Oct 06 2025
If you’re divorced and raising a kid with ADHD, I get it—it’s tough. But let’s talk about how you and your ex can team up on your child’s treatment. The key is working together to make things steady and supportive. Your kid can do great with the right approach. I’ll focus on treatment stuff here, sharing simple ways to make it work.
ADHD isn’t about your kid being “bad” or lazy. It’s how their brain works differently. Kids with ADHD often lag behind in skills like controlling emotions, starting tasks, or staying focused. It’s not on purpose—it’s biology.
For example:
When homes have different rules, it confuses your kid more. So, aim for the same treatment plan in both places.
Good communication is huge for treatment success. Use 2houses co-parenting apps or a shared Google Calendar to track meds, doctor visits, and how your kid’s doing. Share notes like, “They took their pill at 8 AM and seemed calmer at school.”
Set up quick video calls every couple of weeks—just you and your ex, no kid around. Ask stuff like, “What’s helping with focus?” or “Any med side effects?” Keep it positive—no blaming. If talks get heated, get a counselor to help.
Here’s what the experts say works best for kids 6 and older: medication (if needed) plus teaching parents new strategies. Regular therapy for the child alone doesn’t help much with core ADHD symptoms because it relies on internal self-talk – something ADHD brains are still learning.
Think of ADHD medication like glasses. It helps your child see more clearly, but it’s not a cure. You both parents need to be on the same page about:
In 2houses app or using a notebook, you just write down what you notice. For example you can write “Homework went smoother today, but he seemed more irritable around dinner time.”
Your doctor needs this information to help your child get the best results.
This is where you become your child’s best treatment tool. Parent training teaches you specific ways to help your ADHD child succeed. Here’s what works:
Catch them being good: Try to give 5 compliments for every correction. “You remembered to put your backpack by the door – that’s going to make tomorrow morning so much easier!”
Make rewards immediate: ADHD brains need instant payoffs. Instead of “You can watch TV after you clean your room,” try “Clean your room in the next 20 minutes and you get to pick tonight’s dessert.”
Plan for the hard parts: Know when your child struggles most (homework time, bedtime, leaving the house) and have a plan ready. Visual checklists with pictures work great.
Stay calm during meltdowns: When your child loses it, their brain is overwhelmed. Getting angry back just makes it worse. Try: “I can see you’re really frustrated. Let’s figure out what happened and how to fix it.”
Structure is like oxygen for a child with ADHD. When routines are different between homes, it’s like asking them to drive a car with one foot on the gas and one on the brake.
Create a shared “ADHD Parenting Playbook” that includes the following:
Share this document digitally and update it together every couple of months. Even if one parent is less involved, having a basic plan prevents confusion and chaos for your child.
ADHD runs in families, so maybe one of you has it. That can make remembering meds or staying calm harder. Use reminders on your phone or in the app. If you’re the one who handles more, ask for backup. If not, start with small steps. It’s about getting better, not being perfect.
Beyond meds and training, try these:
Treatment works best when your kid feels loved and safe. See “bad” behavior as a sign they need help, not as a fail. Cheer their wins. Tell them, “I’m proud of you,” even on rough days. When you and your ex act like a team, your kid learns to handle life better.
Why 2houses?
A calendar for everyone, getting organised when you’re divorced is a priority. 2houses provides you an online shared schedule, with many editing, adding, and sync features.
For us, as divorced parents, the financial topic is most of the time a conflict topic. Now, 2houses manages all expenses from each parent, keeps you informed on the situation, day after day, coins after coins.
Communication is key, this is why 2houses offers you an online messaging tool, simple, efficient and secure.
The journal is your quick family social network. You can easily share all information, news, photos, videos, and even your children’s funny quotes. The family is never far away, no matter where you are geographically located.
We offer a 14-day trial to test our services and start improving your family life!
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