J.W.
I was the parent who grew up with ADHD so struggle, no, it was a welcome diagnosis. More of an ah ha!
Yes I medicated, again going back to my childhood. It is so strange to me that parents struggle with whether to medicate. If your child needed glasses would you tell them to try squinting and see if that works?
One of, okay the only thing, hard about my childhood was it constantly being put on me that if I tried harder, cared more, I could pay attention. Imagine if you went to a lecture, pumped yourself up with coffee, taped your eyes open, and you still couldn't pay attention because the speaker was damn boring. Now imagine someone walks by and says well if you just sit up straight he will be interesting. Maybe it is my childhood but I would want to punch that person in the face because they clearly have no clue.
If something is boring to someone nothing internal is going to make them interesting. Meds help, I know, I would have never made it though college without them.
Chore charts don't work, all they are is setting the child up to fail. Oh look at the chart, I see you have failed for five days straight, how else can I make you feel bad about yourself! :( Checklists work, well if you remember to give them to them. Both my ex an I have ADHD, when you are counting on the forgetful to remember things get left behind.
My key to success is doing the same thing every day in the exact same way. We are very good at ruts!
In a nutshell it is getting them to do what you need them to do but make them think it is their idea. You nick at their self esteem they will shut down or worse act out. The stupidest thing my ex ever did was got in their face yelling at them. It does not matter if they already realize they were wrong, they will continue to fight back so long as you stay in their face and demean them.
I had it easy, I just did exactly what would work for me as a child. My older two are adults and rather amazing adults.
I want to back up Beth on her comment to Veronica, just because someone doesn't appear to have ADHD doesn't mean they don't have it. My third was in an Autism study, they used his older sister as the control child. Even they asked how I ever figured out she had ADHD. Simple, both her parents have it. Thing is she can tell you how it effects her but no one on the outside of her brain would ever believe she does.
I agree the label is thrown around a lot but you would be delusional if you thought most are not ADHD. Sorry but if I had a dollar for every time I got the comment, wonderful student, joy to have in the class but I don't think he is paying attention I would be a millionaire! My kids were never the problem students! They just couldn't do the boring stuff like the rest of the class.