"Receiving a diagnosis of ADHD is rarely just information. It is usually also a recalibration of everything you thought you understood about your child — and sometimes about yourself."
What just happened?
If your child has just received an ADHD diagnosis, you are probably feeling several things at once. Relief that there is a name for what you have been observing. Grief, perhaps, about the challenges they have already faced. Worry about what comes next. Possibly anger — at the school, the system, or yourself. Possibly hope.
All of these are reasonable responses. A diagnosis is not just clinical information — it is a lens shift. It changes how you interpret the past and how you approach the future. This guide is designed to give you accurate, practical grounding so that you can make that shift with confidence.
What ADHD actually is
ADHD — Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder — is a neurodevelopmental condition that affects the development and function of the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain responsible for executive function. Executive function includes the ability to sustain attention, regulate impulses, plan and organise, regulate emotions, hold information in working memory, and manage time.
ADHD is not a behaviour disorder, though it affects behaviour. It is not caused by poor parenting, diet, screens, or a lack of structure. It is highly heritable — genetic factors account for approximately 74–80% of variance in ADHD traits (Faraone & Larsson, 2019). That means it runs in families, and it is very likely that one or more people in your extended family share some of these traits, whether or not they have ever been diagnosed.
One of the most important things to understand is that the brain of a child with ADHD is not broken — it is developmentally different. The cortical maturation trajectory is delayed by an average of approximately three years compared to neurotypical peers (Shaw et al., 2007). Many of the skills that other children develop more quickly — the ability to pause before acting, to stay focused, to manage strong feelings — will come for your child, but later, and often with more support along the way.
The key insight: ADHD is not about not trying. Children with ADHD are usually trying very hard indeed — sometimes harder than their peers. The difficulty is not in effort; it is in the architecture of the system managing that effort. Understanding this distinction changes everything about how you respond.
The three presentations of ADHD
ADHD presents in three recognised ways, and understanding which profile fits your child most closely is important for knowing what kind of support will help most.
- Predominantly Inattentive: Difficulty sustaining attention, easily distracted, forgetting tasks and instructions, losing things, appearing not to listen, difficulty completing tasks, slow processing. Often quiet. Frequently missed, particularly in girls. May be described as "in their own world" or a "daydreamer."
- Predominantly Hyperactive-Impulsive: Difficulty staying still, excessive movement, talking too much, interrupting, difficulty waiting, acting without thinking about consequences. More frequently noticed and referred in younger children.
- Combined Presentation: Features of both inattentive and hyperactive-impulsive presentations. Common in referred clinical populations, though the inattentive presentation is at least as prevalent in the general population and is consistently under-identified.
It is worth knowing that the presentation of ADHD can shift over time. Hyperactivity often becomes less visible in adolescence, while inattentive features often become more prominent — and more impairing — as academic demands increase.
What ADHD looks like at home and at school
ADHD affects every part of a child's daily life, though it does not affect all settings equally. Many children with ADHD can maintain concentration and regulate their behaviour for preferred, highly engaging activities — video games, creative play, building — and their parents are sometimes told "but they can focus when they want to." This misses how ADHD actually works.
ADHD affects the regulatory system, not the intellectual capacity. The prefrontal cortex regulates attention by sustaining focus on tasks that are not inherently interesting. In ADHD, this regulation is less effective — so the brain defaults to interest-driven attention. What looks like selective effort is actually a neurological pattern: the brain cannot sustain attention unless engagement, novelty, urgency, or emotional salience is present.
Common patterns at home include: difficulty with transitions, resistance to starting tasks, losing things routinely, emotional outbursts that seem disproportionate, difficulty with sleep onset, and inconsistency — great performance one day, near-impossibility the next.
Common patterns at school include: incomplete work, poor organisation, appearing to understand but then not recalling, difficulty with writing tasks, impulsive responses, sensitivity to perceived criticism, difficulty in unstructured settings, and peer relationship challenges.
Common myths — and what the evidence actually says
The strengths that come with ADHD
A clinical honest account of ADHD acknowledges both the challenges and the genuine strengths that many people with ADHD describe. These are not consolation prizes — they are real, documented, and worth knowing:
- Creative thinking: ADHD is associated with divergent thinking — the ability to generate multiple solutions and make unusual connections (White & Shah, 2011).
- Hyperfocus: When genuinely engaged, many individuals with ADHD enter a state of absorbed concentration that neurotypical peers rarely achieve.
- Energy and enthusiasm: When channelled appropriately, the energy associated with ADHD can be a powerful driver of achievement.
- Empathy and emotional depth: Many children with ADHD are described by those close to them as unusually empathic, emotionally generous, and intensely alive to the world.
- Resilience: Children who receive good support and develop self-understanding often develop substantial resilience and self-advocacy skills.
What happens now — a practical next-steps guide
A note on your own reactions
Many parents describe the period after diagnosis as emotionally complex — even when they pushed hard for it. Some feel relief. Some feel grief. Some feel guilty about things they said or did before they understood what was happening. Some feel angry at a system that took too long. Some feel all of these in the same afternoon.
These are all legitimate responses to a significant piece of information about someone you love. There is no correct emotional response to your child's diagnosis. Give yourself the same compassion you would extend to any parent in your position.
It is also worth knowing that if you find yourself recognising yourself in this description — if reading about ADHD has made you wonder about your own history — that is a very common experience. Between a quarter and a half of children with ADHD have at least one parent who also has ADHD. If that thought has occurred to you, it may be worth exploring. You can find resources specifically for parents with ADHD in the Parents with ADHD section.