Managing Attention Problems
The first step when addressing attention functions is to
understand them in the individual child. Parents who
discover and describe their child’s attention styles will
have a tremendous advantage in developing strategies that
improve attention and define when apparent problems may
actually be strengths. For example, once parents understand
that a child’s impulsive style is the very nature of the
creative process and that most breakthrough ideas are
impulsive, they can achieve a deep appreciation for the
exuberance that has previously been so frustrating. This can
lead them to develop ways to enhance and enrich their
child’s experience of her own impulsivity. The cure then
lies within the awareness. Then their understanding becomes
a spark to develop solutions that can take the form of
enrichment, bypass strategies, and advocacy in the school
system. When parents see the child’s emotional reactions to
frustration in their true light, they can take steps to
correct the situation rather than continue in their own
emotionally charged responses to the child.
This
understanding occurs in the child as self-awareness. As soon
as a child is told, possibly for the first time, that
distractibility is a tremendous advantage, she is freed from
her previous negative reinforcement and empowered to achieve
a higher level of self-confidence. Distractibility and
hyperattentiveness to the environment can lead to constant
discovery and personal evolution. Daydreaming can open the
doors to dimensions that are hidden behind the mind’s
limiting control mechanisms. If creativity and intuitive
understanding are the keys to reality, a child with
free-ranging association is at a distinct advantage for the
process of discovery. The problem is that these qualities
are usually only admired in accomplished adults who have
rejected many of society’s values. Our culture is so intent
on rationality as the most valuable commodity of mind, and
children’s creativity is constantly suppressed. Those
qualities that foster natural creative expression deserve
our recognition. A child who feels this admiration for her
true nature will blossom. Then areas of attention that are
weak can be addressed. But they must be seen in perspective
and the child must feel validated for who she is as a
creative being.
The correct homeopathic medicine can free
the child. This is especially true in the area of attention.
Since attention problems reflect an imbalance in the body,
they will usually normalize under the action of a remedy.
For example, in a child who cannot remain still long enough
to focus on a task, the homeopathic medicine will enhance
the natural ability to calm the mind and willfully bring
motor activity under control. This is an ability that a
homeopathic medicine encourages in the same way that immune
system function improves after homeopathic treatment.
Similarly, Chinese medicine views attention problems as an
overactive response to an energetic deficiency state. For
example, the underlying deficiency of Kidney yin allows
Liver yang to become excessive. Stated another way, the lack
of controls allows unwanted, random energy to rise up,
causing the syndrome of restlessness and impulsivity. The
treatment principle in Chinese medicine is to tonify the
deficiency while calming the disturbance using stimulation
of acupuncture points and herbs. Dietary interventions that
improve attention include eating foods high in
phosphatidylserine (eggs), taking a fish oil supplement with
vitamin E, and avoiding the food triggers that interfere
with concentration and efficient brain function.