ADHD by Zoe Kessler
The Real Deal on Relationships, Finding your Focus and Finding your Keys
Attention Deficit Disorder is neither a curse nor a blessing. But diagnosis provides a sense of relief and can release you from the self-blame that accompanies academic or social difficulties, low self-esteem and self-doubt. You are not stupid- you have a recognised brain chemistry condition.
What appears as out of seat behaviour, daydreaming and careless mistakes in childhood may in adulthood become inner restlessness, failure to plan ahead, incomplete projects and forgetfulness. Feelings of failure and inability to accomplish their goals led to more anxiety and depression.
Women blame themselves for not knowing why to do or how to act and were less likely to use effective problem solving strategies.
1. Being Diagnosed: President of the Club
As I learned about ADHD and recognised myself in the descriptions, I felt as though some cruel joke had been played on me and everyone was laughing at my expense. I felt devastated. After a lifetime of struggles, now I had a mental illness too? It was too much. Yet it also offered a new view on experiences from my past.
Not a curse. I have always revelled in my creativity, compassion for others, my sense of solidarity with those who struggle to overcome adversity, and my vitality and passion for life.
Behaviour. Monday 11am. Spun in the middle of the bedroom wondering what to wear, then going from room to room, spinning in circles of thoughts of the tasks to be completed. No idea where to start and unable to prioritise. Late afternoon I panicked - could not even find my list of things to do. Night before woke at 3am sweating and anxious about unpaid bills and unfinished projects which was a common pattern. I was sinking fast and did not know how to come up with next months' rent. I was a mess.
I had turned 47 and my goals and dreams were eluding me.
Diagnosed with Attention Deficit disorder - I bawled my eyes out. My self-image was blown apart. I was not certifiably crazy.
And scared. My fear of rejection after my diagnosis was triggered by my experience as an adoptee and by negative stereotypes of people with mental health disorders. I was very wary of labels. As a kid I had been taunted with ' You were adopted' and now
I had another label - ADHD. I had to see my life through a new lens.
friends thought that I knew!
Stigma of ignorance/stereotypes and stigma. Public think that means she is an idiot. ADHD is not a measurement of intelligence.
2. Being Hyperactive: On the go and gabby
3. Being Addicted: Natural born Cougar.
I lived in terror of choosing the wrong life partner. It was a decision I did not feel qualified to make and I often found myself thinking, What if there is someone better around the next corner? How could I settle for just one person, one kind of relationship, when there is so much more to discover? How could you possibly sleep with the same person for the next 50 yrs? All I could imagine was a life of boredom and dreary lacklustre routine. I was a connoisseur of discontent. My romances always ended as soon as we had settled into a comfortable pattern and I had discovered all that there was to know about one another - or so I thought.
Invariably I would come up with some reason why the relationship was not working for me and feel horrible about once again ripping someone heart's out after telling him that I loved him. If a boyfriend was fascinating and intellectual, he wasn't into organic food. If he was too soft - he was not manly enough. If he was a painter living on a shoestring and a hopeless romantic, I feared a life of poverty. I was instantly attracted to and fascinated by countess men. And almost as quickly, found myself searching for an escape route and something new.
Being Inattentive: Lunch Date? What lunch date? Inattention. A Hallmark of ADHD. One of the main traits of the disorder. It is less about not paying attention and more about being unable to SUSTAIN our attention. We are distractible. Our attention is easily diverted from our intended focus to other things which are more interesting, more exciting and SHINIER.
Stress, anxiety, lack of sleep, and many other factors can make it even more difficult to pay attention. Inattention also leads us to bang out legs onto desk corners, bump into doorjambs and appear clumsier than other people. And wear mismatched socks.
We are easily bored and our clever quick intelligent minds look for something to alleviate the boredom. Such as comfort eating. Perhaps you should drive down to the supermarket - only you have forgotten where you put your car keys.
Tricks to get over this?
*Plan your eating so that you have the healthier snacks and drinks to hand to guzzle at your desk.*Do important things when you are most alert. Know what time of day works best for you. Knowledge is power and it helps you plan and prioritise.
*display your to do list in a prominent place - or your attention will default to the need to water the plants, the lovely view, the interesting email with lots of links to writing pals, Facebook…
*use a paper day planner - not an electronic device. You have to write in the appointments and task for that day - focus on top 2 or 3 priorities
* don’t be shy to ask someone to repeat something. *recognise that distraction can sabotage your efforts.
*use a complete change of activity or location to refresh yourself so you can focus when you return
*use self-talk to help you get back on track. 'Is this what you were going to do?'
*psych yourself up for productivity. Use sensory signals to tell your brain that it is time to work now to the exclusion of everything else. A candle. A cartoon. An online game. A musical piece. Some ritual or routine that helps you mentally transition into the work but it has to be time limited.
*An uncluttered desk symbolises an uncluttered mind and keeps distractions down. Just try not to glance down at the temporary pile on your floor.
* If you are editing - you might use a different room from the one you write in. All part of the pre-work ritual.
3. Being Hyper Focused: The Party. You are single mindedly focused on one thing -to the exclusion of everything else.
4. Being Fired: Worst Executive Secretary of the Month Award. Discover your passion and live it through your work. Writing might NOT be it. And you have to honest about that. Identify your values, strengths and passions. Are you spending your time trying to meet the expectations of others and living according to their values? If you have lived with judgement and criticism of your perceived failings and deficits you need to work on restoring your self-confidence.
5. Being Socially Challenged: Flunking out at the Four Seasons.
6. Being Hormonal: Day Fourteen
7. Being Time Management Challenged: Not Dressed Up with Somewhere to Go. *use a kitchen timer and break your tasks into half hour sessions.* curb perfectionism - [the hardest thing of all for me-] * create a daily structure and stick to it. Too many late nights trying to play catch up to meet deadline followed by over sleeping the next morning does not work.
8. Being Impulsive: When ADHD runs the show.
9. Being Disorganised: Of Mountains and Molehills. Clutter adds to the confusion and fuels anxiety and chaos.
10. Being Overwhelmed: Catching the Sneaky Saboteur. Overwhelmed. *Stop saying yes to everything.*eat, pray if you are religious, sleep, *walk. *get out in nature.
11. Being Financially Challenged: A million roads to ruin. Procrastination is the kiss of death if you work for yourself. But you have to know the root causes of the problem.
12. Being Unconventional: Air Guitar and Garden Gnomes.
13. Being Creative: The ADHD way. Creativity is born from a highly inquisitive mind that sees connections where others might not. Our distractibility can act LIKE A NET IN THE SEA, LETTING US HAUL UP A RANDOM CATCH OF IDEAS, THOUGHTS, IMPRESSIONS, VISUAL IMFLUENCES, SOUNDS and more - which we then cook up into a new and exciting stew that only our minds can create- unique, powerful and personal. Sometime you have to trust your creative impulses.
14. Being Highly Sensitive: Honk if you Hate Loud Noises. ADHD has long been associated with increased physical and emotional sensitivity or hypersensitivity which can make normal daily activities very distracting. *wear comfy clothes *use earplugs to help you manage painfully loud volumes such as in very noisy traffic with loud horns, crowds or at the movies.
15. Being Experimental: Treatments to Try. To centre yourself. *meditate, chant or do yoga. *be around horses or other animals, *find an outlet for your artistic expression - dance, music, singing, and sewing - Playful and fun.
Zoe had created a fascinating personal account of her life with Attention Deficit Disorder and how she has struggled to find happiness in a very chaotic and out of control life.
What worked for me was the very practical tips and advice she has to give on how you can fight back and get some control and structure into your life.
What worked less well for me was the heavy emphasis on the use of medication. There are levels of ADD and for the very serious cases medication such as Ritalin has a place – but most creative people have symptoms which are lower down on the spectrum or only slip into this condition in times of great stress and anxiety, so this is definitely not a one size fits all condition.
Highly recommended for all creatives.
Note:I received a copy of this book from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.