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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 17:30

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.

Nope and she doesn’t even remotely meet the criteria .

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OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 17:32

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.

Thank you the thing is she was totally fine at a busty and overcrowded restaurant for a few hours coloring and eating

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OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 17:36

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.

So how did she meet the criteria for autism and adhd … even overstimulation alone is not enough to diagnose neurodivergence

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readingmakesmehappy · 28/02/2026 17:37

Def doesn’t sound like ADHD. Even at that age my now diagnosed AuDHD DC couldn’t take turns, would hit other kids if they couldn’t understand the game he wanted to play, went straight to meltdown if they found anything hard.

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 17:39

readingmakesmehappy · 28/02/2026 17:37

Def doesn’t sound like ADHD. Even at that age my now diagnosed AuDHD DC couldn’t take turns, would hit other kids if they couldn’t understand the game he wanted to play, went straight to meltdown if they found anything hard.

That’s what I thought like being unable to regulate impulses would be a sign but then there is another post here saying her diagnose never had any issues sharing or self regulating and was autistic and adhd ..

I don’t understand

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OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 17:46

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

How do they meet the diagram Criteria ? It sounds like all of us are adhd

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OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 17:54

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.

I would like to clarify a few points .. I understand that there is this thing called masking but I was told by a lead psychiatrist who is specialised in adhd that that doesn’t happen until much later in school .. at the age of 3 toddlers don’t have the inability to internalise hence the meltdowns and tantrums .. he did say some kids just accepts the no even when they really want something ( Like my daughter ) .. it is personality not linked to neurodivergence

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Monsterslam · 28/02/2026 17:55

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 17:46

How do they meet the diagram Criteria ? It sounds like all of us are adhd

My dc wait their turn and happily wait in a queue but they will be climbing and handstanding and singing and twirling the whole way. At the same time they will also be telling you AT LENGTH about something or other that is their specialist thing this week.

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 17:57

Monsterslam · 28/02/2026 17:55

My dc wait their turn and happily wait in a queue but they will be climbing and handstanding and singing and twirling the whole way. At the same time they will also be telling you AT LENGTH about something or other that is their specialist thing this week.

I see you mean hyperfocus on certain things ?

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Monsterslam · 28/02/2026 18:03

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 17:57

I see you mean hyperfocus on certain things ?

They have special interests. I think most kids do but I see the ADHD aspect is how they just love talking and talking and talking about it. My dd would talk for over an hour non stop, no pauses for breath, about a book series she has read recently.

Ask her next month and she isn't interested and onto the next thing.

If we are in a long queue for something I always feel sorry for the people around us because they WILL be experts in whatever subject it is by the end. But if I try and stop dc they get frustrated and annoyed and then it becomes more difficult.

anotheruser345 · 28/02/2026 18:09

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.

Well thats absolute crap. Im sorry but why do you assume ND equals badly behaved? Thats actually really insulting. My Daughter is autistic and has ADHD and we never had issues with her behaviour beyond typical 3 year old boundary pushing. What she did struggle with was navigating the world and the anxiety that came with that but actually she was always incredibly well behaved and her diagnosis was purely for her to understand what is happening and access help and support in the right way.

Your attitude towards ND is just shitty honestly.

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 18:10

Monsterslam · 28/02/2026 18:03

They have special interests. I think most kids do but I see the ADHD aspect is how they just love talking and talking and talking about it. My dd would talk for over an hour non stop, no pauses for breath, about a book series she has read recently.

Ask her next month and she isn't interested and onto the next thing.

If we are in a long queue for something I always feel sorry for the people around us because they WILL be experts in whatever subject it is by the end. But if I try and stop dc they get frustrated and annoyed and then it becomes more difficult.

I see …that clarifies a lot .. I think it will serve her well when she grows up .. I know a lot of accomplished adhd women who have done really well professionally because they were able to make their special interest a career 😊

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anotheruser345 · 28/02/2026 18:14

Nothing you have posted suggests ADHD or Autism to me personally but people can present in different ways. My advice is help your Daughter understand the world, support her by not taking her places that make her uncomfortable and you do that regardless of a diagnosis. If she struggles as she gets older its something you can address but for now, it doesnt matter what the label is, just focus on her development and her happiness.

I didn't really notice issues with my Daughter until she was 7 maybe (aside from her severe sleep issues but I blamed it on so many other things) but through the assessment realised how many signs were there in her younger years. But we didnt look at things until she was a teen and we talked it through together and she felt the same. I knew for a while that her brain worked differently, but only sought a diagnosis when she agreed she wanted it and she was looking for answers too. Until then I recognised what she struggled with, supported her where I could and we made adjustments. Its the same way we deal with things since diagnosis, the only difference is we now have a clear diagnosis to explain to others when we are looking for support in any particular way.

Janefx40 · 28/02/2026 18:14

I think the thing is that if she’s fine then it doesn’t really matter that much either way. I have ADHD (undiagnosed), my brother has ADHD (diagnosed) as does my neice (diagnosed and medicated). I don’t need a diagnosis because although I find it useful as a general way of understanding my traits, I function fine. I don’t personally think ADHD is over-diagnosed - I think a lot of us have it - but I don’t think most of us need to worry about it too much. Everyone whether ND or not has different character traits. Some of mine are related to adhd but probably not all of them. The key is whether or not we function well. I do, my brother and niece don’t. So they have sought diagnosis and help.

Your DD sounds great and is doing fine so whilst it’s good to understand her and support her needs, I’m not sure that you need to know whether it is ADHD or not at this point. You’ll know more as the years progress.

enjoy your girl! 3 year olds are so gorgeous! X

Hankunamatata · 28/02/2026 18:16

Shes only 3. If you still have concerns at 6 yrs approach GP

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 18:17

Janefx40 · 28/02/2026 18:14

I think the thing is that if she’s fine then it doesn’t really matter that much either way. I have ADHD (undiagnosed), my brother has ADHD (diagnosed) as does my neice (diagnosed and medicated). I don’t need a diagnosis because although I find it useful as a general way of understanding my traits, I function fine. I don’t personally think ADHD is over-diagnosed - I think a lot of us have it - but I don’t think most of us need to worry about it too much. Everyone whether ND or not has different character traits. Some of mine are related to adhd but probably not all of them. The key is whether or not we function well. I do, my brother and niece don’t. So they have sought diagnosis and help.

Your DD sounds great and is doing fine so whilst it’s good to understand her and support her needs, I’m not sure that you need to know whether it is ADHD or not at this point. You’ll know more as the years progress.

enjoy your girl! 3 year olds are so gorgeous! X

I love this answer so so much ..thank you

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OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 18:20

anotheruser345 · 28/02/2026 18:09

Well thats absolute crap. Im sorry but why do you assume ND equals badly behaved? Thats actually really insulting. My Daughter is autistic and has ADHD and we never had issues with her behaviour beyond typical 3 year old boundary pushing. What she did struggle with was navigating the world and the anxiety that came with that but actually she was always incredibly well behaved and her diagnosis was purely for her to understand what is happening and access help and support in the right way.

Your attitude towards ND is just shitty honestly.

I agree … I see a lot of people blaming bad behaviours on being neurodivergent ( absolutely not the case for severe disabilities ) but that’s so not the case .. may I ask what traits met the diagnostic criteria.. I know anxiety can coexist with auADHD but it is not in the diagnostic criteria.. to be diagnosed you need to present either inattentive or hyperactive or mix hence the name ( being told by professionals )

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youalright · 28/02/2026 18:30

anotheruser345 · 28/02/2026 18:09

Well thats absolute crap. Im sorry but why do you assume ND equals badly behaved? Thats actually really insulting. My Daughter is autistic and has ADHD and we never had issues with her behaviour beyond typical 3 year old boundary pushing. What she did struggle with was navigating the world and the anxiety that came with that but actually she was always incredibly well behaved and her diagnosis was purely for her to understand what is happening and access help and support in the right way.

Your attitude towards ND is just shitty honestly.

I don't think that but thats the point i know multiple children with autism really well behaved lovely kids. Then I know other children who have never been told no in their life as they have adhd/autism and mum says they can't help it. I absolutely think there are lots of genuine cases but I also think there is a significant cases where its parenting

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 18:43

youalright · 28/02/2026 18:30

I don't think that but thats the point i know multiple children with autism really well behaved lovely kids. Then I know other children who have never been told no in their life as they have adhd/autism and mum says they can't help it. I absolutely think there are lots of genuine cases but I also think there is a significant cases where its parenting

I understand your point .. a friend’s kid who’s about 13 auADHD formally diagnosed but high functioning he is using his condition to get out of school early or not going to school at all but prefers lounging around with video games or on his bike and that’s appalling behaviour because his parents have to work for necessity and the school lets him out after only doing an hour of lessons… to me it is important to teach my daughter whether she is ND or not that life is tough for all of us and there are no special discounts . That school is her responsibility and work is mine

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kierenthecommunity · 28/02/2026 20:28

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 18:43

I understand your point .. a friend’s kid who’s about 13 auADHD formally diagnosed but high functioning he is using his condition to get out of school early or not going to school at all but prefers lounging around with video games or on his bike and that’s appalling behaviour because his parents have to work for necessity and the school lets him out after only doing an hour of lessons… to me it is important to teach my daughter whether she is ND or not that life is tough for all of us and there are no special discounts . That school is her responsibility and work is mine

I used to be as judgmental as this towards parents who had children with EBSA

Then I learnt better when my son hit year 8

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 20:36

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 18:43

I understand your point .. a friend’s kid who’s about 13 auADHD formally diagnosed but high functioning he is using his condition to get out of school early or not going to school at all but prefers lounging around with video games or on his bike and that’s appalling behaviour because his parents have to work for necessity and the school lets him out after only doing an hour of lessons… to me it is important to teach my daughter whether she is ND or not that life is tough for all of us and there are no special discounts . That school is her responsibility and work is mine

As if a school would just ‘let him out’😂

They are responsible for him. If he’s out he’s on a reduced timetable due to struggling. They can’t just ‘let him out’ due to safeguarding. I was a secondary school teacher for 25 years no kid is ever just let out.

Wait until your adhd kid hits burnout and then talk about ‘using it as an excuse’

If only. My dd was desperate to go to school, but just couldn’t.

Bigoted ignorant comment.

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 20:46

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 20:36

As if a school would just ‘let him out’😂

They are responsible for him. If he’s out he’s on a reduced timetable due to struggling. They can’t just ‘let him out’ due to safeguarding. I was a secondary school teacher for 25 years no kid is ever just let out.

Wait until your adhd kid hits burnout and then talk about ‘using it as an excuse’

If only. My dd was desperate to go to school, but just couldn’t.

Bigoted ignorant comment.

And how do I feed her ? Smart ass

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OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 20:49

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 20:36

As if a school would just ‘let him out’😂

They are responsible for him. If he’s out he’s on a reduced timetable due to struggling. They can’t just ‘let him out’ due to safeguarding. I was a secondary school teacher for 25 years no kid is ever just let out.

Wait until your adhd kid hits burnout and then talk about ‘using it as an excuse’

If only. My dd was desperate to go to school, but just couldn’t.

Bigoted ignorant comment.

You are the ignorant one who thinks that life will give them special treatment once parents are no longer there

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ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 20:50

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 20:46

And how do I feed her ? Smart ass

Like we did? We had to cope. She self harmed. Sometimes you get no choice. One of us had to stop work.

And as a teacher we l never ever condoned missing school.

ArseInTheCoOpWindow · 28/02/2026 20:54

OneOliveKoala · 28/02/2026 20:49

You are the ignorant one who thinks that life will give them special treatment once parents are no longer there

I don’t think they do though. They learn to cope and adjust. But adolescence is a learning curve, and a time for learning about yourself. Ds 33 is also adhd. He’s managed fine. Has an amazing job.

Someone once said to me ‘Nd kids can step off the path for a while in adolescence, but they get back on later’ sums it up really. The struggle is real whether you approve or not. The majority of EBSA are ND

And it is a disability after all.