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Addressing and Managing a Child Who Habitually Lies

Oct 12, 2017
  • Family
  • Family Member
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  • Parent
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Kid peeking through his fingers over his eyes

ADHD and Compulsively Lying

Be Understanding Without Excusing Lies

You shouldn’t excuse your child’s lies, but you should show your child that you understand why they are lying. For example, you may tell your child, “I understand you are struggling so let’s figure out how to backtrack and resolve this situation better.”

You should also talk to your child about happened, including the reasons for the lying. Then, help him find better ways to handle the situation differently in the future.

Don’t Give Your Child Opportunities to Lie

Children with ADHD are not particularly good with details, but if you press, you give your child an opportunity to lie. Even if you know exactly what your child did, don’t press him for answers. Instead, move forward with a fair punishment.

It is also important to try to avoid scenarios where lying is a choice. For example, if he is supposed to do homework, rather than ask if he did it, go and check. If the homework isn’t done, tell him to complete his school work and put away whatever he was doing instead.

Praise Honesty

When children receive positive reinforcement, they will be motivated to keep doing good.

Therefore, when you catch your child telling the truth, offer praise for her honesty. You can also reward your child for telling the truth especially in situations where it is tempting to lie.

Just be careful not to reinforce negative behavior. For example, if your child intentionally lies and ADHD symptoms are not to blame, make sure you address this lying rather than ignoring it.

Help Your Child

If your child struggles with certain tasks, give them a list of steps to help them. For example, if your child struggles to set the table, offering a list will make the job easier and remove the stress that would cause the child to lie.

Remind Your Child to Think Before Speaking

Impulsiveness makes children with ADHD answer too quickly, often resulting in lying. Give your child verbal instructions to think before she answers.

If you give your child an opportunity to think before speaking, you are more likely to get a more truthful response.

Manage Symptoms to Help Stop Lies

In a child, compulsive lying often comes from the inability to treat and manage ADHD symptoms. Though you should discipline your child or teen for any lying, you should also help your teen to manage the symptoms that cause him/her to lie.

For example:

  • Impulsivity – Sometimes a child with ADHD will do something on impulse when they should be doing something else.  For instance, your teen wants to borrow the car to go to the library to study. However, his attention gets diverted, and he decides to go to the mall. Later, his mom wants to know how his studying went. He lies and says it went well. His mom soon finds out he didn’t go to the library like he said he did. While the teen should face consequences for the lying, medication or other treatment adjustments should be considered to help with distraction and impulsivity.
  • Inability to stay on task – Many ADHD children cannot stay on task to finish things like homework, for instance. An ADHD child may hide the fact that she has several incomplete homework assignments. The fact that she is hiding this from her parents should be disciplined. However, she needs to be taught the necessary organization strategies to overcome this problem.
  • Boredom – ADHD kids often lie to get out of tasks they find boring, such as household chores. The thing to do to help this situation is to make the tasks more interesting. You could try playing their favorite music while they are doing the dishes.

How to Address ADHD Habitual Lying

The lying issue needs to be examined so parents can figure out why it occurs and persists. If the child is having problems at school, it may be an academic problem. If the lies are mischievous, for example, to hide alcohol use or other delinquent behavior, they need to be dealt with in a strict way.

The following are suggestions to handling the issue of lying:

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  • Discuss with your child the serious consequences of compromising the trust between the two of you. Tell him or her how it can be rebuilt.
  • Outline what the consequences are for lying.
  • When calling the lie out, do it in a calmly and respectfully way without anger.
  • Demand accountability and reward honesty.
  • Be an honest person yourself, so you are a good role model.
  • Always be respectful when engaging with your ADHD child or teenager, as it facilitates a positive relationship.

The Takeaway

It is important to work with your child to break the cycle of lying and getting in trouble, as these can affect your child in the long-term. Focus on your child’s strengths and giving them appropriate support and praise.

If you are struggling to get your child to cooperate and stop lying, you may want to enlist the help of a psychologist who works with children who have ADHD and their families. And if you find yourself feeling alone in your struggles of raising a child with ADHD, look into support groups with other parents of a child with ADHD.

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Yvonne Banks
Yvonne is a licensed practical nurse who has a passion for helping people to improve their health conditions. Practicing since 2001, she has worked with both geriatric and pediatric patients during the course of her career.
Lana Barhum
Lana Barhum is a freelance medical and health writer from Northeast Ohio. She has written for a variety of online health publications, including the Pain News Network, Alliance Health, and more. Lana uses her experiences to share expert advice on various chronic illness and medical topics. See all of Lana's articles
More Articles by Lana
Resources
  • ADDitude (The Truth about Your Child's Lying)
  • Impact ADHD (The Truth behind Your Child's Lies)
  • Understood (Teens with ADHD and Lying: Why It's Common and How to Respond)
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