ADHD symptoms are framed not as a neurological disorder, but as a physiological stress response. The 'Attention-Deficit' is the 'flight' (distraction) and 'Hyperactivity' is the 'fight' (aggression) from an over-activated nervous system, often triggered by early childhood stress.
Early stress over-activates the amygdala (the brain's stress 'on' switch) while stunting the hippocampus (the 'off' switch). This creates a neurological imbalance of 'all gas, no brakes,' resulting in a state of hypervigilance and dysregulation that is often diagnosed as ADHD.
This framework defines anxiety and depression by their relationship to loss. Depression is an emotional state consumed by losses that have already happened, while anxiety is a state consumed by potential losses that may never occur. Both conditions are fundamentally rooted in the experience of loss.
If ADHD is a response to environmental stress, the logical first step is not medication but parental guidance therapy. This 'inconvenient truth' shifts responsibility to parents to examine family dynamics and psychosocial stressors as the root cause before medicating a child's symptoms.
There isn't a direct gene for ADHD or depression, but there is a 'sensitivity gene' that makes individuals more susceptible to stress. According to epigenetics, present and nurturing parenting in the first year of life can effectively neutralize the expression of this gene, preventing future mental illness.
When disciplining a child, always acknowledge their feelings first before setting a boundary. Voicing empathy (e.g., 'I can see you really want that') makes the child feel heard and validated, making them more receptive to the subsequent rule or denial, preventing an escalation.
