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It will get better, I promise!
I grew up as a girl with AD/HD that was noticed by a third grade teacher but when unnoticed and untreated until about three months before the end of my senior year of high school (mostly due to the fact that even in the mid to late nineties, a lot of psychiatrists thought "she's female, too smart, and is bouncing off the wall, she's just bored and needs more advanced classes"), so I identify with your daughter because I've had similar issues.
Some of the things I've noticed from past experience: keeping normal female friends when you have AD/HD is extremely hard, but boys seem to be much more forgiving. Normal girls start playing extremely complex "social politics" from a very young age, and these politics are so complex that an ADHD girl would have a very difficult time even breaching that first layer, much less get the normal girls to stick around. My experience has been that boys are frequently much easier to get along with and much more appreciate of an ADHD girl's unique perspective and contributions. In fact, all but one of my friends throughout preschool and elementary school were boys! They didn't even care if I was athletic or not, since my admitted lack of tact led to many amusing sayings and a great deal of well-placed sarcasm that they found entertaining.
Most of my friends in late junior high/high school fell into these categories: A) slightly older or slightly younger than me, B) also had issues such as ADHD, dyslexia, or Aspergers Syndrome or knew someone who did and were used to dealing with it already, C) were the tomboyish, nerdy girls and other social outcasts, or D) were boys who didn't mind hanging out with a girl who proved that she could keep up with the snarking, as mentioned above.
My advice would be to consider encouraging your daughter to seek out friendship in areas that you might be avoiding because of concern over gender roles or whatever reason you may have; try a co-ed scouting agency such as Camp Fire or Spiral Scouts (it's mostly geared towards Wiccan and other Neo-Pagan families, but they are extremely open and welcoming by nature and most of the kids in those groups have dealt with similar issues at school). Girl scouts at this point, unless you interview the group and discover that they already have a girl with ADHD who might be willing to be friends with your daughter, I really really REALLY advise against because of painful past experiences.
Also try discussing the issue with a school counselor and see if there's other students at the school with learning disabilities or social difficulties, and see if there's a way to arrange a lunch group that your daughter can sit with during lunch or free periods and share experiences. And always remember that junior high is the toughest period, but once you get to high school there are a lot (and in most cases, I do mean A LOT) more people to meet and a higher chance of meeting the right group of folks.
Since this is getting kind of long, in passing I encourage you and your daughter to keep an open mind and start looking for friends in places you haven't considered yet, and to try your best to stick it out. It'll get better soon! Last but not least, you can also check with your doctor or local YMCA etc. for a Big Brother/Big Sister type program or even just a local network of older teens, young women, and others with ADHD who have been through this already who can act as a mentor and also a resource for taking some of the stress off of yourself. This website is a good place to start, and finding an older mentor for her also has the added bonus of giving her someone with the same problems as herself to look up to.
Hope that wasn't too long, and then it helps! Just hang in there!
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