ADHD: A Parents Guide To Understanding Your Teen

ADHD: A Parents Guide To Understanding Your Teen

Has your teen recently been diagnosed with ADHD?

It could be that you’ve spent years with the wrong diagnosis, not getting your child the right type of therapy needed. ADHD can bring several complexities and challenges for parents and everyone in the family.

Learning how to understand ADHD can help you to understand your teen better. This can, in turn, help you to provide your teen with the right type of therapy needed to handle the ADHD symptoms.

Concerns about a misdiagnosis

Believe it or not, a misdiagnosis can occur when it comes to ADHD. This is because many ADHD symptoms overlap with those seen accompanying other conditions. Some of the ADHD symptoms, including difficulty focusing and concentrating, being restless, and having a tough time following instructions, can all be seen across a wide variety of conditions.

ADHD can be a complex disorder, leading to children and adults receiving an incorrect diagnosis. Some children and teens may be diagnosed with ADHD but may have a mood disorder, such as bipolar disorder. They may be on the autism spectrum and be misdiagnosed as having ADHD.

Some of the other concerns that can show similar symptoms to ADHD include:

  • Vision or auditory problems
  • Learning disorders
  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder
  • Low or high blood pressure
  • Oppositional defiant disorder

ADHD and other concerns

ADHD can bring layers of complexity that can add to the challenges you and your teen face. Another concern is that ADHD can coexist with one or more other issues that can present their types of challenges.

ADHD may coexist with other issues, such as:

  • Conduct disorder
  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Learning disabilities
  • Speech problems

If your teen has been diagnosed as having one or more of these concerns, you will need to adapt your parenting style to ensure that you meet all of his needs. Getting the right resources and therapies to help a teen with ADHD is essential for ensuring he is equipped to tackle the challenges that he’ll experience at school and as he grows up and enters the adult world.

Helping other members of the family

Despite his best efforts and yours, your teen’s ADHD will have an impact on other family members. It can be challenging for siblings to understand why their ADHD sibling behaves as they do. Even other adults in the household may struggle to handle and interact with a teen with ADHD.

While you must take steps to help your teen feel confident and avoid any embarrassment that he may feel related to his diagnosis, it’s also essential to help other members of the family understand.

Teens with ADHD can be prone to struggling with poor self-esteem, resulting in increased stress, picking fights with peers and teachers, and a general decrease in their ability to cope. This is why it can be helpful to ensure their homelife is structured, stable, with minimal unnecessary stress.

Parenting a teen with ADHD can be stressful. Help your parenting partner to understand the structure that your teen needs so that he can thrive. This could include reminders to finish homework, get his chores done on time, and get home before his curfew.

ADHD can make it more of a challenge for a teen to follow instructions, so they often need more supervision and reminders than other children and teens in your home. It’s important to keep things upbeat and positive to avoid the potential for a negative tailspin for your already struggling teen.

Siblings can find themselves in arguments with an ADHD teen who is constantly interrupting conversations, fidgeting, or displaying other signs of ADHD that they may find frustrating or annoying. Take the time to sit down with each of the children in your home and have an age-appropriate conversation with them about what your ADHD teen is facing.

Help them to understand that your teen will be going to additional therapy, getting a bit more one-on-one time with each parent, and maybe disruptive to schedules and family plans from time to time. It’s completely normal for other siblings to feel left out and simply not as important as the child with ADHD.

Do your part to reassure them that you love each of your children equally. It can also be helpful to schedule time for each child with each parent, doing something that they enjoy—perhaps going fishing, going for a bike ride, or shopping for a new outfit. There’s no doubt that it can be a challenge to juggle each person’s emotional and mental wellness needs in your home. With a bit of time and care, you’ll find yourself running a household where stress and frustration are a thing of the past.

Getting teachers, coaches, and the school on board

You are sure to find yourself in the position of needing to advocate for your teen. This is particularly true in the school setting. With an ADHD diagnosis, your teen’s school will afford him the accommodations that he needs to better keep up with his studies. The plan that is created for your teen may give him additional time to take tests, preferential seating in classrooms to minimize distractions, and less homework so that he doesn’t get overwhelmed.

It’s very important to ensure that every teacher, coach, and influential person in your teen’s life understands the challenges he faces.

The school counselor may also help with some concerns that you have, and can also certainly prove to be an excellent resource for information that could further prove beneficial for your teen.

ADHD can be a challenge for a teen and everyone around them. Working together as a united team, you can help your teen overcome some of the biggest challenges as he learns how to manage his ADHD.

Request Free Admissions Information

Step 1 of 3 - Your Contact Info

Written by Natalie

22 Dec, 2021

Recent Posts

How to Get Along With Parents When You Are a Teenager

Do you find that you struggle to connect with your parents lately? Being a teenager can bring a world of changes to your life. Including finding that it’s not as easy as it once was to speak with, connect with, and confide in your parents. You may find that you’re...

Fun Family Teen Building Activities

The teen years can be challenging; from mood swings and big emotions to wanting to experience a bit of freedom, it can be an exciting transition as these young adults become their own people. If you’re looking for fun ways to interact with your teenager, look no...

How to Best Help My Troubled Teen

Has your teen started acting out? Behaving in a manner that seems uncharacteristic? Perhaps your teen has started running with the wrong crowd or seems to have lost interest in things he once loved to participate in. Some behavior and attitude changes are considered...

Keeping Your Teen Safe on their Cell Phone

For most of us, our smartphone is rarely far from our hands. There are many things to be said about our reliance on the little devices that holds so much of our lives. Good and bad. For parents, a cell phone can be a helpful tool when they need to keep in touch with...

Why We Are Seeing an Increase in Teen Anxiety

Anxiety is a natural response to stress and fear. For years teens have been facing increasing pressure from school, sports commitments, family concerns, and even peer issues. With everything they’re struggling with, it makes sense that they would have increased...

Let’s Get Creative! How to Spark Your Teens Creative Side.

While the summertime can burst with days of full-filled activities, most of the time is probably downtime for your teenager. This isn't bad; after all, time for rest and recovery is imperative. However, too many days of quiet time can lead to boredom for kids of all...

8 Ways to Stay Connected To Your Teen

We live in an increasingly interconnected world. This is why it can sometimes be baffling that it’s not always easy to connect and stay connected with your teen. Most of the time, we have communication devices in our hands, using them to connect through social media...

Shy Teen? How to Make Friends!

If you are shy, you probably know how frustrating it can be to try and make friends. This is particularly true if you have to move to a new school or town and you don’t know anyone. Thankfully, some excellent ways to make friends when you are a little shy will work no...

Defiant Teen Behavior Lying and Stealing

Rarely do you meet a person who never tells a lie. Even the best of us may stretch the truth when serving our needs. Children and teens will often tell lies to get themselves out of trouble. It can become frustrating when a teen starts to act out, be defiant, and...

Summer Fun Tips for Tweens

There’s nothing quite like the excitement of the end of the school year. For parents, it can mean fewer mornings rushing around and fewer afternoons ferrying kids to an assortment of activities. For students, it means a long summer of fun stretching ahead of them...

You May Also Like…

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *