She feels hollow and empty because the core of her, her emotional content, is being negated.
There are a lot of different reasons people can feel hollow and empty inside. If you’ve never even
met this girl, proclaiming the reason
she feels hollow and empty is
this one thing... and then to further declare it’s the result of bad parenting at a minimum, and probable abuse... is frankly insane.
Furthermore? To be adamant that seeking help for a symptom which is
classic ADHD, is actually ignoring the symptom entirely? Makes about as much sense as saying seeing a trauma therapist for PTSD is ignoring how what a flashback IS is really a cry for attention.
***
Every symptom on the planet has multiple sources and causes.
Just because disorders share symptoms & coping mechanisms, doesn’t mean that they all have the same cause. Case in point (
@Freida I was going to be mentioning this later, but since I’m putting it up, here)
- Self harm with PTSD? Tends to be about numbing/feeling better, and control, and punishment, and trauma re-enactment. It’s a hugely difficult & complicated coping mechanism to deal with.
- Self harm with ADHD? Tends to be self medicating. The adrenaline rush in place of a stimulant. You can nix most kinds of ADHD self harm overnight by giving a kid a coke or Mountain Dew or cup of coffee & sending them out to play. Stimulant plus physical activity. Voila. About as easy as things come.
- Disassociation (including emotional numbing) is a symptom of PTSD, and the vast majority of the time it needs to be negated (limiting flashbacks, depersonalization, and derealization as close to nil as possible).
- Disassociation is is core component of ADHD; it’s both what allows for hyperfocus to happen, and it’s a necessary break from overactive senses. You want the disassociation present, but also need to learn to manage the when/where/how long. (So you aren’t cheerfully typing away on a computer whilst the fire alarm is blazing away, after 10 hours of not eating/drinking/or peeing... so when the firefighter shakes you out of it, you’re racing outside, not to the loo, because OMFG I have to pee! >>> And a thousand other variations on theme. Whether it’s getting so involved in one thing you miss everything else, or running your feet to ribbons, or, or, or).
It’s a very very
very ADHD thing to lose your emotions for a spell... especially if you’ve been having a series of emotional blow outs, which for ADHD is bread and butter. Emotions don’t
fade with ADHD (unless you’re on certain kinds of medication, and then that’s super weird, although apparently it’s how most people feel feelings) but come on full force, and stay there, until they are replaced with something else. BIG emotions are baseline. Always. Then? Enter hormones, enter the closest an ADHD person will ever get to bipolar “rapid cycling” & “mixed episodes” (it’s close, but it’s not quite there, because ADHD peeps can learn emotional monitoring and regulation, bipolar people can’t), enter tantrums & full force meltdowns of
epic proportions, enter? ...emotions simply shutting off for awhile. <<< Not because it’s a cry for help, or emotional neglect, or bad parenting. Just because they’ve been on too big, for too long, and you need a break from them & a chance to reset.
...
Do I know for a fact that this little girl’s Classic ADHD symptoms are being caused by her ADHD? Pfft. Of course not.
I think it far more likely, however that her
mother & her therapist -who both have real & serious access- are correct about her
diagnosed condition being the cause of something incredibly common with that condition... than random assertstions of abuse and neglect and attention seeking.