Aug 18

ADHD and Anxiety in children: finding the balance between support and avoidance

What’s the link between ADHD and anxiety?

In my work as a psychotherapist - and in my life as an ADHD mum - I often see anxiety and ADHD walk hand in hand. The latest research suggests that around one in three children with ADHD will also experience significant anxiety at some point.

For many families, the anxiety isn’t just the child’s. Parents feel it too. We see our child freeze in a busy playground or cling at the school gate, and our heart rate matches theirs. Our instinct is to protect them. But sometimes that protection feeds the anxiety instead of easing it.

Why do parents become anxious about their child’s anxiety?

It’s natural. When you love someone, you want to stop them hurting. But anxiety doesn’t fade if we avoid it altogether - it grows.
In clinic, I’ve seen this happen step by step:
  • First, the child avoids school.
  • Then hobbies fade away.
  • They stop seeing extended family.
  • Before long, they’re spending most of their time alone in their room.


This isn’t who they are. It’s what anxiety does - it shrinks their world.

How do you know when to push and when to pause?

This is the question I hear most from parents. There’s a fine line between encouraging resilience and creating a trauma response.

We never want to throw a child into the deep end. But we also don’t want to keep them away from every puddle. The answer is scaffolding - creating just enough support so they can manage, cope, and slowly build confidence.

Think of it as holding the bike while they pedal. You’re close enough to catch them, but far enough away to let them try.

What does scaffolding look like in real life?

When my own child’s anxiety was high, mornings were a battle. We started with tiny steps - first just getting dressed for school, even if we didn’t make it out the door. Then walking to the school gate. Then inside for the first ten minutes of the day.

In clinic, I suggest parents
  • Break challenges into smaller, manageable pieces.
  • Use calm, predictable routines.
  • Practise anxiety triggers in safe, short bursts.
  • Model coping by talking through your own strategies.

Over time, the “carpet” of avoidance lifts, and the crumbs - the fears - can be cleared away before they grow.

What can parents do if they feel stuck?

If you’re feeling unsure or overwhelmed, you’re not alone. Feeling anxious about your child’s anxiety doesn’t mean you’re failing. It means you care.

Small, consistent steps - backed by belief that your child can cope - make a huge difference. And remember: children borrow our confidence when theirs is low.

For more practical tools, the twigged Toolkit for ADHD includes evidence-based strategies for managing anxiety alongside ADHD traits, designed for home and school life. Try the Free Taster now (and if you like it, get 20% off with our Early Bird offer - for a limited time only).

gee eltringham

The founder

I started twigged out of both personal urgency and professional insight.
As The Toolkit Therapist and parent to a neurodivergent child, I experienced first hand the overwhelm and isolation families often face after a diagnosis.
Frustrated by the lack of practical, empathetic support, I set out to create what I couldn’t find: simple, evidence-based tools that make everyday life easier.
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