Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

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:
slimeytart · 01/03/2026 13:18

I think parents know their kids best, I don’t necessarily think Op is anxious but just looking ahead for their child.

As parents all look at the current situation and rules and take those into consideration to map the child’s future. For instance my child is 14 but we’re already thinking ahead about uni prospects for example, and figuring out how best to go about things.

LoughNaFoo · 01/03/2026 14:33

Ilikemytea · 01/03/2026 12:26

OP, with all kindness - it sounds like you're very anxious and seeing all possible problems where there are none. You're daughter behaves as any other normal 3 year old would, and suddenly we're here discussing school refusal, SEN needs and possible future disasters. I'd suggest this discussion is not really helpful anymore and you may think of seeking suport for yourself. Take care.

I would suggest again that the OP deals with her own anxiety because her obvious hyper-focus and intensity with her DD is more likely to cause her DD more emotional issues that will limit her development than any ND traits that are not there.

OP should read up on attachment theory to see how her own anxious-preoccupied attachment behaviour will impact negatively on her child. Big clue is the child asking if her mum is happy or sad - sounds like she’s already anxious herself.

Sounds like she is absorbing and internalising the emotional atmosphere around her and left questioning. Keep it calm, peaceful, gentle and laid back.

OP these are early days - step back - give her some space - let her be who she is in this world - stop engulfing and smothering catastrophic thinking. Get professional help for yourself.

I asked before do you want her to be perfect or ‘fresh three’?

Let her have her toddlerhood and pace yourself - parenting requires lots of twists and turns, resilience, changing gear and flexible thinking.

OneOliveKoala · 01/03/2026 18:08

LoughNaFoo · 01/03/2026 14:33

I would suggest again that the OP deals with her own anxiety because her obvious hyper-focus and intensity with her DD is more likely to cause her DD more emotional issues that will limit her development than any ND traits that are not there.

OP should read up on attachment theory to see how her own anxious-preoccupied attachment behaviour will impact negatively on her child. Big clue is the child asking if her mum is happy or sad - sounds like she’s already anxious herself.

Sounds like she is absorbing and internalising the emotional atmosphere around her and left questioning. Keep it calm, peaceful, gentle and laid back.

OP these are early days - step back - give her some space - let her be who she is in this world - stop engulfing and smothering catastrophic thinking. Get professional help for yourself.

I asked before do you want her to be perfect or ‘fresh three’?

Let her have her toddlerhood and pace yourself - parenting requires lots of twists and turns, resilience, changing gear and flexible thinking.

All true what you are saying it is more the fact that she doesn’t want to play independently that worries me

OP posts:
MissingSockDetective · 01/03/2026 18:10

OneOliveKoala · 01/03/2026 18:08

All true what you are saying it is more the fact that she doesn’t want to play independently that worries me

That's very common in a child so young.

MrsBennetsPoorNervesAreBack · 01/03/2026 18:10

OneOliveKoala · 01/03/2026 18:08

All true what you are saying it is more the fact that she doesn’t want to play independently that worries me

OP, she's three. Lots of 3yos enjoy having the company of a parent when they play.

BoobsOnTheMoon · 01/03/2026 18:26

OneOliveKoala · 01/03/2026 18:08

All true what you are saying it is more the fact that she doesn’t want to play independently that worries me

She is three years old. It's entirely normal for three year olds to be rubbish at independent play.

Does she go to nursery? What is the feedback from staff, if so?

How much do you know about typical child development? Perhaps get yourself some books about it and read them instead of this endless obsessing online.

OneOliveKoala · 01/03/2026 18:34

BoobsOnTheMoon · 01/03/2026 18:26

She is three years old. It's entirely normal for three year olds to be rubbish at independent play.

Does she go to nursery? What is the feedback from staff, if so?

How much do you know about typical child development? Perhaps get yourself some books about it and read them instead of this endless obsessing online.

She goes to three playgroups a week and there she plays independently or with her peers it is just at home no matter how many toys I get for her

OP posts:
MrsBennetsPoorNervesAreBack · 01/03/2026 18:36

OneOliveKoala · 01/03/2026 18:34

She goes to three playgroups a week and there she plays independently or with her peers it is just at home no matter how many toys I get for her

It's normal!

I used to joke that mine had an inbuilt mummy magnet!!

MissingSockDetective · 01/03/2026 18:38

OneOliveKoala · 01/03/2026 18:34

She goes to three playgroups a week and there she plays independently or with her peers it is just at home no matter how many toys I get for her

All children do that, they love playing with adults. She's only three.

Barnbrack · 01/03/2026 18:43

remarema · 26/02/2026 21:22

“DS really struggles not in noisy environments but with overwhelm after school, it takes him hours to sleep, he struggles with transitions, has dysgraphia and can have a very negative self perception, he physically struggles to be still to the point he can hit himself because he gets so angry that he can't be, he has huge meltdowns and it's very difficult to identify the triggers although tiredness and overstimulation definitely increase likelihood”

This could 💯 be me describing my dd.

Yep! Same, mines 8, medicated for sleep since he was 6 thank God because I was at the point I was googling whether less than an hours consecutive sleep over several years would actually kill me outright.

He's wonderful, social, kind, quirky, gets dysregulated easily, tried to throw himself over the bannister when dysregulated last night, made me paper aeroplanes repeatedly all day with messages like I love you and you're the best mum ever all day today.

Was so dysregulated he couldn't dress himself this morning then managed a 6 hour day out on public transport against all the odds. He's a wee enigma and one of my absolute favourite people in the world. There's a comedian who talks about her 3 yr old son and how she'd throw herself in front of a bus for him... And some days, because of him... And that's a very relatable point. He just does everything turned up to 11.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread