• 1luv8008135@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Me: I need to leave this community. What if these memes are just making me think I have ADHD when I don’t.

    Also me on literally every meme that’s posted here: haha, hard rel8

    • BeigeAgenda@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      All these ADHD memes have several times made me think if there’s a light version?

      But from what I understand everyone can experience ADHD “symptoms” from time to time, but people who are diagnosed with it have symptoms that are several orders of magnitude more intense.

      • FlihpFlorp@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        I’m gonna sound like a broken record here but my favorite thing is:

        Everyone pees but when you pee 60 times a day you go see a doctor

  • 1ostA5tro6yne@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    10 months ago

    i was diagnosed early in childhood. my parents chose to believe it was fake and more than once actually pleaded with me to explain why beating me senseless every other day didn’t make the behavior stop.

  • nman90@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I thought this a couple of years ago, even though i was diagnosed at 5 (29 now). It’s funny how i went my whole life thinking it was just the stereotypical adhd is just hyperactivity and laziness because the doctors never really tried to explain how this disorder could affect me. I decided to look it up studf about adhd and am deeply conflicted by how it literally explains my entire life and behaviors even though i thought i had it under control. On one hand im glad there is something that explains a lot of my struggles and medical issues but on the other i feel like my entire personality is just dictated by adhd and that i never really had as much freedom of choice as i thought i did.

    • Avalokitesha@programming.dev
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      10 months ago

      I feel like the more you understand how your brain works, the more you learn how to work around it.

      Full disclosure: I’m not diagnosed, but on a waitlist for ADD - for over a year now and it’s not moving, but I digress. I am diagnosed with autism though.

      To me it feels like my brain is a wildwater. You can’t control it, but if you change the environment around it, you can guide it into useful directions. I’m lucky that by now the people around me have accepted it and are able to laugh with me when I fuck up. We have a lot of systems in place to reign in the worst effects, and the more we get used to it the easier it gets not to fall into traps and not to be unreliable.

      I guess I’m working on my skills as a mindbender who tricks my brain into being useful while still allowing it to get that dopamine?

    • SoleInvictus@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      It’s weird, isn’t it? I was diagnosed as an adult, just a couple of years ago, and it was surreal how much sense it made of my entire life. I’m now on guanfacine which makes me feel like I have a superpower, but it’s really just being able to remember things, notice more things, and concentrate for more than two seconds.

  • 4grams@awful.systems
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    10 months ago

    I’ve known for a long time I should try to get a diagnosis but I’m afraid of changing now that I’ve spent 40+ years figuring out how to live.

    • Stamets@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      Think of it like this.

      Your whole life your foot has been getting more and more swollen. You don’t know why. It impedes every facet of your life but it’s never consistent. Some days it is swollen and hard to run on. Other days you can sprint no problem but standing still is what hurts. Other days it is killing you no matter what you do. But you push on and over years you learn to adapt, humans are good at that. You find ways to relieve the pressure when the standing days happen, find ways to keep running even if you want to tear off your limb. You get through it. You make do. You’re never comfortable, you’re never fine, you’re never completely okay but you make do and you’ve come to terms with that.

      And then one day someone sees your foot and says “Oh, that’s arthritis. Yeah there’s some meds you can take that will massively reduce pain, swelling, allow you to run and stand whenever you want. Just gotta find a doc to help with it.”

      Are you going to keep running on that foot? Or is it even the slightest bit worth it to try and get a little relief after suffering for so long?

  • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    I hate explaining ADHD to people because it’s a completely unintuitive disorder. It’s like “I’m easily distracted” yet at other times I’m completely incapable of tearing my focus away from something. I have continual thoughts of things unrelated to my current focus, and other times I can’t think of anything at all, I just can’t hold on to any thoughts. I’m fidgety, almost all the time, but I can sit still and drive a car on the freeway for several hours with absolutely no issues.

    It’s like, for every symptom I have of the disorder there’s always a “but sometimes” caveat that is present. It’s just a nightmare to try to make someone understand especially when they’ve never struggled with the disorder or anything like it. It’s a complete conundrum.

    • Dulusa@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      It’s not that you don’t have attention, what your lacking is the control over your attention. This means that you have a harder time directing your attention to what is “necessary”.

      The result of this might be not being able to focus your attention on something, but it can show also as not being able to shift the attention away from something.

      It’s actually not two different sides but rather the same.