Manage episode 521206490 series 2776481
Are we turning ordinary childhood struggles into “disorders”? In this gripping conversation with child psychiatrist Dr Sami Timimi, we unpack the rise of ADHD, autism, anxiety — and the cultural story that’s quietly reshaping how parents see their kids. If you’ve ever wondered whether your child actually needs a diagnosis or just needs more connection, this episode will hit home.
Dr Timimi challenges the medicalisation of childhood, explains how labels can limit hope, and offers four powerful principles for supporting kids without pathologising them. This one will stay with you.
KEY POINTS
- Why “normal” is a moving target — and why that matters for parents.
- How subjective definitions in mental health fuel overdiagnosis.
- The risks of labels: internalised identity, lowered expectations, and unnecessary interventions.
- Four parent principles:
- Don’t try too hard — avoid the trap of hunting for problems.
- Don’t fear emotions — distress is part of growing up.
- Prioritise relationship over behaviour control.
- Beware concept creep — when clinical words invade everyday parenting.
- What’s driving the explosion in ADHD, autism, and neurodiversity narratives.
- Why today’s kids may be the most pathologised generation in history.
QUOTE OF THE EPISODE
“When distress is medicalised, it steals our hope.” — Dr Sami Timimi
RESOURCES MENTIONED
- Searching for Normal by Dr Sami Timimi
- Insane Medicine by Dr Sami Timimi
- Happy Families resources: happyfamilies.com.au
ACTION STEPS FOR PARENTS
- Pause before pursuing a label — ask what your child might be expressing, not what disorder they “fit.”
- Create more emotional space — sit with their feelings instead of fixing them.
- Strengthen connection rituals — closeness buffers distress.
- Use everyday language — avoid clinical terms for normal childhood behaviours.
- Look at the environment first — school, stress, sleep, and relationships often explain what diagnoses can’t.
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