Hi Nikita
Thanks for sharing your story - I think it puts a lot of little worries into perspective!
How old are your three older kids now? How is Sharayah doing these days?
I agree that the prenatal environment can have a profound effect on a person, but I also read that the latest research shows that fully 50 percent of our personality comes from our genes. Probably your youngest and eldest are similar partly due to their similar DNA!
I also saw a fascinating documentary series about twins recently. The amazing thing was that twins who had been separated at birth and raised apart turned out to have shared hobbies and strikingly similar biographies (the funniest were twin brothers who had married women with the same name… twice! One brother had a third wife, so his twin was saying his wife would be wary of any woman with that name!!)
We all want the best for our children, and there’s no doubt that your girls would’ve been better off without the IUGR. But don’t beat yourself up, because besides the fact that it wasn’t your fault, it also probably has less to do with their personalities than you imagine.
About your son with ADHD, is he on medication? I don’t have any direct experience of kids with ADHD, but am really interested in the topic, as I think too many kids, in the US especially, are on meds. Here are some things I’ve found out:
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From Shalom in the Home (great show. Have you seen it?): Some kids’ “ADHD” is cured by having their parents give them more attention, more one-on-one time. Some kids have difficulty sharing their thoughts and feelings, and this causes them to act out. On Shalom, Shmuley (the expert who helps families in strife) had one family make a kind of “suggestions box” for their son to use to share anything that was on his mind. The boy’s younger sibling was taking up most of his parents’ attention (does this happen because Azaria is so demanding?), and it was great for him to be able to write something down, put it in the box, and have his mom and dad take the time to read it and talk about it with him later (when his younger sibling was in bed).
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Some kids diagnosed with ADHD are right-brain learners. They learn by doing - and this partly accounts for their “hyperactivity.” Have you used TweedleWink with your son? If so, how’d it go? If your son isn’t the verbal type (a bad speller, etc), is he more of the practical type (good at fixing things/understanding how things work)?
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Some kids diagnosed with ADHD have Asperger’s (very mild form of autism). You can read about the symptoms on Wikipedia to see if they match up with your son. Apparently, such kids can respond really well to cognitive behavioral therapy.
Re. Azaria’s sleep problems and separation anxiety, have you heard of a book called The No-Cry Sleep Solution? I bought it after it was recommended to me by La Leche League (when my four-month-old was waking me up so much, it was making me ill). I highly recommend it.
Also, I guess the only thing to bear in mind when times are tough is that everything is just a stage. I was really going spare for a while with Naimah (especially when I had tonsillitis, a ton of work to do, and no way of getting an uninterrupted night’s sleep). But now that she doesn’t wake me up at night, I can barely remember what that was like. It seems very, very far away; yet, it was only six months ago!
Look forward to chatting more… Take care
Maddy
PS I really like your girls’ names! Very pretty and original. ![:slight_smile: :slight_smile:](/images/emoji/twitter/slight_smile.png?v=12)