• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

S.P.A.C.E. ADHD Group

ADHD Parent Support Group

  • Home
  • What is ADHD?
  • Meet Ups
    • Monthly Meeting Dates for 2025
  • About SPACE Stockport
    • Meet The Team
  • Useful Resources
    • Parents and Carers
    • Information for Professionals
  • Blog

ADHD

4 June 2019 By Claire SPACE Team

Volunteering

Cartoon Donna

As many of you know SPACE is ran by a small team of volunteers. We use our professional skills and knowledge to support families with ADHD. This week is National Volunteering Week, which seems like a good time to talk about the challenges of managing a task of this size, with the constraints that come with running a busy organisation with such limited resources.

At present we primarily work with parents of children with ADHD. The key strength in our current structure is that we are firmly part of the community we serve. The reason that the four of us run this charity is because we all have at least one child with ADHD. SPACE was formed to create a support network that didn’t exist. We came because we needed support for our own families and we stayed because we wanted to support those that came behind us.

The task ahead of us is huge, but we’re determined to tackle it head on. We have worked hard to build our knowledge on ADHD and make sure that we are always up to date on new developments in the scientific community. We have established positive relationships with not only the families we support, but also within the local SEND and national ADHD communities.

Parenting is hard and parenting children with ADHD can sometimes be especially hard. Often we as parents are required to fight for our children, because for many of them school can be problematic, particularly for those who have difficulty managing their behaviour during the school day. At home, as parents, we sometimes fall into the trap of fighting with our children, leaving us trapped in the middle and on the receiving end of everything from everybody.

Over the years we have heard every myth, stereotype and ridiculous theory about ADHD and it is staggering that after all this time, we still talk to parents with a new diagnosis and hear the same nonsense that some of us heard over a decade ago about our own children. So much more is known about the condition today, yet the same old stigma and misinformation is still being fired at parents. Children are still struggling in education. Those with Inattentive Type ADHD are still being ignored and misdiagnosed. Parents are still being made to feel bad about considering whether they should let their child try medication and people with book deals are still making money by claiming that it doesn’t exist!

ADHD isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but living successfully with the condition usually needs knowledge, support and a few practical techniques. Children and young people need to know that their brains work differently and learn how to mitigate the potential downsides. Parenting a child with ADHD often needs a different approach, one which accommodates those differences. Parents also need information about the various local services and unfortunately many of them also need to know their rights as they manoeuvre the various systems affecting children with special educational needs.

We currently work full time in our day jobs and squeeze multiple jobs as part of SPACE into morning commutes, lunchtimes, evenings, late nights and weekends. We regularly use our annual leave to exhibit at open days, attend meetings with professionals from the NHS and even attend the All Party Parliamentary Group on ADHD at Westminster.

Angela Rayner with The SPACE Team
The SPACE Team with Shadow Minister for Education, Angela Rayner

The problem with squeezing multiple jobs into gaps that don’t exist, is that there isn’t enough time to do everything. Our current structure simply does not afford us enough resource. To do everything on our list some of this needs to be a job, ideally several jobs. Resources are often referred to as The 3 Ms – Men, Money and Minutes. We are four women, with no funding and no time and yet despite these facts, year in and year out we make a difference. Despite the small team size, this is actually a 300% increase on one of our previous incarnations, where Michelle ran the group alone with no formal support.

SPACE currently has no paid staff and every single thing we do, is done by one of us. Between us we cover every role, in every department unpaid and top of our day jobs and family commitments. It’s frustrating when we have to park ideas due to a lack of funds or we miss opportunities to attend events, but mostly it’s frustrating that we could do more to help families if we had more time and more money.

At present we are not a funded service and have existed with no financial support from either the NHS or our local authority. As we currently have no funding streams in place we hold occasional fundraising events, our most recent one being our sponsored zipwire.

SPACE Zipwire Photo
The SPACE Team Sponsored ZipWire

During 2018’s ADHD Awareness Month we put on a conference called the World of ADHD According to SPACE and the conference was primarily funded by the team hurtling down some Welsh mountains along with some additional funds provided by a small number of conference supporters who paid a small amount to exhibit products and services that we felt would be useful to local families.

Over the years we have managed to keep our costs down. Our monthly meet ups have been generously supported by local business owner Heather, who owns Funky Monkey Coffee Company and allows us to take over the venue free of charge each month. This has provided us with a welcoming and comfortable venue, in which to meet parents and we will always be extremely grateful to Funky Monkey for their support. We have managed to balance the books for a very long time, but this has also impacted on the amount of activities that we have been able to do so far.

SPACE at Funky Monkey
SPACE at Funky Monkey

The good news is that there are numerous sources of funding for 3rd Sector organisations like ours. The bad news is that actually securing that funding requires certain skills. Making time to research the available funding pools and produce written bids is challenging. In many organisations there will be a specific person or even a whole team of people responsible for bid writing, so we’re playing catch up. We’re attending events, using online resources and accepting offers of help from people in our personal networks who have been kind enough to help us learn those skills. We are also trialling other fundraising activities including Amazon Smile and JustGiving.

Despite the hard work, the frustrations and the challenges, we love what we do. We love being ADHD Champions. We love that we get to help other families. We love being able to reassure parents that ADHD isn’t always a bad thing. We love highlighting positive role models and sharing in each others sucesses. We love the community we’ve built and no matter how our organisation changes in the years to come, we’ll be here to welcome many more parents to our tribe.

The SPACE Team
The SPACE Team

Filed Under: General Tagged With: ADHD, National Volunteering Week, neurodiversity

15 March 2018 By Claire SPACE Team

NICE Guidelines

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) provide national guidelines and advice to improve health and social care and this month they released a new set of guidelines for Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD / ADHD) These new guidelines update and replace the previous guidelines from 2008.

The team here at SPACE are particularly pleased to see an increased focus within the guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of girls and adults of both sexes. A common ADHD myth is that the condition only affects male children, which is now known to be completely untrue.

There are a number of common misconceptions about ADHD, particularly the idea that it is solely a problem of behaviour, which leads to the common stereotype of naughty boys shouting and throwing chairs. Whilst there are many cases where this is true, it completely ignores anybody that doesn’t present with those symptoms which creates a serious problem for those who have the Inattentive form of ADHD. The new guidelines includes a reference to attention issues, under recognition, highlighting the fact that ADHD is not a behavioural condition, despite the fact that it is often challenging behaviour that is most widely recognised.

By only recognising challenging hyperactive behaviour, children who are well behaved in the classroom and able to maintain a reasonable level of academic attainment are left to manage without support. This can lead to them fighting internally to control their behaviour during the school day and “exploding” the minute they get home.

Internalising the effects of undiagnosed ADHD is also a problem for adults, particularly women and there are large numbers of adults presenting with mental health complaints, which actually stem from a lack of diagnosis and support for ADHD.

The updated NICE Guidelines are for healthcare professionals, medical commissioners, those with ADHD and their families and carers. Outdated information is responsible for many people not receiving the support they need to thrive and we are pleased to see that the updated information from NICE recognises a number of factors which were not present in the previous edition, including a recognition of the hereditary factory. We are hopeful that this will lead to an improvement in diagnosis and training and lead to better outcomes for families with ADHD.

View the NICE Guidelines here: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng87/

Filed Under: General Tagged With: ADD, ADHD, Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, NICE Guidelines

25 September 2017 By Claire SPACE Team

SPACE Take On The Titan – Sponsored Zipwire

On October the 7th the SPACE Team are travelling to Wales to take on the Titan.

Titan is a four person zipwire that flies 2000 metres down a Welsh valley, which raises the question of why four women, three of whom are terrified of heights, are driving to Wales to put themselves through that ordeal. The answer to that question is that they are raising money for SPACE Stockport, the ADHD parent support group they run.

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a condition which is regularly characterised by hyperactivity, inattention and impulsivity. It is not necessarily a bad thing, but it can be challenging, especially if children and young people have problems managing their behaviour or experience difficulties at school.

Despite all the scientific research there is a lot of misinformation about ADHD, which leads to ignorance and negative stereotypes. To help combat these problems and raise awareness of the facts, we’re challenging the misinformation about ADHD by challenging our fear of heights. October is ADHD Awareness month so we decided to celebrate and raise funds for our group with a sponsored Zipwire.

ADHD is still stigmatised and parents and carers often find themselves on the front line. SPACE provides information, advice and support for parents in a friendly open environment, with others in a similar situation.We share information on a variety of topics including school conflicts, medication, and the diagnosis process. We are also able to signpost parents to services which can help them and their children. As a community of ADHD parents we are able to share personal experiences, which can especially helpful for those with a new diagnosis who may feel overwhelmed.

SPACE holds regular monthly meet ups and provides online support, but we’d like to extend the range of services we offer and unfortunately that costs money, so we’re taking on the Titan and we’d appreciate your support. If you’d like to make a donation to our zipwire challenge please visit our Just Giving page where you can donate securely.

If you happen to be in Wales on the 7th of October and hear screaming, don’t worry it’s just the SPACE Team supporting parents, abolishing myths and fighting sterotypes.

Wish us luck.

https://www.justgiving.com/campaigns/charity/s-p-a-c-e/adhd

Filed Under: General Tagged With: ADHD, ADHD Awareness Month, ADHD parent support, Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, fundraising, S.P.A.C.E., SPACE Stockport, sponsorship

17 September 2017 By Claire SPACE Team

Liverpool Here We Come

The team here at SPACE Stockport pride ourselves on our knowledge of ADHD but we’re never too proud to learn more. This November, Claire and Sharyn will be travelling to Liverpool to attend the ADHD Fundation’s 2017 Conference.

We’re looking forward to catching up on the latest information on ADHD and sharing it all with our local parents.

Filed Under: General Tagged With: ADHD, ADHD Conference

4 January 2017 By Claire SPACE Team

SPACE Stockport ADHD Parent Support Group Meetings 2017

SPACE Stockport hold their ADHD parent support group meetings on the second Wednesday of the month at a coffee shop in Stockport called The Funky Monkey Coffee Company.

If you have a child with ADHD and would like to spend a couple of hours with other local parents in the same position, why not join us?

Wednesday 11th January 2017
Wednesday 8th February 2017
Wednesday 8th March 2017
Wednesday 12th April 2017
Wednesday 10th May 2017
Wednesday 14th June 2017
Wednesday 12th July 2017
No Meeting In August
Wednesday 13th September 2017
Wednesday 11th October 2017
Wednesday 8th November 2017
Wednesday 13th December 2017

Filed Under: General, Meeting Dates Tagged With: ADHD, Parent Support, S.P.A.C.E., SPACE Stockport

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • Twitter

© 2018–2025 SPACE Stockport | Registered Charity Number 1129386