If you have ADHD or think you might:
The A.D.D. Resource Center can help!

“Why Doesn’t Anyone Like Me?” — Helping Children with ADHD Navigate Peer Rejection

Why This Matters

Friendships are not a luxury for children — they are a developmental necessity. Research consistently shows that positive peer relationships in childhood are a stronger predictor of adult happiness than grades or IQ. For children with ADHD, social struggles compound academic and emotional challenges already in play. When a child feels chronically rejected, self-esteem erodes, anxiety grows, and the willingness to try again shrinks. Understanding why children with ADHD struggle socially — and what parents and caregivers can do about it — can change a child’s entire social trajectory.

When Your Child with ADHD Has No Friends: Ways to End Social Isolation

Many children with ADHD struggle to make and keep friends. Learn why social isolation happens, how “active vs. inactive” social time affects behavior, and practical steps parents can take to help their child build real, lasting friendships.

ADD Resource Center
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