I understand you want to try other things but I have to say my side too.
If your child was diabetic and the doc said she needed to be on insulin would you say no, that you want to try reading books to fix this chemical imbalance in her body?
If she had seizures would you read books about it and research a lot of stuff then try home remedies to try and fix her brain?
If your child was schizophrenic would you simply say they just need to do what some book says and they won't have that problem any more?
Of course you wouldn't. So for any parent to say they don't want to give a medication that fixes a chemical issue in the brain is.....just odd to me. Don't they want their kids to be better? To feel normal? To be able to think and process thoughts and it not be like playing in the middle of a tornado full of debris swirling around distracting them?
So please, take your child to a doc that is qualified to diagnose a mental issue such as ADHD and stop trying to fix this by reading books and stuff.
ADHD is a chemical problem in the brain. It's like getting in an old beater car that jiggles and drives horrible at 35 mph but once you get over 40 mph it drives like a dream.
An ADHD brain is firing all the information it's receiving but the pathway to where it needs to go is...disrupted, disconnected, not getting the information because it's bouncing all over and not going to the right place.
The medications for ADHD speed the brain function up. Suddenly it's like that old beater car that is out of sync until it hits 40 mph and above. The brain suddenly syncs up and starts working.
They can suddenly understand all that information they are receiving. Their world suddenly makes sense and they are able to look around and see outside their bubble and function.
The meds are a God send to those of us who've chosen to give medication to treat a medical issue.
Ritalin makes my grandson, who started taking it at age 4, able to do school work, listen, he can focus and watch a TV show, he can help cook, he can do everything he puts his mind to. Because the meds make his brain work right.
Ritalin is a short term med. That may not be the right wording. The pill stays in his system about 4 hours, usually at about 3 1/2 hours I can see him starting to bounce a little or starting to lose focus. Then the medication is gone. It does NOT build up in his system or stay in there. It's GONE after 4 hours. We chose to not do the extended version. The short time pill works fine for our guy.
He takes a whole pill in the morning, a half after he eats lunch, then IF IF IF he has something where he needs to pay special attention he can have another half by 4pm. If he has a performance or a game or something that he needs to be focused and settled down then we give him that second half. That happens, at MOST ever, once per week. He was taking a class that he needed to pay attention for a couple of months.
Otherwise he gets no other Ritalin. It helps him through the day so his brain can work right.
Updated
I understand you want to try other things but I have to say my side too.
If your child was diabetic and the doc said she needed to be on insulin would you say no, that you want to try reading books to fix this chemical imbalance in her body?
If she had seizures would you read books about it and research a lot of stuff then try home remedies to try and fix her brain?
If your child was schizophrenic would you simply say they just need to do what some book says and they won't have that problem any more?
Of course you wouldn't. So for any parent to say they don't want to give a medication that fixes a chemical issue in the brain is.....just odd to me. Don't they want their kids to be better? To feel normal? To be able to think and process thoughts and it not be like playing in the middle of a tornado full of debris swirling around distracting them?
So please, take your child to a doc that is qualified to diagnose a mental issue such as ADHD and stop trying to fix this by reading books and stuff.
ADHD is a chemical problem in the brain. It's like getting in an old beater car that jiggles and drives horrible at 35 mph but once you get over 40 mph it drives like a dream.
An ADHD brain is firing all the information it's receiving but the pathway to where it needs to go is...disrupted, disconnected, not getting the information because it's bouncing all over and not going to the right place.
The medications for ADHD speed the brain function up. Suddenly it's like that old beater car that is out of sync until it hits 40 mph and above. The brain suddenly syncs up and starts working.
They can suddenly understand all that information they are receiving. Their world suddenly makes sense and they are able to look around and see outside their bubble and function.
The meds are a God send to those of us who've chosen to give medication to treat a medical issue.
Ritalin makes my grandson, who started taking it at age 4, able to do school work, listen, he can focus and watch a TV show, he can help cook, he can do everything he puts his mind to. Because the meds make his brain work right.
Ritalin is a short term med. That may not be the right wording. The pill stays in his system about 4 hours, usually at about 3 1/2 hours I can see him starting to bounce a little or starting to lose focus. Then the medication is gone. It does NOT build up in his system or stay in there. It's GONE after 4 hours. We chose to not do the extended version. The short time pill works fine for our guy.
He takes a whole pill in the morning, a half after he eats lunch, then IF IF IF he has something where he needs to pay special attention he can have another half by 4pm. If he has a performance or a game or something that he needs to be focused and settled down then we give him that second half. That happens, at MOST ever, once per week. He was taking a class that he needed to pay attention for a couple of months.
Otherwise he gets no other Ritalin. It helps him through the day so his brain can work right.