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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

ADHD concerns

135 replies

OneOliveKoala · 26/02/2026 16:42

I’m looking for some outside perspective on my fresh 3YO . She’s an amazing little human, but she’s quite unique, and I sometimes wonder if she’s simply a highly sensitive child or if I’m overlooking something.

She is extremely verbal. She’s been doing complex imaginative play with storylines and characters since about 2.5. She asks constant “why” questions (e.g., why a dinosaur can’t fit on a bridge), and she’s very emotionally aware. She’ll ask me, “Mummy, are you happy or angry?” or “Is everything okay?” She notices tiny changes in tone, mood, or environment.

Socially, she does very well. In playgroups she shares her toys, waits her turn, participates in table activities, and eats at the table with other kids. She’s never hit, punched, or thrown toys. She lets other kids go down the slide first. If we go to a shop and I say “no toy today,” she just says “okay.” If she does get a toy, she waits in line, goes to the counter, pays with her own money, and says please and thank you (she’s been doing that since 2.5).

She follows two-step instructions and has for a while. If she can’t do something, she doesn’t cry—she says, “Mummy, I can’t do it,” or “Can you please help me?” She never really has tantrums.

Sleep has always been great. She’s slept through the night since 14 months. She goes to bed at 6pm, wakes around 5am, naps about 1 hour 45 minutes, and when it’s bedtime she just has a kiss and goes to sleep in silence. No drama.

She eats a pretty varied diet. It can be a bit hit and miss day-to-day, but overall she eats well.

Now the part that makes me wonder:

She gets extremely overstimulated in certain environments. For example, in a coffee shop she can get panicky and even shake (no meltdown, no tears), and say, “I want to go home.” Once we leave, she calms down quickly. So we rarely go and also when there’s people around she changes completely .

She’s scared of climbing and big slides. If a play area is too big or chaotic, she gets panicky and prefers something calmer. She doesn’t like going into the bath anymore (used to love it), but she has no issue with tooth brushing or me detangling her very long thick hair every night.

At home, she likes me to be in the room while she plays. If I go into the kitchen, she’ll come check for me. But if I go out to grab food and she stays with her dad, she’s perfectly fine.

She has never really had meltdowns. She communicates distress instead of exploding. She’s empathetic, very observant, cautious in new environments, and extremely attached but not distressed if she’s with another trusted adult.

She is showing signs of being a perfectionist and gets upset if like a toy doesn’t fit properly etc , highly verbal and talker , rarely plays independently…all of these I am being told are signs of adhd in girls .. we don’t have a family history but that doesn’t count as anyone can have it

OP posts:
OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 08:58

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 08:54

Mine did.Always amways waited her turn patiently. Girls internalise. Even my ds who is also adhd always waited patiently. He didn’t have meltdowns either.

Shes never been impatient when waiting.

Edited

may I ask what make her adhd because it sounds now that every trait can be read as adhd .. you can have adhd with excellent self regulation and focus .. i mean the adhd criteria for diagnosis is a strict one ..

OP posts:
MrsBennetsPoorNervesAreBack · 28/02/2026 09:05

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 08:58

may I ask what make her adhd because it sounds now that every trait can be read as adhd .. you can have adhd with excellent self regulation and focus .. i mean the adhd criteria for diagnosis is a strict one ..

People can mask in many different ways and put coping strategies into place etc, but someone would only meet the diagnostic criteria for adhd if their symptoms have a significant negative impact on their ability to function effectively.

youalright · 28/02/2026 09:13

We need to realise children the same as adults will have different personality types and thats completely normal some will be more confident then others some will struggle in bigger groups and be shy. Some are chatty and some are quiet. Not everyone needs a diagnosis. Even if a person has traits of a condition they don't need a diagnosis. The only time someone needs a diagnosis is if its severely impacting their life which if that was the case you would know.

Tamtim · 28/02/2026 09:25

One of my daughters has ADHD and Autism. She’s always been an amazing sleeper. She displayed some behaviour that wasn’t very toddler-like that your daughter seems to, such as no tantrums, waiting her turn, very intelligent and could understand directions before she was a year old. She was a bit late talking, but soon developed an amazing vocabulary that was constantly commented on by others. She never hit or complained if told no. She was definitely different in that respect to all the other toddlers and kids we hung out with.

The over stimulation came later for my daughter but she’s always been highly sensitive. Later on she would shut down in busy or new environments.

Your daughter sounds just wonderful.

THisbackwithavengeance · 28/02/2026 09:30

Why are parents these days desperate to have their DCs diagnosed with SEN or neurological disorders? Is it for DLA?

She sounds like a lovely, well behaved, highly intelligent and sensitive little girl. 👍

MrsBennetsPoorNervesAreBack · 28/02/2026 09:37

THisbackwithavengeance · 28/02/2026 09:30

Why are parents these days desperate to have their DCs diagnosed with SEN or neurological disorders? Is it for DLA?

She sounds like a lovely, well behaved, highly intelligent and sensitive little girl. 👍

A diagnosis doesn't entitle anyone to DLA. So it isn't that.

youalright · 28/02/2026 09:42

THisbackwithavengeance · 28/02/2026 09:30

Why are parents these days desperate to have their DCs diagnosed with SEN or neurological disorders? Is it for DLA?

She sounds like a lovely, well behaved, highly intelligent and sensitive little girl. 👍

I thinks is to excuse behaviour so they don't have to parent. This is not aimed at parents of children with severe ND.

MrsBennetsPoorNervesAreBack · 28/02/2026 09:45

youalright · 28/02/2026 09:42

I thinks is to excuse behaviour so they don't have to parent. This is not aimed at parents of children with severe ND.

That makes no sense either because the OP's dd sounds very well behaved. She doesn't need any excuses.

And having a ND most certainly doesn't let you off the hook with regard to having to parent - quite the contrary.

Ilikemytea · 28/02/2026 09:53

There is absolutely nothing in your description which would suggest ADHD - who told you she might be?? Also, no service would consider diagnosing a 3 year old with hardly any symptoms.

Robotindisguise · 28/02/2026 09:57

My daughter has ADHD and autism and really struggles. It’s certainly the case that her presentation was unusual at 3 so I’m not saying you can’t spot neurodivergence at that age. But.

I am concerned you are looking at something (social media?) which is leaving you to diagnose the bloody hard work which is parenting a smart child who is into everything and constantly asking questions as a form of neurodivergence. She is making sense of the world and that is a great (if exhausting) thing. The only thing you describe which gives me pause is her becoming overstimulated and distressed in coffee shops, but even in that environment i I would wonder if she’s used to a quiet home and it’s just generally all a bit much. If it doesn’t sort itself out over the longer term it could be one marker for autism, but would need other signs as well.

It’s possible she’s just very smart. Kids who throw themselves down big slides do so assuming it’s bound to be fine - she’s assessing that risk herself.

I would keep answering the questions, and parent the child you have to the best of your ability, accepting we are all different. Once she starts school you will have far more information about how she relates to others. Lots of people - especially intelligent people - have some slightly autistic traits like pattern-spotting, overwhelm, etc. Don’t worry. She sounds great.

youalright · 28/02/2026 10:08

MrsBennetsPoorNervesAreBack · 28/02/2026 09:45

That makes no sense either because the OP's dd sounds very well behaved. She doesn't need any excuses.

And having a ND most certainly doesn't let you off the hook with regard to having to parent - quite the contrary.

Im not talking about op im talking about the many parents who don't parent their children and then say he can't help it he has adhd while doing absolutely nothing

MrsBennetsPoorNervesAreBack · 28/02/2026 10:11

youalright · 28/02/2026 10:08

Im not talking about op im talking about the many parents who don't parent their children and then say he can't help it he has adhd while doing absolutely nothing

Fair enough. I haven't really come across parents like that tbh.

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 10:16

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 08:58

may I ask what make her adhd because it sounds now that every trait can be read as adhd .. you can have adhd with excellent self regulation and focus .. i mean the adhd criteria for diagnosis is a strict one ..

Severe burnout with exhaustion, sensory issues, really demanding, meltdowns, severe anxiety, spikey academic profile, mini obsessions that pass, very quiet in class, overwhelmed easily, couldn’t cope with transitions, got upset easily (RSD) bad sleeper, skin picking, always complained about ‘racing mind’

Diagnosed by lead pysch in adhd in our metropolitan area. Adhd meds changed everything.

youalright · 28/02/2026 10:18

MrsBennetsPoorNervesAreBack · 28/02/2026 10:11

Fair enough. I haven't really come across parents like that tbh.

Omg you should live near me

CeciliaMars · 28/02/2026 10:27

Teacher here who has taught loads of kids with ADHD. Nothing jumps out at me in what you say. All kids have likes and dislikes, strengths and weaknesses.

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 10:45

CeciliaMars · 28/02/2026 10:27

Teacher here who has taught loads of kids with ADHD. Nothing jumps out at me in what you say. All kids have likes and dislikes, strengths and weaknesses.

I was a teacher for 35 years. With girls adhd nothing does jump out. They try to force in even at an early age.

LoughNaFoo · 28/02/2026 10:49

I am wondering about your own anxiety and perfectionism (as a parent) and if this implicit energy is too intense or engulfing and absorbed by her.

Do you want her to be perfect or three?

BettyBoh · 28/02/2026 10:52

This sounds more like Autism but at 3 years old the main indicator would be parents. Do either you or your husband show signs of nuerodiversity? It’s highly hereditary.

Ilikemytea · 28/02/2026 11:38

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 10:45

I was a teacher for 35 years. With girls adhd nothing does jump out. They try to force in even at an early age.

OP described lots of strenghts, some non-specific anxieties, no functional impact. There is nothing ADHD about this description.

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 12:02

Ilikemytea · 28/02/2026 11:38

OP described lots of strenghts, some non-specific anxieties, no functional impact. There is nothing ADHD about this description.

Except fatigue.

My adhd dd has severe fatigue, anxiety and was a school refuser. These were the guiding symptoms. These were her core symptoms.

LoughNaFoo · 28/02/2026 12:07

Ilikemytea · 28/02/2026 11:38

OP described lots of strenghts, some non-specific anxieties, no functional impact. There is nothing ADHD about this description.

Agree. It’s almost a stealth boast.

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 12:10

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 12:02

Except fatigue.

My adhd dd has severe fatigue, anxiety and was a school refuser. These were the guiding symptoms. These were her core symptoms.

Edited

She describes brain and physical fatigue. Both of which are functional impacts. Both are indicative of adhd

She describes anxiety, again ADHD

Op says she herself is ADHD. It’s usually inherited.

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 12:14

Wrong thread🫠

Ilikemytea · 28/02/2026 12:24

LoughNaFoo · 28/02/2026 12:07

Agree. It’s almost a stealth boast.

I think this thread - and some others - show the danger or overinperpreting normal variations in behaviour and personality as disorders, because X said so (despite no evidence and no qualifications).

jojogwangwan · 28/02/2026 14:06

ItTook9Years · 26/02/2026 16:48

None of that sounds like female presentation ADHD. Who is telling you this?

ADHD and ASD are as heritable as height. If a child has one of the conditions it’s something like 80% likely their parent does.

Edited

I know, asd then yes but not adhd

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