now, was he cured.

    Been arguing with the missus over some time, what type of school he should go to.
    Should it be a Mainstream but with a special provision, or does he need a Special School, one of those expensive schools with spaccy kids all the Sun Readers say are a waste of money or down to piss poor parenting.

    We've been so see at least 20 schools. Some should be shut down, they're like prisons and do nothing for children on the spectrum. Others are great, but mixed with children of different disabilities either physical or mental, so the peer group is challenging.

    The mainstream schools with provision are mixed. The specialist teachers get it, but the kids and the teachers dont, so they land up getting bullied, or triggered by adults who are too stuck in their ways.

    And to cap it all, we have to make a decision, a decision in the next four weeks. Way before anyone else has to do for school placing. We have to make a decision NOW, 18 months before we know how he'll cope or be in 18 months.

    After a few school visits with him to secondary schools recently it's become quite obvious that he could never do a normal school even with help. So a specialist school is what we have to find and agree in the next four weeks.

    I wish i'd just given him a bloody good hiding 7 years ago when I first posted this thread.

    Leave a comment:


  • vwdan
    replied
    Pretty heartbreaking thread to read - no doubt every parent here has only ever done and wished their best for their kids.

    For my part, there appears to be at least some evidence that kids with congenital heart defects are more likely to be on autistic spectrum, have ADHD or other similar conditions. I try not to worry about it too much at this point, but it's definitely in the back of mind as something to watch for.

    Leave a comment:


  • mudskipper
    replied
    Originally posted by MarillionFan View Post
    Does he have any medication? When DS1 is at his worse decision making, the medication calms him down and does give him the ability to focus.
    No. We first sought help for his behaviour when he was about 7, but didn't get anywhere. I think we bought the idea that he was just 'naughty'.

    I don't think a diagnosis of ADHD would be an excuse for what he's done in his adult life, but it might be an explanation, and something that could be treated to give us all some hope for the future.

    Leave a comment:


  • MarillionFan
    replied
    Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
    My eldest has had behaviour problems all his life. Things recently have gone from bad, to worse, to rock bottom - but as a result he has finally been allocated a key worker and seems to be getting some help.

    He's been referred him to an adult ADHD centre - waiting list 12-13 months. He'll be dead or in prison by then.
    Does he have any medication? When DS1 is at his worse decision making, the medication calms him down and does give him the ability to focus.

    Leave a comment:


  • vetran
    replied
    Originally posted by cojak View Post
    Sorry to hear that.
    +1

    Leave a comment:

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