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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Does this sound like neurodivergence or a sensitive temperament?

255 replies

kvazzy · 11/05/2026 22:23

Hi everyone,

Posting on AIBU for traffic.

I’m trying to make sense of my DD’s profile and would really appreciate balanced perspectives, especially from parents of neurodivergent children or people who know this area well.

My DD has just turned 5 and is in Reception. Overall she is doing well. School are happy with her progress, she is developing well academically and teachers say she is on track. She also does well in structured activities such as tennis, ballet and singing. Teachers/coaches generally give positive feedback. She has a lot of energy, but can also concentrate.

What makes me wonder about neurodivergence:

  • She is very emotionally intense and can get very upset over things that may seem small.
  • She finds losing, being second, or another child being “first” very hard. For example, if another child overtakes her on a bike or runs ahead of her, she can become very upset and say she doesn’t want to be friends with that child anymore, although this does not last.
  • She can take refusal very personally. If another child doesn’t want to play her game or do something together, she can experience it almost as rejection of the whole friendship.
  • She can be quite controlling in play. She loves children and wants to play, but sometimes wants very intense, close interaction and struggles when the other child wants space or wants to do things differently.
  • She has some sensory sensitivities: hair brushing, hair washing, nail cutting. We have to put a cartoon on while doing all these things.
  • She can be perfectionistic. She has said things like “I am not good enough” and can become very upset if her writing or numbers don’t look right.
  • She is very sensitive to criticism or correction and can become upset if we point out mistakes.
  • She can resist everyday demands such as dressing, handwashing and stopping play. We often have to make these tasks playful or interesting for her.
  • She can be very shy around other people at first, especially adults.

What makes me less sure it is neurodivergence:

  • She is very socially motivated and has always loved being around children.
  • She has rich imaginative play and creates lots of different scenarios and games.
  • Her play is flexible in the sense that she invents new games all the time, rather than repeating one rigid script.
  • She generally does well at school and in structured classes.
  • She can follow instructions and wait her turn in after-school clubs.
  • She has good language and can often explain her feelings afterwards. For example, after one big upset with friends and craft materials, she later told me she was scared the other children would take her things without asking.
  • She usually recovers after meltdowns and can go back to playing happily.
  • She seems very empathic and relationship-focused, sometimes almost too much so.

I suppose what confuses me is that she is not withdrawn or socially uninterested at all. If anything, she is intensely social, very imaginative, bright, energetic and sensitive. But she struggles a lot with rejection, losing, sharing control, and feeling that her things or her place in the group are at risk.

Does this sound more like possible neurodivergence, or more like a highly sensitive / intense / strong-willed child who needs support with emotional regulation and social flexibility?

OP posts:
Boomer55 · 15/05/2026 08:33

kvazzy · 11/05/2026 22:40

Do you think what I am describing are not fairly big issues?

She sounds a bit spoilt really. She needs to learn that life won’t always go her way. 🤷‍♀️

PlimptonInSummertown · 15/05/2026 08:37

Mummyoflittledragon · 15/05/2026 08:23

And that’s why I was saying to wait a while as op will hopefully be taken more seriously further down the line, because at 5 what op is saying could be explained away. Less so in a couple of years - as I said in my above comment, differences can be less easily ignored. I know and I mean I know exactly what it feels like not to be taken seriously. My dd is 17. We are on a big old journey with it all right now.

It’s such a load of crap, isn’t it? DS got support and a diagnosis within 18 months of me raising concerns. Even though he has a diagnosis (and so do I), DD is now 13 and still keeps getting told that she just basically has to not be like that. Just don’t have SN, essentially. Earlier this year at a meeting with a teacher I reiterated that DD was exactly like I had been as a girl only to be told that ADHD presents differently in children (I know, it makes no sense) and also that the teacher had been reading up on neurodivergence and apparently “they” don’t believe it has a strong genetic component anymore. 🤦‍♀️

They honestly don’t see their sexism and don’t understand their lack of knowledge on the subject. Like I said, my son has ADHD, my daughter’s apparently just a spoiled pain in the arse 🤷‍♀️

Mummyoflittledragon · 15/05/2026 11:13

Oh your poor dd. That stinks. With mine, I believed what I was told about dd. I only have one. We just threw our savings at dd and put her into private school in year 9 as she wasn’t coping at a large co-Ed secondary. Then in year 10, the SENCO surveyed all the teachers and they came up with zero issues for dd. So again I believed it rather than trusting my gut. It wasn’t until she got severely mentally unwell and developed an eating disorder that I was validated - I was recommended someone on the ED threads, who specialises in ND.

Su1rlie · 15/05/2026 12:39

PlimptonInSummertown · 15/05/2026 08:37

It’s such a load of crap, isn’t it? DS got support and a diagnosis within 18 months of me raising concerns. Even though he has a diagnosis (and so do I), DD is now 13 and still keeps getting told that she just basically has to not be like that. Just don’t have SN, essentially. Earlier this year at a meeting with a teacher I reiterated that DD was exactly like I had been as a girl only to be told that ADHD presents differently in children (I know, it makes no sense) and also that the teacher had been reading up on neurodivergence and apparently “they” don’t believe it has a strong genetic component anymore. 🤦‍♀️

They honestly don’t see their sexism and don’t understand their lack of knowledge on the subject. Like I said, my son has ADHD, my daughter’s apparently just a spoiled pain in the arse 🤷‍♀️

I know! I think one day there is going to be a lot of controversy and reflection over the sexism and misogyny within ND diagnostics and SEND. It’s appalling that it is still happening even though it’s well known that it happens. The misogyny and sexism goes towards the mothers too. It’s just appalling. My husband and I have noticed the difference in attitude whenever he is involved or attends meetings within the NHS and SEND.

PlimptonInSummertown · 15/05/2026 13:01

Su1rlie · 15/05/2026 12:39

I know! I think one day there is going to be a lot of controversy and reflection over the sexism and misogyny within ND diagnostics and SEND. It’s appalling that it is still happening even though it’s well known that it happens. The misogyny and sexism goes towards the mothers too. It’s just appalling. My husband and I have noticed the difference in attitude whenever he is involved or attends meetings within the NHS and SEND.

It really can’t come quickly enough for me. I can accept that my ADHD wasn’t noticed or diagnosed because it’s inattentive type and I was born in the 1970s. I was considered difficult, lazy, dramatic, overly emotional because in those days there was simply no other way of understanding a smart girl whose brain chemicals weren’t regulated.

Seeing history repeat itself when we now know what’s almost certainly going on with my daughter is more painful than I can describe. I will forever be grateful that my son won’t be branded lazy (and we have found good meds for him which is like a miracle), but how can it be that my daughter is being dismissed like this?

DH does all the interaction with schools and other support, for a variety of very good reasons, but we have both noticed how the so-called support basically blames everything on me! I’m very open about having ADHD, but they do treat it like a personality flaw. Drives me up the freaking wall. It’s 2026!

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