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Forum Name: Health & Wellness
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Help for my son's ADD 
rogerw
posted Jan 9, 2008 7:43:35 AMTo All
My son has ADD and he is having a really hard time with the medications for it.  One made him gain weigh one made him not hungry so he lost weight and looked sick.  I would like to find a happy medium, something that is natural and has no harmful side effects to it.  Does anyone know of anything that works or have any suggetions that might help?
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Help for my son's ADD 
Jordan
posted Jan 15, 2008 5:14:11 PMTo All

It's not a more natural medication that I want to recommend, but something as simple as replacing all of your toxic household products with non-toxic products.  Bleach, ammonia & detergents have actually been proven to make ADD symptoms worse in children.  Not only your cleaning chemicals should be changed, but also your soaps, shampoos, laundry detergents etc.    These changes could help your son's symptoms.  Good Luck!

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Help for my son's ADD 
spiritual awareness
posted Feb 14, 2008 7:05:16 AMTo All
If I may I would like to point out to you a few things about ADD. It is all over right now many of our kids came to this earth with "ADD" .I think we are doing an injustice to our kids if we make them feel that we have to fix them because they are broken. If people involved with your son could hear what his message is, what does He like, how does He like to get things done? If He is loud it's only because He hasn't been heard yet in what ever situation He is loud in. If He is ignoring you it's because He's trying not to fight. If He doesn't like what He's being taught it's because He needs to learn a different way. Our kids are not broken! God did not make a mistake! ADD kids came with a message and all we have to do is hear what they are saying and then LISTEN. Some hope for you- I have a son with ADD school was real tough for him, He learned more about life and people while in school than any text book could ever teach Him. Big plus -awesome education for what really counts! He was well liked by his friends He wasn't too concerned about what the teachers thought . Big plus -He learned how to be true to himself! He is now 22 years old. Never on meds. because I felt strongly that God didn't make a mistake, also if you can look up these meds and see the side effects you may want to weigh that out. Did you know that some street drugs being sold are drugs for ADD, and we say to our kids don't take drugs ??? So He's now 22, a Foreman in a very big construction company (the youngest in this company) He works hard and plays hard, awesome with people, making real good money, goes to work everyday and all this without a diploma because the school could not teach him the text book stuff. He quit at 18 because I allowed it and praise Him to this day for sticking it out. My suggestion is Love, Encouragement, and Praise and most of all HEAR what He's trying to say and He will have all the tools to make it as an adult with no side effects. God doesn't make mistakes!!!


Light Always
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Help for my son's ADD 
Cherre
posted Mar 6, 2008 1:26:19 PMTo All
I think the other suggestions have merit and would like to also suggest that diet can play a huge role in our mental, emotional and physical selves. Is there a way to incorporate more whole, homemade foods into your son's diet? You could also try reducing the amount of sugar and animal products he eats. Foods that are intense and complicated may compound his problems, but foods that are simple could help.
http://doesabodygood.blogspot.com
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Help for my son's ADD 
Whaleswimmer
posted Mar 10, 2008 4:11:36 PMTo All

Diet, a green environment, balance in choices are all good.


Craniosacral therapy has been effective in many cases. Lots of info on the web about the therapy. You can also check out www.aquacranial.com


 

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Help for my son's ADD 
Boadicaea
posted Jun 6, 2008 12:42:22 AMTo All
My son, who is now 35, started life hearing a different drummer. He threw himself into life, often landing on his head. At 5 he contracted juvenile diabetes and his hypoglycemic episodes (low blood sugar, which affects the brain and causes irrational and hard-to-deal-with behavior) were legendary in his school, added to his already unique views on how to behave in the classroom. In 7th grade two teachers demanded that I "do something" about him, but refused to let me put him in another teacher's class because, they said, "He's the only one in the class that knows anything!" As a freshman in high school he decided to try medication for his diagnosed ADD (I was diagnosed as well) and his grades started matching his IQ. After graduating with honors, and setting some kind of school record for detentions as well, he began putting himself through college (I had become disabled and couldn't work or help him). He spent 4 years thrashing around and not getting anywhere, then pulled himself together and graduated from a California State university.

I haven't mentioned how much medical ad psychological help he needed, or that his father abused him, physically and emotionally, or that he struggled to take care of his physical health in college because he had no health insurance, or that when he was 6 and again when he was 12 he tried to take his own life.

If there had been a medication for all his pain, I would never have kept it from him--but there wasn't. And all the medication in the world only changes illness; the dynamics of relationships inside our family that developed to deal with the chaos that followed him everywhere had to heal as well. And the only chance to do that is to find medication that helped him behave, so we all had a chance to make our own changes.

I know there's been so much talk over the years about children being "overmedicated." What about the cruelty of UNDERmedicating? There is a medicine that will restore the balance of the brain, giving a child (or an adult, and I speak from experience here) some peace and finally a chance to live without constant frustration and anger--and a parent decides that the child won't even be allowed to try it? That is some kind of abuse, as far as I'm concerned.
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Help for my son's ADD 
Whaleswimmer
posted Jun 8, 2008 7:50:55 AMTo All

Since at least one is four, if not one in three, children in the school system are medicated to "control" them, not to cure them, there is a lot of medicating going on.


Unfortunately both over and under medicating. In many cases the medication is not helping other than turning children into zombies or changing neural programing (the way the brain works) to force someone to be "controllable". On the other hand, in the cases where medication is helpful, it is the miracle.


Even when medication is successful, greater quality of life can be found in eliminating toxins in the environment, (nontoxic cleaners etc) adjusting diet (less sugar and additives), more fresh air, exercise, complementary additions such as craniosacral therapy and therapies for emotional processing.


Sometimes surgies are overdone, sometimes lifesaving. Every child or adult deserves to have thier situation evaluated on a case by case basis with an open mind. Whatever works.

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