Tag Archives: ADHD

Procrastination is the Creative Process of the ADHD Brain

This was written with the intention of trying to show non ADHDers how our brains work. Please share it with your loved ones so they can understand you better :). Good Luck!

With an ADHD brain, time is both your enemy and your best friend. How can I best explain this?

When your brain is going a mile a minute thinking of all these awesome and amazing ideas all at once that you simply must do immediately or they will never get done. PLUS, you are thinking about “I have to do the dishes; I have to get to the grocery store; I have to cook dinner; I have a mountain competing pile of laundry that needs to be done; the bathroom; the living room needs vacuuming; I have to feed the dog…” I think you get the point.

For most brains it would be easy and simple for someone to sit down and prioritize what they have to do and when it should be and can be done. People with ADHD brains have this other “little” problem called “where the heck to I start????”. Even if we actually have the forethought through all this chaotic thinking to just take ten minutes to make a list. Even after that list is made, actually starting the list after all that list making, chances are we need a brain break. We might even start on the first item (that in itself is an accomplishment) the issue then becomes, well I’ve finished that, but now I am too tired mentally to start on the next task, so maybe you try do another task but in order to complete that task, task number 4 needs to be completed first. In a nut shell it all becomes very overwhelming very quickly.

I do find chunking helps a little (sometimes) and it is better than doing nothing. The problem I find with chunking is that I run out of time. I will use chunking when tiding up for example. I will take ten minutes and tidy up the living room then, take a break for ten minutes, then take the piles I have made and bring them back (as close to in proximity) to where they actually belong, take a break for ten minutes, then vacuum for ten minutes then take a break but by then it’s time to go pick up the kids from school and then distraction sets in, the kids are telling me about their day, they want a snack, they have homework or notes from the teacher and then by the time that whirlwind is all over the dishes in the sink look pretty darn daunting let me tell you. Yet I still have to figure out a way to make dinner through that mess. On top of all this, in order for me to get anything done, I need to take some time to quiet my brain. So I sit, do something mindless on the computer for a while maybe to start to re-focus and then that turns into procrastination. Think of procrastination is an ADHDers creative process; the only way we can even begin to think about taking on that next task is to first quiet the brain. The necessary quietness that I create in my brain makes it very difficult for me to start over or start something new. Let the procrastination process begin! It’s a vicious cycle.

Things usually do get done eventually though, but by the time you do finally get through that list, you have to start all over again and let me tell you all something very important, if you learn nothing else, learn this… THE WORST thing you can do to an ADHD brain is create a painfully boring mundane task and then make us do it again!

Truth be told, when I do have time, sometimes, I just don’t want to. And I realize that most people (ADHD brain or not) feel that way, but if you read the above again and imagine your brain thinking like this ALL THE TIME, NON STOP you can maybe get a small peak into the reason my house is a mess! And why I need a housekeeper!

Check out this hilarious video from Totally ADD, it basically explains the above, if you don’t have the attention span to read it 😉

Also, support our efforts in Shining a Positive Light on ADHD at I Am Shiny

creative_process

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I Am Shiny – Shining a Positive Light on ADHD

There is a young girl in Michigan (age 9) who I am truly inspired by. She did something we all need to do; she spoke out publically at her school about her “differences”. She has ADHD and was experiencing social issues with peers and decided to take control of the situation by educating her classmates. She asked her teacher if she could do a presentation to her class about what it is like to have ADHD. Can you even imagine? I mean, how awesome is that? This young girl had the courage and fortitude to stand up in front of her peers and educate them! The presentation shared her experiences and challenges with the condition as well as some positive facts. The presentation also showed all of the amazing things popular (famous) people who have this condition are doing and have done and who are extremely successful.

This is what we need, what ADHD needs! We need people, children, young people and adults to not be afraid of ridicule, we need people to stand up and say “I have ADHD” and I am awesome!

Living with ADHD can be challenging. But really, what in life is not challenging? Everything is challenging, if it’s not one thing then it’s another. There is a lot of science behind why we are the way we are, why we do what we do and why we don’t “fit” into the mold of what society thinks about how we should think. At the end of the day though it really doesn’t matter, we all are who we are and we all think how we think. What we ADHDers need to focus on is teaching ourselves (first and foremost) and then teaching the rest of the world that we have something truly amazing to offer. We ADHDers have a very special and unique way of looking at the world. We see things differently and therefore are able to have a truly unique vantage point. We are creative, we are imaginative, we are out of the box thinkers. If it were not for ADHD type thinking, we would not have half of the things, gadgets and inventions that we all enjoy every day. Objects we can’t live without in many cases. That type of out of the box, big picture thinking is what drives our society. It is what keeps us moving forward. That type of thinking needs to be celebrated not ridiculed. We need ambassadors to spread the word and shed a positive light on “being shiny”.

Within the ADHD community many of us call ourselves “Shiny”. I LOVE this word! It describes an ADHD brain and personality perfectly. Shiny describes how people with ADHD see and feel about the world. How we express ourselves.  The term “Shiny” takes the stigma and negativity away from this condition and gives it a positive and uplifting spirit. We need to get rid of the negativity associated with this condition. Too many adults and children see ADHD as life sentence, but it doesn’t have to be that way. Shiny is a wonderful way to be and I for one a proud to be shiny!

In an effort to stand strong together, we have started an “I Am Shiny” awareness campaign. The campaigns single goal is to shed a positive light on ADHD and therefore raise awareness. To get rid of the stigma that is associated with this condition. Every day, people are afraid to say anything at their jobs, in school, in job interviews or to friends and family for fear of being pigeon held in this “false idea” of what we ADHDers must be like.

Let’s educate about all the amazing things we ADHDers can do. Let’s all stand up together and say “I Am Shiny” and I Am Awesome! Visit our “I Am Shiny” facebook page to pledge your support and keep up to date with all things “Shiny”. Visit www.iamshiny.org

ADHD_different

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Patience for Sale?

Anyone know where I can get some patience? I am NOT a patient person. Probably because of my ADHD or whatever but it doesn’t really matter I am not a patient person. I am NOT patient with electronics. I have been known to throw electronics when they get me going. I threw a knife at a fire alarm once. In my defense I was pregnant so those hormones were raging. I probably would have done it anyway, but I am sticking with pregnancy for that one. I am patient with my kids though, most of the time. That’s good, right?! However, I don’t think my kids would agree… I’ll have to ask them… They will probably laugh their buts off when I do, but trust me I am more patient than they realize when it comes to them, defiantly. I think I must also get this impatience from my mother, maybe it’s genetic. I remember times as a child when my mother was very impatient, frustrated easily. She was kind of famous for it in our circle of friends. There was once an incident with a banana that I won’t get into. I don’t know, it’s probably both learned and genetic. My impatience also affects my life in positive ways; I don’t wait to be asked. It’s where I get my ambition and drive. It keeps me going when things get tough in life. I am not the kind of person to wait around for life to happen to me. I guess my impatience is a big part of how I got to where I am in life so I suppose it’s not all bad. I think I am going to go meditate now, but first I am going to throw my satellite receiver. Peace and Tranquility to you my friends…

Patience

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I’ve Decided I like my ADHD Brain

I was diagnosed with ADHD as an adult about three years ago. Looking back upon my life the diagnosis really made me think “oh ya that’s why…ok”. You see I am a female and I went through my entire childhood with teachers telling me that I need to focus and stop talking all the time in class. The diagnosis did relieve a lot of anxiety about who I am, how I think and why I think what I think. Another big help besides finding out I actually had ADHD was the huge community support I found out there for adults (and kidos) with this condition. My son was diagnosed as a child and without opening up that chapter to your all right now, the knowledge of what has been going on my entire life was truly an epiphany. The reason I even thought about the possibility that “I” had ADHD was I was at yet another doctor appointment to discuss the many years of struggle with my weight. The doctor asked casually “have you ever been tested for ADHD?” No, I hadn’t even thought of that! though looking back it’s like Duh lady, have you met yourself? Distracted, tick, unfocused, tick, hyper focused at times, tick, impulsive, tick, inattention to details, tick. Ok so that’s all the “bad stuff” right? What about the awesomeness though?! Able to think outside the box, come up with amazing ideas, some of which are ridiculous but awesome none the less, my ability to see the big picture, how I can make people excited about an idea, I can sell ice to an Eskimo as they say. Most of all I feel like my brain allows me to see things that “others” don’t see. My ADHD can give me distraction but it also allows me to see the beauty in life that sometimes others miss. I can be quirky and interrupt conversations, but I can promise you what I do say is always “interesting” though it may not seem so at the time… I took medication for a while and it does help me stay focused and be less impulsive but the more I think about it the more I fell like those attributes make me who I am, it’s 100% me and that’s not bad. I do think that taking medicine is good and I will probably take it again, but I am enjoying my ADHD brain right now, all the highs and the lows that comes with it. So please if you ever hear from a child that has been diagnosed and is despondent about it tell them, yes there are struggles and yes there are hurdles you will face but man buckle up because it is going to be an awesome ride kid! In the words of the great comedian Gerry Dee “Attention Deficit is a skill AND a Disorder”.

Attention Deficit is a Skill AND a Disorder.

Attention Deficit is a Skill AND a Disorder.

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