risingphoenix wrote:
Why is it that when a situation is obviously serious and for example someone is upset because they got hurt (physically or emotionally) or an adult wants to have some serious talk with the ADHD child (because for example it hit someone else out of "fun" and it was too hard and the other child is now crying or something similar), that no matter what one says all the reaction one gets is laughter and giggles? Is that out of provocation or embarassment or lack of empathy or do they just really find it so funny? And how is one supposed to react to this in return?
I'm absolutely not sure it's with all hyperactive children this way, because I only know two, but that's a trait they both clearly share.
well, ADHD kids are known to get excitable and not have the forsight to control that very well.
at a guess i'd say that the giggling bit was due to anger, frustration and the embarassment at being told off. i am sure that you are familiar with the 'rule' of telling children off straight away or not at all so that they can relate being in trouble with the previous incident and actually learn from it. lots of kids of my generation were told 'wait til your father gets home'. by the time father got home and administered punishment, the average child would have forgotten what the original misdemenour was anyway. i just think that this is so exagerated in an ADHD child that they end up in this awful flux of feeling that they are constantly being told off for something they do not understand.
as for the 'lack of empathy' bit. 'specialists' like to bandy that phrase around a fair bit, but if you break it down it doesn't really mean an awful lot on it's own. i mean there are a lot of times when people lack empathy and one of those would be when feeling other more driving emotions and not being able to emotionally 'multi task' as it were. also a lot of other issues can prevent us from knowing how to act out upon the empathy that we feel towards others.