• 1luv8008135@lemmy.world
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    6 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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      5 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.

      • NightAuthor@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Not diagnosed till late 20s.

        I’m “twice gifted”, so my intelligence can help me mask my ADHD in some ways. Looking back, all… ALL the signs were there, but no one was looking, or just didn’t understand. Lots of “you just need to apply yourself” kind of shit.

        Anyway, check out Russell Barkley, if you’ve got a thing for educational videos, his are interesting enough, I feel, since he’s talking about me.

        He made me feel a lot more confident that I have it, despite 3 different psychs already agreeing I do… and made me feel a lot more comfortable with who I am.

      • FlihpFlorp@lemm.ee
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        5 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

  • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    5 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.

    • Ann Archy@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I have no problem staying committed to a task when my life depends on it. For all other cases meh.

  • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    I’m more than a little convinced ADHD isn’t really a disorder, society is the issue, and this personality/brain type is actually beneficial in simpler societies.

    • SuddenDownpour@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      When it comes to neurodivergences that aren’t strictly universal negatives (for example: anyone would agree that DID is terrible, while modern autism advocacy strongly opposes any sort of “cure”, and even assimilation as opposed to integration), you can easily find the case that they work great as complements within larger groups. Having an autistic dude fascinated by working materials may result in your tribe being the very first one in the area that gets obsidian spears or composite bows, even if he isn’t a very good hunter otherwise.

      The problem comes when an industrialized, profit-obsessed society attempts to standarize social customs, goods, living spaces and so on while individualizing responsibility for every aspect of your life despite plenty of its factors being outside any one person’s control. Perhaps you’d have a lot to contribute to society if you just had certain unusual accommodations, such as a very quiet house or freedom to set your own working hours, but companies in the contemporary market economy hisses at people who don’t fit like cogs in a machine, and having a house with very specific conditions is outside the reach of a lot of people. Perhaps you do even manage to find the means to become a very productive member of society despite the odds being stacked against you, but because the specificity of your situation means you barely have any negotiation power in the labor market, most of what you produce gets appropriated by someone who isn’t very smart, but has some capital and better “people skills”.

    • wizzor@sopuli.xyz
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      5 months ago

      To an extent, it is also beneficial in today’s society. Hyperfocus and fast context switching can be assets in some jobs, if the downsides are not too great and that can depend on the job and colleagues a lot.

      But yea, I can imagine it has been more of an asset in a different time.

    • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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      5 months ago

      Absolutely, most parts of neurodivergence is evolved to be useful for “wild” humans, hunter-gatherers. Like gee i sure wonder how it might be useful for people living in tents in the wildnerness to have a dude who just cannot go to sleep before 2 in the morning…

      Apprently court jesters were historically generally autistic people, whom the rulers kept around because they wouldn’t sugarcoat stuff and acted like a bullshit detector. Might be pretty handy for a tribe to have some people who’ll speak up when they think the leader is being dumb.

      • Slotos@feddit.nl
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        5 months ago

        That’s not how evolution works. Traits don’t evolve “to be useful”. Anyone who claims a goal to evolution has failed to grasp evolution.

        Evolution converges on local maxima by selecting for traits that are good enough to continuously propagate through the filter of individuals death. For sexual reproduction, if a trait is not bad enough to continuously reduce carriers’ presence in a mating pool, it can and will remain.

        It’s survival of not inadequate enough.

    • Zeon@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      As someone diagnosed with ADHD, I find many of these posts overly dramatic. I understand that dealing with it is challenging, but when I see others discussing it, I sometimes feel that some might not genuinely have ADHD and are merely exaggerating for attention.

      • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        pretty much the biggest inconvenience for me was getting people to write stuff down. Like when they’d try talk for five minutes about how they wanted something built, explicit instructions, I’d always have to remind them, write it down or draw it, if you want me to understand, we’ve been over this for years now, you know I know how to do the work once the desired result is presented in a way i can understand.

      • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        I was reading your study, and got to the part where they said it is hard to empirically test this theory because of limited genome whatever, and it crossed my mind Africans don’t carry the neanderthal DNA Europeans do, so i looked up if ADHD was more common in either race and it apparently is much more prevalent in white people. Yeah correlation isn’t causation but it is interesting.

  • Phegan@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    At age 41, I just figured out I have ADHD, I assumed my entire life that I had a complex set of flaws.

    • OfTheScarletChorus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 months ago

      I am 50. After reading a lot about the subject, I also suspect I am affected - my whole life. Getting an appointment with a psychiatrist to be sure right now. It would explain so much…

      • citrusface@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Well good luck - Vyvanse has a generic version now and has been working wonders for my 40 year old self… Except for the insomnia tonight.

    • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      I figured it out last year, I was 39. You’re in good company.

      I just couldn’t figure it out until I came across information about ADHD and everything clicked. I’d be lying to say that I haven’t had moments of self doubt and imposter syndrome like the op suggests.

      To me, at the end of the day, whether I’m actually ADHD or not, I have very similar tenancies and traits and the treatment works for me. That’s all that really matters.

  • Leg@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    This is unironically me. I just went through a lengthy diagnosis process that determined I do not in fact have ADHD, despite ticking an alarming number of boxes. I call myself ADHD-adjacent now.

    • UNWILLING_PARTICIPANT@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      Wow does that feel worse? I mean ADHD or no, you’re still beholden to your neurology to some degree.

      Even if isn’t a common diagnosis for the kind of thing you are.

      • Leg@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        It felt pretty bad at first. I wanted to be able to help myself somehow, and I thought this was a great place to start. It was like starting back at square one. But practices and therapies that assist with ADHD also tend to help me out, so at least I got something out of it.

  • prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    Oh. Good. I’d gone a few minutes without doing this mental check, thank you for putting it back in there for today. 🫠

  • 1ostA5tro6yne@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    5 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.

  • “What if I don’t actually have ADHD, I simply share some behavioral issues that make it seem like ADHD because I was raised by parents who did have ADHD and I just kind of adopted it from them?” - Me, like once a week since getting diagnosed.

  • nman90@lemmy.world
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    5 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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      5 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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      5 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.

  • Daxtron2@startrek.website
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    5 months ago

    It doesn’t help that every asshole on the Internet suddenly has a psychology degree to tell you you don’t actually have ADHD/autism.

  • Empricorn@feddit.nl
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    5 months ago

    Whether you “officially” have ADHD or just the symptoms, it’s not your fault. It’s your responsibility.

    • halva@discuss.tchncs.de
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      5 months ago

      getting a real diagnose in my country means ill be stuck with a mental disability in an extremely psychophobic society with no way to treat it because all adhd meds are banned here

      so my only way to cope is to talk to other people who probably have adhd as well and learn how they manage their lives

    • ThirdWorldOrder@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      Getting diagnosed is a joke. Literally took 10 minutes. They don’t verify or go into depth about anything. At least it was that way for me. They gave me adderall but it made me feel like a crackhead so I only used it for a month. Vynase was better but still didn’t end up liking it too much. These days I let Jesus take the wheel.