ADHD is highly heritable, which means you may well have children with ADHD. As they age, how to support them becomes less clear, as parents need to let go of the organizing support they provided their ADHD child when younger, and embrace something new. Here are tips for parents of adult children who wish to keep their relationships strong.
This post was inspired by a reader who wrote me earlier this year about her children – both of whom were diagnosed with ADHD as adults. She noted, with some regret, the “cost of high expectations” she and her partner had had for their children. “…there was a price to pay in the way they were raised...high academic expectations, expectations for college, etc. And for my son it was tough going through 4yrs in a business school with a lot of super charged, high testosterone type A's - many who have now gone on to super charged careers.
So they now tell me they have anxiety. Who can blame them? Add my own very perceivable angst in fretting over their academic performance until I found out about the ADD, and you can see where it all came from.”
Aside from learning more about ADHD, what can you do to support your adult children with ADHD?
First, don't beat yourself up. If this woman had known about her children’s ADHD, it’s unlikely she would have spent so much time pushing them through their school struggles. But she didn’t know. Her best bet now is to acknowledge she would have done it differently – embracing the ‘otherness’ of her kids – and then move on to what’s relevant today.
Acknowledge that anxiety and ADHD often go hand-in-hand – and that may not be comfortable, but it is ‘okay.’ Anxiety is a common co-existing condition for those with ADHD, for just the reason that this woman mentions - there is an increased likelihood of struggling and/or making mistakes when you have ADHD relative to the 'norm' of being efficient and having things come more easily. This struggle leads those with (diagnosed or undiagnosed) ADHD to wonder if they will embarrass themselves or fail in a way that will lead others to judge them. This is a reasonable question, as during childhood, this is exactly what happens to most kids with ADHD - teachers, parents, friends all judge behaviors that stray from the 'norm.' Further, those with ADHD often get blindsided. They are going along in their own way (and often in their own mind) and don't realize that disaster looms. Have this happen enough, and you can get pretty skittish and/or anxious (and depressed.)
Those who love adult children with ADHD can experience anxiety, as well, as they observe the struggles their adult kids go through. Watching a child choose a mate who may not treat them so well, struggle through college, or have trouble putting together an effective job search is painful. You want to help, but know that at the core you cannot lead as you may have in the past, when your child was younger.
As a parent, your best course of action is to focus on accepting and loving your child for whom he or she is. That means taking off the 'expectations' blinders, and setting aside some of the traditional paths you may have dreamed your child would follow. Your child may be very bright, but the ADHD symptoms provide a roadblock to always demonstrating that intelligence at the time, or in the way, that others can best see. If you, as the parent, are judgmental about the successes or struggles your child faces, then that child has no safe haven to go to where s/he is accepted solely because s/he 'is.' Everyone needs that, simply to be mentally happy. (And by judgmental, I mean either 'judging' or simply 'expressing disappointment' rather than being overtly supportive and eager for them to follow their path.)
This does not mean parents should lower their standards. Expecting that a bright child finish college is different from hoping that s/he will finish in four years, or won't get any bad grades. Requesting that your child be gainfully employed doesn't mean she has to be a banker or a lawyer, tied to doing many repetitive tasks that don’t fit well with ADHD. Perhaps she will be an environmental pioneer of some sort and work mostly outside, instead.
I also don't mean you should abandon input, particularly if you see your child heading towards being unsafe (for example, moving towards alcohol or drugs to respond to anxiety or depression.) I'm simply urging you to think as broadly and supportively as you can, and take a deep breath when tempted to 'push' your adult child with ADHD in a direction with which he will struggle. You don't have to support hare-brained schemes, certainly, but you don't have to 'push' a child towards 'the norm,' either.
Here are some very tactical suggestions for dealing with anxiety and the challenges of adult ADHD:
- Explore mindfulness training - the ability to be more aware of the feelings that are inside you, and to choose whether or not to engage with them or simply observe them and let them pass, can be exceptionally helpful for both parents and those with ADHD. As an example, when an event makes you anxious, mindfulness training can help you observe that you are starting to feel anxiety and then make the decisions to self-calm
- Encourage the ADHD person to fully optimize treatment for ADHD. For more information on this, go to my online treatment guide - make sure to download the free chapters from Couple's Guide to Thriving with ADHD.
- Create time to be together to simply celebrate your child and show him/her that you are engaged with what they are doing and that you love them unconditionally
- Consider journaling to explore letting go of any long-held expectations you might have had about what your child should do professionally (for example "I've always thought you should be a doctor" even as that child struggles mightily in school.)
- Stay engaged, and in the most positive way possible. Do fun things together, celebrate your child's talents, etc. Life can be one tangle after another for those with ADHD and it is a real gift when parents just 'let loose' and enjoy the moment with them.
- Remind yourself regularly about all that is wonderful about your child (to stave off the urge to criticize, if you have it). Some do this with gratitude journals, which I find a very effective tool for staying on the positive side when life is throwing you lemons.
- MelissaOrlov's blog
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Comments
An adult child
Submitted by tcrane on
I just lost my cohesive effective response to this beautifully articulated article into the ether; instead of screaming in this coffee shop, I'll absolutely agree with mindfulness suggestion; I'm in a DBT class now at Kaiser and it is paradigm shifting for me to learn dialogue (vs. monologue or passive aggressive witholding.....).
In the ether perhaps is a wordless confirmation of your steadfast love from my parents (whose tangible presence visits and comforts me from spirit).
While there are still grossly inadequate support groups for Adults with ADHD and for Non-ADHD spouses, this website CHADD, the 'different perceptions of Thom Hartman's brilliant books point to significant shifts. In this culture, with both the 22.5 percent increase in ADHD diagnosia since race to the top was implemented, this love is evermore and everpresently needed and appreciated. Please submit specific concerns you have parents for your adult kids. As an MSW, I can share the blessings of insights and millons of missing the marks with you. I will share what I'm learning (Covey) AND most probably "reach best what I most need to learn". I've had a great career and marriage and have beautiful wife (my occasional war buddy-Bernie Siegel) who has infinite patience and tolerating impatience. She just texted me again as I'm late!! Best..
That is "teaching best what I most need to learn"
Submitted by tcrane on
from Richard Bach "illusions"
...Please submit specific concerns you have parents for your adult kids. As an MSW, I can share the blessings of insights and millons of missing the marks with you. I will share what I'm learning (Covey) AND most probably "reach best what I most need to learn". I've had a great career and marriage and have beautiful wife (my occasional war buddy-Bernie Siegel) who has infinite patience and tolerating impatience. She just texted me again as I'm late!! Best..
How can I help my young adult child get help for ADHD?
Submitted by Still Learning on
Thank you for this post- it is a great reminder for me as a parent of a young adult (19) with ADHD, especially the piece about loving the child you have! My daughter has anxiety and ADHD and uses medication for both. Anxiety is under control and has improved over the years. As a college student, she struggles with the administrative aspects of school and the self-care required to be physically and mentally healthy on a regular basis. She refuses to get help although her school would provide it. Her response is, "I know what I have to do...I just have to do it." I have told her that I think that sounds like it's a matter of just trying harder and I think there are easier ways to do these things...there are people and tools who could lower her stress by helping her to track items that need to get done and so on. Personally, I think it's self-defeating to keep telling herself she just needs to do it, to TRY or WILL herself to a better place. I have read many of Dr. Hallowell's books and have done research on ADHD coaching to further my knowledge on the subject. My wish for my daughter would be for her to be able to maximize her creativity and artistic talents while keeping the areas that are a struggle under control well enough to not cause her the rollercoaster of emotions that come with missed deadlines, stress from school, and overall feeling like a failure. What suggestions do you have for helping someone who doesn't want help?