Ideas For Home Management
Weve all done it. Tried to muffle a snicker when our
specialist asks us to make a star chart. This
supposedly will encourage our child to work towards rewards and learn that they
will get no attention, positive or otherwise, from bad behavior. Does this
strategy work? Does it cocoa!
Unfortunately, many techniques which work with normal kids just
do not with ours. What these practitioners just dont understand is that
the mechanism which remembers the reward and gives that good feeling when one
is given, is dulled in our children.
What does work then? Well, there arent any management strategies that
work everytime, with all kids. What I have found is that something which works
on one particular day, may not work the next day. The kids are just too
inconsistent, and dont learn from experience. Therefore, it is better to
take each occurrence as it comes and dont rely too much on experience.
Take it an hour at a time!
Try these tips:
- If yours is the kind of kid who wont get up in the morning, try
offering an incentive. One parent told me that before, his son just
wouldnt rise on being called each morning. But he changed his call from
Johnny, get up. Its breakfast time, to Captain
Crusaders starting. Because the kid was going to get to
see his favorite cartoon NOW, he was soon downstairs, sitting, eating his
breakfast ... in front of the cartoon of course, but hey who cares, he was up!
This has continued and now the problem has been solved - for now.
- One way to ease the pressure is to ACCEPT. Learn about ADHD and
what behavior you can expect. The more I learned, the more I started to see
that some of the baffling things that George does, are just part of his
make-up. I also stopped beating my head up against a wall to make him comply
with things which werent that important. Like putting clothes on the
right way. If hes happy wearing clothes inside out and back to front,
its OK with me! Well, most of the time.
- If you are going through a particularly bad patch, where everything but
everything seems to be going wrong, your child seems to be going backwards, and
he is picking up so many strange habits and bad behaviors that you dont
know where to start, try focusing on one or two of the WORST misdemeanors and forget the rest for the time being.
- It is important to distinguish "inability" from
"non-compliance." I know this is difficult, but when you start to
learn what the child can and cant control, you have a better idea of when
to punish and when not to.
Easier said than done, I hear you say. It is difficult, but by learning as much
as you can about ADHD and devouring all the information you can about what to
expect, the emotional rollercoaster you are on will subside.
I used to beat my brains out about Georges inability (or was it refusal)
to get ready for school in the morning. It was one long week-in, week-out
battle after another. Then one day I just said "forget it." In the
space of 8 or 10 minutes I could have him washed, dressed, hair brushed and
ready...if I did it for him. Some parents would be unhappy about this, but I
decided to make life easier for ME.
-
Now, although George is eleven, I wash him, brush his teeth and comb his hair
every day. Dressing, he more or less, he does for himself now, but only if I
lay things out for him the night before. I do, however, often have to turn his
clothes the right way as he still has a penchant for wearing things
back-to-front. Its ten minutes more work for me, but the aggravation
factor has decreased a hundred fold in the mornings! I have accepted that
motivation is not Georges strong point!
- Look for the good things and see the whole picture. Although things
can be really bad at times for us, and George goes through periods when he is
the devil himself, we do accept that things are much better than they were two
years ago. He has caught up with his school work and is starting to shine in
certain things. Handwriting has improved, swearing has decreased, hyperactivity
has decreased. When things look really bad, I think of the all round
improvements. Theres no magic formula-just a stubbornness to get through
this and a hope that things will turn out okay in the end.
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