TikTok didn't diagnose me with ADHD...but it pushed me to go see a doctor who did.

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  • čas přidán 29. 08. 2024
  • I have always known that I was likely ADHD, but was never formally diagnosed. I then joined TikTok and kept seeing video after video after video that described what I thought were unique quirks of my personality...only to be shared by millions of others with ADHD. I know that TikTok is not a diagnosis though, so I then went for a formal evaluation and after 5 minutes, his exact words were, "Wow, you are aggressively ADHD, how were you never diagnosed?"
    Any one of the things in these videos doesn't mean that you have ADHD, but if you are like me and almost ALL of them do...maybe go see a doctor. Changed my life forever.
    TikTok: / speechprof
    Instagram: / thespeechprof
    Facebook: / thespeechprof
    Pinterest: / thespeechprofessor
    #adhd #adhdproblems #adhdbrain #neurodivergent #neurodiversity #anxiety #workingmemory

Komentáře • 418

  • @sabrinanelsen8660
    @sabrinanelsen8660 Před rokem +411

    Fun thing I’ve learned as a therapist: the overlap between ADHD, Anxiety, and the Autism Spectrum is WILD. So sometimes I, a person with anxiety, listen to your skits and go “Hmm… that is oddly familiar.” ❤

    • @Deidredit
      @Deidredit Před rokem +18

      I've always suffered from extreme anxiety but after watching some of these videos, now I wonder if I have ADHD or even on the spectrum.

    • @sourgreendolly7685
      @sourgreendolly7685 Před rokem +27

      My ADHD was missed for 32 years because the focus was on my anxiety and that was assumed to be from trauma. They even thought I had bi polar ii at one point because of how hyper I was when not depressed and how big my emotions were.
      Turns out some of my trauma was peoples responses to said undiagnosed ADHD (including those big, unregulated emotions) and being socially awkward and traumatized is a great way to develop anxiety 🤦🏻‍♀️ Welp.
      I have nothing bad to say about the misdiagnoses. It's all very hard to figure out unless there's NOTHING ELSE going on due to the overlaps (or you are white boy in elementary school, they seem to get spotted more easily)

    • @saragates2255
      @saragates2255 Před rokem +8

      @Sabrina Nelsen I've been learning the same and wow, it's a mind blower! No idea how doctors are able to discern between them but it sure reminds me to be patient with them as they parce through the data to understand exactly what is causing a patient's symptoms!

    • @gaelle4328
      @gaelle4328 Před rokem +8

      Turns out for me personally asd/adhd was the problem behind my anxiety or rather extreme stress

    • @koraliekora-leepalmer4024
      @koraliekora-leepalmer4024 Před rokem +6

      I have all three, so he always seems to hit home!

  • @corynydam2361
    @corynydam2361 Před rokem +312

    Worst response someone’s ever had to hearing about my ADHD:
    “Isn’t it just fun, though, always having energy and doing a bunch of things at once?”
    Me:*
    “Sure, it can feel like a superpower when I’m reading two books and listening to a podcast while also humming whatever song I’ve got stuck in my head. Until I realize I’ve read the same two sentences twelve times in a row, I couldn’t say with a gun to my head what the podcast is about, I had actually important things to do that I’ve forgotten or neglected, and I just spent the last two hours accomplishing nothing and disappointing people who were relying on me. At least I got the tune of the song right, though.”
    It’s called a disorder for a reason, people. We’re not crippled, and most of us can manage, but for me at least that involved a huge amount of suppression and self-monitoring to fit in and act “normal.” To this day, I have a lot of difficulty actually relaxing and letting my brain do it’s thing unless I’m alone in my house.
    *Insert swear words of your choice at appropriate intervals. I certainly did.

    • @DocDreable
      @DocDreable Před rokem +12

      This spoke to my heart SOOOOoOOOoOOOo much.

    • @toddrouch7526
      @toddrouch7526 Před rokem +7

      Omg, I totally relate with what you said. While I type this I'm watching this on my phone, another video on my tablet and a totally different video on my TV. And I'm usually wearing my bone conduction headphones so I can do more than one thing at a time.

    • @sourgreendolly7685
      @sourgreendolly7685 Před rokem +22

      I was exhausted from having to mask the disorder that took 32 years to diagnose. My kind of hyperactivity just got me into trouble that I didn't understand so I learned to suppress it. Turns out that makes me depressed, which steals my energy completely 🙃 All because it's a crime to be "annoying" as a child or something. I still can't understand how that got me in trouble and I'm not any less annoying either

    • @ivanahettnerova3533
      @ivanahettnerova3533 Před rokem +11

      And after some time information from that books and podcast will randomly spring into your mind and you would wonder, why do I know this? That was my biggest question how do I know things, until I realized that I had documents on TV as backing noise.

    • @ivanahettnerova3533
      @ivanahettnerova3533 Před rokem +4

      @@toddrouch7526 bone conducting headphones are game changer I love them. And I'm not loosing them like those stupid small earpieces.

  • @andreafox9137
    @andreafox9137 Před rokem +124

    I am a paramedic and the best part about having undiagnosed ADHD is the ability to hyperfocus. When I fixate on a critical patient I can't even hear the siren on the car, it's just me and them. The rest of the time my brain refuses to shut off. And that damn inner dialog.

    • @sourgreendolly7685
      @sourgreendolly7685 Před rokem +8

      Being diagnosed didn't take that from me. I'm also super focused during medical emergencies I'm not an EMT, just a caregiver to my grandparents and we've had a year with all that. Including me, that was the one I couldn't handle myself having acute gallbladder infection and recovering from the removal (what do you mean "rest as much as possible?" lol)

    • @Marielu127
      @Marielu127 Před rokem +5

      Thank you for that statement! I'm quite certain I have ADHD or something like that (there were/are sooo many "jokes" I would've been diagnosed by now had I been born later), but I'm terrified of losing that energy, that hyperfocus which I love and need for my job as an emergency med. So I accept that my personal daily life is all chaos etc as a tradeoff. I just do hope it'll be the same for me 😅

    • @memoriea
      @memoriea Před rokem +5

      I remember reading something that said people with ADHD are better at being paramedics then their nerotypical peers.

    • @quintrat
      @quintrat Před rokem +7

      @Marielu127 I'm an anesthesiologist with a past in emergency medicine. I was diagnosed at 45. Ritalin doesn't take the hyperfocus, it takes the omnipresent noise and the chaos. What used to be a chainsaw is now a scalpel. Also, what's manageable in your 20ies and 30ies will not necessarily stay so. Sleep deprivation is one thing, my brain just can't deal with it anymore. 🙈
      So don't be afraid of the diagnosis. Just find out what works for you and what doesn't. Every brain is different. ✌️

    • @nollypolly
      @nollypolly Před rokem +4

      I was undiagnosed for 44 years and ppl have always commented on how strangely calm I was in emergency situations. I go into a 'zone' and nothing else exists but the task at hand. Ofc now I know where it comes from and I don't feel like a sociopath when tragedy strikes and I'm the only one not freaking out.

  • @Nickbox
    @Nickbox Před rokem +37

    The first time I took medication for ADHD I started crying because the concert of sounds that was in my head died down enough for me to hear my own internal voice. It was like I was at a party where in one room was music playing, in another a TV blaring, and everyone was talking over each other to the point you can't even hear your own voice. Then suddenly, everyone shut up and turned off the tv and music and I could actually hear myself. It was overwhelming.

  • @kimw3284
    @kimw3284 Před rokem +89

    The masking part really hit hard. I've been seeing a therapist (for the first time in my life) for grief since May/June and she has been wonderful. A couple months ago I came across some videos about ADHD in adult women, specifically inattentive type. It sounded really similar to my own experiences so I kept working to educate myself and got up the courage to mention it as a possibility to my therapist. She doesn't specialize in that so was open to my perspective and said she'd help me get in touch with a specialist if I want. After that I got up the courage to mention my suspicions to my husband and my mom (at different times). My husband accepted this at face value at first but has since made one or two comments that indicate he is skeptical. My mom was shocked when I said that this answered a lot of the things I've struggled with over the years and pretty much dismissed that these have been issues for me. I'm decently smart and academically inclined, plus I instinctively figured out a handful of coping strategies, so I got through school relatively unscathed (except for a few occasions which stand out in my memory and fit inattentive ADHD to a T). I was/am seen as the "good" child so I have developed a deeply ingrained habit of hiding any internal mental struggles from my family (and apparently my husband too) so they will continue to think I have my sh*t together. And I didn't even realize I was doing this until recently 🙃
    I made the decision to not tell anyone else close to me about my suspicions because their reactions are causing me to doubt myself. Maybe I'm neurotypical with leanings towards distractability, impulsivity, poor working memory, and a penchant for severe procrastination/motivation issues. If I'm misdiagnosing myself, fine, but I've decided that the only person I will accept that from is a specialist. It has been freeing and terrifying at the same time.

    • @rachelppython
      @rachelppython Před rokem +11

      Are.... are you me??????

    • @melaniecerveau3230
      @melaniecerveau3230 Před rokem +15

      Hello, I relate to what you're saying a lot but for the autism spectrum.
      I was diagnosed as a gifted child at, like... 8? 9? I did have school struggles but I've also had massively bad luck with 3/5 of my primary school teachers (one of which meant 3 years of child therapy, wheeee) so that's to take with a grain of salt. Add a bunch of family-related trauma from early teens to... now, actually, and then a MASSIVE TRUCKLOAD of depression & anxiety.
      The thing is, I'm the firstborn of my family, and the family trauma bs meant I felt I had to protect the little ones, so I had to keep it together at all times. I, too, was the "good" child. The result is that 1) if I say I feel this or that, most people have doubts and 2) I legit don't know how to unmask which is problematic when I'm *trying* to get diagnosed.
      I look people in the eyes and I don't info dump on my special interest(s) (world-building and writing). The thing is, avoiding looking at people's face was verbally and/or physically beaten out of me, and the info dumping was socially crushed. I don't fidget because the noise and movement annoyed my dad. I don't hum/sing/chit-chat because my dad didn't like the noise. On the other hand, I can stay immobile for 8h straight drawing or reading and only realise something is wrong when the low sugar means my hand shakes too much to continue. I cannot time-manage at all. I can phone for work with the best of them but get panic attacks when i need to call a dentist. I have to think of daily tasks as quests to beat the executive dysfunction. That doesn't make me look autistic or (more broadly) neurodivergent to most uninformed people. That makes me look lazy.
      So yeah, Mr Therapist doesn't think I'm autistic. I'm ready to hear that. I just want to hear what the flip is off with me so I can get the tools to manage it and finally do something else than "somewhat survive".
      Best wishes on your diagnosis quest, internet friend. You deserve the closure (and, if pertinent, the tools and help), and no one should get in your way for that, not even your family. I respect your strength in going through that process, your open-mindedness, and for making it so far with all the things you internalised. Cheers!

    • @RutabegaNG
      @RutabegaNG Před rokem +7

      @@melaniecerveau3230 Is your therapist at all familiar with autism in adults and autism in women? It looks different. And it looks different again if it's comorbid with ADHD.
      That's not to say that you definitely have one or the other. Only that it helps to have someone who knows what they're looking at to make that call. There are things that show up under the ADHD or autism umbrella that are caused by something else entirely, and then there are things that are very clearly one or the other.
      If your therapist is not comfortable with or familiar with autism or ADHD in women and adults, consider looking for another opinion. They may come up with the same response, but at least they'll have a better sense of what they're talking about.

    • @melaniecerveau3230
      @melaniecerveau3230 Před rokem +7

      @@RutabegaNG hi there! thanks for the reply! Yeah I’m aware that being an adult already makes it funky. Here’s the fun part: I’m also trans (FtM) so who knows what might be the “typical” for me? I sure hecking don’t haha.
      I’ll still ask my therapist again tho (I’m lucky, he’s a good one: told me from the get go that he’d give me as many tools and help me as much as he could regarding being trans, but that he wasn’t trained and confident in actually helping me transition in the best way for me. Speaks well of his ability to take a step back and admit when he’s not the best to answer a question.)

    • @rachelppython
      @rachelppython Před rokem +3

      @@melaniecerveau3230 best of luck to you, my guy! I relate hard to the experiences you shared above. I hope you have all the happiness in the world!

  • @sherrymerrill6317
    @sherrymerrill6317 Před rokem +10

    The bit about, "Apparently it's not my job..." had me in tears until you said, "...You can't have my job." I immediately started laughing! Thank you so much for being you and making this content. I feel understood.

  • @meinenklinke
    @meinenklinke Před rokem +42

    I didn’t get diagnosed with ADHD until this year (I’m 36) and it was because of TikTok. I do remember a college professor who I told that I would be doodling during class, but it was because it helped me focus, and he was 100% understanding of it. I got an A in his class.
    Edit: I’ve decided to add my favorite object blindness moment. I lost my drill. My lime green drill. Searched for hours. It was in the middle of a table.

    • @Catlily5
      @Catlily5 Před rokem

      I doodled all over my notebooks. Long before I got diagnosed with ADHD.

    • @RutabegaNG
      @RutabegaNG Před rokem +2

      Any of my old school and college notebooks that I still have are full of doodles. I knew it helped me pay attention. At the time, though, I also "knew" that ADHD was just an excuse, that it didn't really exist. Yeah it turns out I was wrong about that second part.
      I'm a bit older than you, but I did get diagnosed at 27. I pursued it. The internet was still a new thing and I was surfing around and came across a personal website that hit a little too close to home. A few little hyper focused rabbit holes later and I found myself looking for a therapist who was familiar with adult ADHD.
      That object black hole is extremely annoying. Especially when it's something I was literally holding in my hand two seconds earlier. I blink and it's just ...gone. Like it never existed.

    • @IgnacioCheese
      @IgnacioCheese Před rokem +1

      I took notes like crazy even though they always said “wait til the prof pauses and try to consolidate what they said”… I’m yeah no- I would have forgotten everything if I didn’t write it down that exact moment. lol

  • @smay745
    @smay745 Před rokem +85

    I remember my first day at work while on Vyvanse. I turned to my (also ADHD) coworker and said, in shock, “it’s like my brain has been a strobe light my whole life, but now I finally found the light switches to each room! I can turn the rooms off and on when *I* want them on!”

    • @joan.nao1246
      @joan.nao1246 Před rokem +5

      Strobe light! Brilliant!

    • @sourgreendolly7685
      @sourgreendolly7685 Před rokem +10

      that's a great description! I usually describe my 'spacing out' as a big theater curtain that gets in between my brain and everything else. I can hear and have a vague sense of time passing but it's muffled and I cant just pick up the heavy curtain without help.
      Vyvanse seems to be my match as well, and I only found out due to the shortage! Shoutout to the pharmacist that straight up told me it was all the stimulants except Vyvanse that they couldn't stock so I could discuss it with my doctor, really appreciat her.

    • @ravengray3095
      @ravengray3095 Před rokem +2

      I’m trying a new medication right now for adhd, don’t have an official diagnosis yet so I can’t try stimulants, but my doctor and I are working down a list of nonstimulants trying them for a month each to see if they work, on day 5 of med 2, hope it works lol

    • @piggieria
      @piggieria Před rokem +3

      I use the analogy of being at a party. Everything is loud and crowded, so you walk into the room next door. You can can still hear everything but it isn't as loud and overwhelming.
      Walking into the other room is how I know my meda have kicked in every morning.

  • @aabidahsiebritz3839
    @aabidahsiebritz3839 Před rokem +100

    The inner monologue resonates with me, when I'm alone I mistakenly speak out loud as if to answer myself, it's like a constant stream honestly. I also have a terrible memory, I have things I have to do and that's my day-to-day, and some specific moments I remember but the rest is a vague mess. I just turned 30 and it's kind of nice to know why I am the way I am.

    • @ninaschust3694
      @ninaschust3694 Před rokem +4

      That is why I often put a mobile on my head when I walk in the streets. I suddenly start speaking out loud without realizing it at first.

    • @fleuroster5258
      @fleuroster5258 Před rokem +6

      I always speak with myself, my parents think it’s creepy, i think it’s to get some thoughts out of my head

    • @ImNotaRussianBot
      @ImNotaRussianBot Před rokem +5

      I have to read out loud for dense information when I am insanely fast and comprehensive in reading BECAUSE of the background noise.

    • @GrumpyOldFart2
      @GrumpyOldFart2 Před rokem +4

      @@ninaschust3694 I don’t do the mobile thing but I SO SO SO identify with the running monologue in my head and then suddenly speaking out loud part of “my” response (as opposed to the person I’m “talking” to). It’s so embarrassing because if one is in public (like a grocery store) people nearby who heard you will have an “uh-oh crazy person” look on their face.

    • @ravengray3095
      @ravengray3095 Před rokem +3

      There have been times when I literally had a conversation with myself out loud without even realizing it. Usually about an alternate ending to a book or a different way a conversation could’ve gone or a way a future conversation could go, stuff like that

  • @shinozsnow9354
    @shinozsnow9354 Před rokem +22

    Have you ever heard of the fawn response? It's a complex PTSD respond that focuses around people pleasing to avoid conflict and disapproval at the complete sacrifice of your wants and needs. It's one of my main everyday responses that I only realized I did within the past couple of years to the point that I forgot what most of my wants and needs are and know that many of the ones I think I have are actually other peoples that I have taken in to better be able to people please. It's something I am starting to try to work on. But it's going to be a long road.

    • @cats333tube
      @cats333tube Před 5 měsíci +1

      You can do it. Be patient with yourself.

  • @Torichan888
    @Torichan888 Před rokem +12

    The lotion or hair product one. I have lost things that I was holding in my hand because I wasn't holding them at eye level. The worst is once I put my pencil in my mouth to use my eraser... and lost my pencil. I found it when I went to ask where it went and couldn't because my pencil was in my mouth.

  • @themoistfeltlipsofsatanasamupp

    For me I just dislike big spoons because they’re too weighted and don’t fit in the bowls I use nicely

  • @pameladwyer2244
    @pameladwyer2244 Před rokem +17

    I always enjoy listening to you. You are a sweet, lovable man. Was just diagnosed with ADHD a month ago at age 69. My parents loved me, but I was a big disappointment to them. It sucks finding it out later in life.
    When you are speaking, with your hands moving too, adding goofy music just is too much. Please don’t add the music - it’s one too many distractions, and your message is what counts! All the best! P.S. You rock bows and makeup!

    • @joan.nao1246
      @joan.nao1246 Před rokem +2

      I relate, Pamela! I adore him & look so forward to whatever he's posted, but sometimes I have to pause his vid (yes, even the Shorts) & take a breath to finish them. It's totally up to where I am that day, hour, minute.

    • @schokoloko2092
      @schokoloko2092 Před rokem +2

      I can relate to that. and English is not my native language, so i read the text while hearing. but the speed is sometimes too fast to hear/read and understand, so often I have to watch it twice. and the music is definitely not helping with that!

    • @misstere5132
      @misstere5132 Před rokem +1

      I am 52 and I took my first adhd medication today. I grieve what my life could have been if anyone paid enough attention to see I was struggling so very much my whole life

    • @pameladwyer2244
      @pameladwyer2244 Před rokem +3

      @@misstere5132 I hear you. A family member told me not to “dwell on it”. She meant well, but I told her that no-one stops her from grieving her Dad, gone many years. I said I need to grieve and be angry over the struggles that I had.

  • @_Hajar_
    @_Hajar_ Před rokem +39

    I'm not diagnosed, but I relate to almost everything you said. At one point I had a meltdown and was prescribed a pill that I take to this day. Not for ADHD, but it makes thoughts manageable, instead of me getting one and spinning it to the lowest point of sadness. Self-talk becomes more monotone (instead of the usual: Go to h€ll/I wish I didn't have to live with you/etc), it becomes: oh, now i have to do this/I should remember to do that. I thought it was just me being me. Thanks.

    • @joan.nao1246
      @joan.nao1246 Před rokem +4

      @H C I'm liking the sound of that med! Do you feel comfortable sharing what it is, so I can bring it up to my Dr?

    • @sourgreendolly7685
      @sourgreendolly7685 Před rokem +5

      That is just being you. You just aren't the only one that experiences it. It could be ADHD but there are a lot of symptoms that can also be things like anxiety and such.
      Like I've always had several autistic friends because it's always felt like they just get me and they don't try to fix my awkwardness. I'm not autistic and most of them aren't ADHD, but we have a lot of overlapping symptoms and comorbid disorders so we are still a lot alike when we're just being us.

  • @saragates2255
    @saragates2255 Před rokem +18

    @The Speech Prof I found out recently that CPTSD can cause some of the same memory issues you describe. It causes individuals to live in a state of hyper vigilance which causes the brain to release cortisol and adrenaline, both of which can cause serious memory impairment. I experience some similar memory issues as you but I do not have ADHD and I've been diagnosed with CPTSD. My doctor was very clear about what causes the memory issues in this case. CPTSD is not uncommon in survivors of childhood trauma, which I am also. From some of the things you've described about your childhood it might be worth looking in to. I'm sure if we were to combine the effects of ADHD and CPTSD the result could be devastating. I'm so sorry you're fighting the memory fight every day... It's exhausting and can be frustrating for those around us also. May the Force be with you❤️

    • @joan.nao1246
      @joan.nao1246 Před rokem +5

      Sara, so much cross over within ND diagnoses/symptoms. Thank you for bringing it up.

    • @saragates2255
      @saragates2255 Před rokem

      @@joan.nao1246 ah, I didn't know that... Thank you! 👍

    • @thecornucopiasystem
      @thecornucopiasystem Před rokem +6

      Can confirm, the childhood trauma can seriously impact how your memory works for the rest of your life, like it does for us, neurotypical or not
      - Gemini
      Seriously, we can't tell what our terrible memory is attributed to, our autism, our ADHD, our CPTSD, or our DID/OSDD
      - Knockout

    • @joan.nao1246
      @joan.nao1246 Před rokem +2

      @@thecornucopiasystem Absolutely, thank you for clarifying NT or ND!

    • @sourgreendolly7685
      @sourgreendolly7685 Před rokem +5

      That's why my ADHD wasn't caught until age 32. I definitely had a lot of trauma but I was also born with an ADHD brain. That's why trauma work could only do so much for me.

  • @shinozsnow9354
    @shinozsnow9354 Před rokem +27

    I was diagnosed with ADHD last year at the age of 34 and not only was being treated for it life changing, but just the diagnosis was life changing. It even had a huge affect on the anxiety and depression I was also diagnosed with as co-morbidities. I wasn't struggling because I was lazy, a failure, not smart enough, etc. In fact, the opposite was true for me to even function at the level I was despite it. I had many coping mechanisms I had created over the years and they still weren't enough.
    The small spoon statement hit me. I used to take tiny bites of any food that I really liked as a kid, so I could enjoy it as long as possible. Partly because we were poor and partly because it was how I fought that I need MORE OF THIS NOW. If I took tiny bites it would keep hitting that this is so good and feel like I was eating so much at the same time. It happened the most with beef jerky, crunch bars, and mallow cereal.
    Also, why did you have to play such a good background song that I struggled to focus on what you were saying? xD
    I have dump spots in specific places around the house, so I have controlled places that I will most likely randomly lay things. I also have to have corded bluetooth headphones because even pulling it out to listen to someone for a second risks me setting them down randomly, putting them in my pocket and not finding them for hours despite them still being in my pocket or just flat out dropping them and they disappear into oblivion because I forgot I was holding them. The corded ones I have clip together in the front, so if I drop one side, it doesn't automatically weigh it down and they fall off and also disappear into oblivion.
    Honestly, I am afraid of having kids because me system to remember to do things is so dependent on things staying in the place I set them that I feel kids will break me.

    • @sourgreendolly7685
      @sourgreendolly7685 Před rokem +2

      I definitely don't believe I can handle being a parent for similar reasons. I was diagnosed last year too only I was 32, but I felt this way beforehand. I'm great with kids but they're exhausting. I'm fine with being the babysitter/weird artist aunt.

    • @alexandracoffin696
      @alexandracoffin696 Před rokem +1

      I wasn't diagnosed until I was 27, and there is a sense of liberation in finally knowing that you're not lazy, unmotivated, don't care, etc... but it can also hurt to look back and think about how hard you struggled against your own mind only to be left feeling useless and like you just "didn't/couldn't try hard enough." I had to go through a period of mourning and angst over what could have been if I had been diagnosed sooner and gotten the help I needed to be more successful. The biggest impact for me though, was realizing exactly HOW MUCH it affected my day-to-day life. I knew that my ADHD made focusing on work and meeting deadlines more difficult, but I didn't realize that treating it would also help me be a better wife, mother, and an overall happier person.
      So for anyone wondering if it's worth it to get diagnosed as an adult and seek treatment: absolutely! Understanding your neuro-divergence and learning how to work with it can have a cascade affect into so many other areas of your life.

  • @CCP_yb
    @CCP_yb Před rokem +10

    I just had my second therapy session today, and the therapist gently suggested that I was textbook adhd and assigned me some reading. Your video here popped up by happenstance and almost literally everything you said sounds exactly like what has made me feel stupid, lazy, depressed, and useless for the last 20 or so years. I think the last time I could remember not just tolerating myself because I had no choice was sometime in my teens. I’m 32, and it’s such a damn comfort that my bad memory, procrastination, inability to focus, constantly fidgeting and switching gears, lying to people to excuse my inadequacies and apologizing constantly when lying wouldn’t do, grinding my teeth against the constant stream of songs, movie quotes, and inner monologue rolling around in my head… it’s not all just because I suck at living. I’m not useless, and I don’t have to hate myself and feel ashamed all the time… well goddamn, today’s a day for revelation, and I don’t know what to do with myself. Really looking forward to continuing to get help though.

  • @doodlesack0
    @doodlesack0 Před rokem +5

    I've, um, been binge-watching your videos for way longer than I should be... I also have adhd... hyperfocus is in overdrive lol. Why can't I just be like "oh i like them, suscribe" without having to proceed to watch every video that creator has ever made? Please tell me I'm not alone lol. Love your content 😅

  • @Jennaswirly
    @Jennaswirly Před rokem +9

    😂 the allergy pills!! Omg as someone on the autism spectrum the working memory problems also is an issue. I take allergy pills twice a day and I often can’t remember if I took either my morning pill or evening pill. Out of caution I won’t take it if I’ve passed the time I normally take it. Then several hours later I realize I didn’t take one of my pills cause I start getting hives on my hands and my chest and my neck and I start sneezing. Severe allergy sufferer with 5 cats and 15 chickens….and a couch that came from a home with a dog. I am pretty sure I’m a glutton for punishment. Cause I’m allergic to all of it, and the outside for 9 months out of the year. *edit cause I forgot words. Lmao

  • @janetpingrey7155
    @janetpingrey7155 Před rokem +9

    The worst thing ever said..."it's all fake and an excuse to act badly"...I was not diagnosed until I was far into adulthood and had used black coffee throughout my childhood as a control. My doctor realized when she put me on Benadryl and it stimulated me to the point of insanity (cleaning until 4:30 AM, talking a mile a minute, "Squirrel" ) that she did some other tests and then GAVE me a great book to read (Driven to Distraction) and then would answer any questions the book did not. I do not take meds and some days are a little nuttier than others, but I have you and a couple other vloggers to make up my tribe.

    • @happylady2679
      @happylady2679 Před rokem

      Omg I think my son has it. Benedryl makes him hyper not sleepy.

  • @logosgal
    @logosgal Před rokem +6

    I spent a significant chunk of time tonight ranting & crying with my person about some tasks that my adhd brain has been dreading & putting off for months, talking about how stupid & useless I felt for letting them get so far. This video helped me feel a lot less alone & stupid. Thanks for sharing!

  • @belabotum876
    @belabotum876 Před rokem +11

    And no one still gets my adhd and autism because it’s not visible like my sons. I also stutter. It’s debilitating sometimes. Luckily my bf is here and knows the way I am. I’m 52 and he knew me since I was 6. He used to defend me when I was bullied. Now I own a business, home, car. I have help raising my son who lives with autism and mother whom has dementia. Is it hard? Yes that’s why it’s easy. ❤

  • @sixbirdsinatrenchcoat
    @sixbirdsinatrenchcoat Před rokem +36

    So this is (part of) why I relate to you so much … Just got my diagnosis 🤷🏼‍♀️
    Edit: Wait … other people don’t have constant dialogues playing in their brains? Yes, dialogues. Or … what’s it called when there’s more than two people talking?
    Edit: That round pill box is still stressing me out because … what end do you start in and how do you immediately tell if you’ve taken your pills the 5 or 6 times you look at it each day? I mean, if you know what day of the week it is, but still …

    • @ladykoiwolfe
      @ladykoiwolfe Před rokem +4

      It probably has the time of day written on it.
      And I don't even have a regular monologue in my head. It is usually completely silent. The kind of silent that apparently isn't quite normal. No pictures either, I can't visualize.

    • @calamityjean1525
      @calamityjean1525 Před rokem +2

      "Or … what’s it called when there’s more than two people talking?"
      Conversation. It's called a conversation.
      Re the round pill box: " how do you immediately tell if you’ve taken your pills the 5 or 6 times you look at it each day?"
      Leave the compartment empty at least until the following day. When you look at it and today's compartment is empty, you've taken your pills today. I got one for my husband because he wanted to start his pill-taking week on Friday instead of Sunday. He filled it every Friday, took his daily pills, and left the sections empty until the following Friday.

    • @TheImaginaryCat
      @TheImaginaryCat Před rokem +3

      For me being diagnosed as an adult and trying out meds for the first time was like someone suddenly muted the 8 different tv channels I had constantly yelling in the background and didn't even realize. Turns out I don't actually think more sluggishly than the people around me just in every direction all at once. Good for creative brainstorming and coming up with innovative solutions to problems, bad for actually functioning like a human being. That first quiet was such a relief I just sat there staring over a lake and cried

    • @RutabegaNG
      @RutabegaNG Před rokem +2

      @@TheImaginaryCat You know those things that happen in your life that you remember everything when they happened? The first time I took a stimulant for ADHD is one of those times for me. Over 20 years ago and I still remember it like it was yesterday. I can't remember yesterday, or this morning for that matter, but that day is as crystal clear to me as the day the Challenger exploded in 1986.

  • @Violet_Jedi_Sylveon
    @Violet_Jedi_Sylveon Před rokem +3

    Damn it, this video is way way to relatable. Also I agree on the small spoon, large spoon is only for scooping dips and stuff.

    • @Catlily5
      @Catlily5 Před rokem +1

      My boyfriend is 6'4" and has a big mouth. He doesn't understand why I don't like big spoons. But the small ones just fit in my mouth better!

  • @shaynatattersfield4043
    @shaynatattersfield4043 Před rokem +2

    I remember when I first when on adhd meds, I'd been having trouble with all these voices swearing at eachother in my head. The meds made a huge difference. I can still think and talk to myself when I want, but it stopped the distracting arguments

  • @thomaswolfe7845
    @thomaswolfe7845 Před rokem +6

    Oh dude, I've been asking to be tested for almost 2 years and I'm still fighting to convince them to put me on the goddamned wait-list to be tested

  • @1CurlyB
    @1CurlyB Před rokem +11

    I had a doctor once that said maybe I needed to get diagnosed, because she thought I might have ADHD. I was like - what's wrong with this doctor, I don't have ADHD. But something keeps telling me - you need to find out. I'm sitting here listening to this, thinking......I might have a problem. I can't tell you how many times I can't remember if I've taken certain meds or not - I've skipped them, I've damn near overdosed. This may be problematic..........

  • @Xandycane
    @Xandycane Před rokem +7

    I have a lot of family with ADHD and this makes so much sense. It explains some things. Though, a few I want to show the Red Bull part because seriously!
    I say caffeine really affects me (literally, my hands shake if I have too much, which is more than one cup) and they are telling me I'm wrong and it does nothing. I always am telling them I'm overly sensitive and they are reverse sensitive. 😁 They just keep drinking yummy coffee in front of me as I stare in envy.

  • @ecopartypackcheltenham
    @ecopartypackcheltenham Před rokem +3

    Just showed this to my bff who is in the long process of being diagnosed. Instant response was "Yes" have I taken 3 pills or 0 pills, so true and that red bull makes her sleepy 🤦🏻‍♀️

  • @HulaHula667
    @HulaHula667 Před rokem +3

    I have to have my pharmacy put my meds in what they call dosett boxes, so all my meds for the day are together in one section for mornings/evening etc for every day and I have a tray per week. It’s the only way I manage to regularly take my meds. I still occasionally mess up. I’ve taken the morning at night and vice versa, or forgotten a dose entirely, but at least I am able to tell pretty much at a glance.
    I’m currently very much near the start of about a THREE YEAR wait list for an official diagnosis of ADHD(spectrum) at 41.

  • @rainbowkenz
    @rainbowkenz Před rokem +1

    The “it’s not your job, it’s my job” line murdered me. No, my dude, it’s clearly my job. And although I am failing at it, I can’t just… stop.

  • @SailorYuki
    @SailorYuki Před rokem +12

    The working memory thing is so frustrating. I can't even count the times I've been in the shower wondering if I have washed my hair yet, or if I just used shampoo or conditioner? Most of the time I forget to rinse it off and my hair looks way more greasy after the shower than it did when I stepped in it.

    • @joan.nao1246
      @joan.nao1246 Před rokem +2

      Omg yes! Exactly why I adopted a routine in the shower!

  • @sherrylaury
    @sherrylaury Před 21 dnem

    Not only did I feel the need to make everyone happy. It absolutely destroyed me when I couldn't.

  • @shannonroysden7908
    @shannonroysden7908 Před rokem +8

    Ok…halfway into the video I still feel the need to say Big Spoon… more milk in the cereal bite…

    • @zoegoodfellow1988
      @zoegoodfellow1988 Před rokem +1

      And the cereal doesn't get soggy!

    • @_Hajar_
      @_Hajar_ Před rokem +1

      Big spoon for eating meals small spoon to eat dessert/mix sugar in coffee or tea.

    • @andiward7068
      @andiward7068 Před rokem +4

      Blow your mind, Capn Crunch w/a fork doesn't scrape up the roof of your mouth. Use a drinking cup 8-12 oz for cereal and no more soggies.

    • @zoegoodfellow1988
      @zoegoodfellow1988 Před rokem +1

      @@andiward7068 never had captain crunch before (UK) but I will try it with a different type!

    • @tantamounted
      @tantamounted Před rokem +2

      @@zoegoodfellow1988 Cheerios can do that too (especially if eaten dry), I had to stop eating them for a while because they made my mouth sore. Now I can have them again, I just can't have a whole box in one go!

  • @joakescarnival8303
    @joakescarnival8303 Před rokem +1

    Sometimes after too long I forget why I was so sure that I had ADHD and that scene in IT where it's revealed that the doc just let the kid think they had asthma cuz an empty puffer calmed their anxiety pops into my head. Then I get wonderful videos like this to sock me in the relatable. "Ah yah that was it!" Thank you.

  • @totallyrandomd1714
    @totallyrandomd1714 Před rokem +1

    I feel so seen! And since we are around different people, it's okay that it's your job to make the people around you happy. It's my job to make the people around me happy. Now we can make twice as many people happy!

  • @bunnery2326
    @bunnery2326 Před rokem +1

    I didn't know until my son said he thought he had it and on researching it I kept coming up with "Oh I do that". Doh, face palm looking back over my lifes struggles to finish anything, start stuff, reading 6 books at the same time.......

  • @bookishbassoonist2210
    @bookishbassoonist2210 Před rokem +2

    For the meds problem, I just started using timer cap bottles. They’re from Amazon. They count down in seconds how long it’s been since the bottle was opened and it’s been very helpful with my evening meds

  • @transformativegreenspacest1898

    This stuff is great. Although, that part about forgetting what we were doing 5 seconds ago...when it happens while driving a car, it use to scare me real bad. I would just be in my thoughts and then all the sudden BAM! I am turning through an intersection. Luckily, I have always been a real safe driver.

  • @annarouse3466
    @annarouse3466 Před rokem

    The first time my daughter took her ADHD medications, I remember very vividly. It was maybe 20 minutes later and she was playing in the livingroom and all of a sudden, she just stopped. And looked at me really intensely. And when I asked her what was up she whispered "Someone turned the volume down..." What volume, you ask? "The volume to the party in my head." And ever since then, she has taken her medication with a joy I am almost jealous of. And when she starts to outgrow her dose, she will tell me "I think we need to see the Dr. Someone's turning the volume up again." I've never had that experience, but she loves knowing she isn't alone. Thank you.

  • @JenWren4
    @JenWren4 Před rokem

    Mrs. Rauf taught me the the footnote on EVERY report card I ever got... Jen would do well if she'd only apply herself... Was wrong. She engaged me in different was and asked me for answers on years instead of making me read and take the test. Her English lit class was the first one I EVER got an A in and it was Junior year! she was the teacher no one wanted because she was a Hard teacher so it's made the victory even more amazing! Thank you Mrs Rauf!

  • @berenicesaquet1870
    @berenicesaquet1870 Před rokem +1

    The quiet mind, a friend gave me one of her pill (after peer diag from way to many people) and it was like 'OMG that is so calm, that is relaxing, OMG I can switch focus at my will easily , that is weird but nice, OMG no constant flow of ideas from everywhere with at least 10 strings of though that I don't control ? I can listen to music and a conversation ??? I can listen to the lyrics and the music in a song ????, Incredible !!!)

  • @elaexplorer
    @elaexplorer Před rokem +2

    All the fast food places have apps. You can order in the app. See exactly what you're ordering, make substitutions/deletions, and don't have to relay that information to anyone. If you get your burrito with beans it's because the restaurant messed up and not because you forgot to say no beans.

  • @janeldavis905
    @janeldavis905 Před rokem

    I loved this. The lotion, allergy meds, and soap stories are so relatable. Also, on the quiet mind thing, I once watched a CZcams video called ADHD Simulator, and when I watched it I thought, "Yeah, ok... it was a good simulation of how brains work, but I don't think it's exclusive to people with ADHD." So I had my husband watch it because I was convinced he'd find it relatable too... Nope. He found it very "stressful" and was surprised that I felt it was accurate. He said his brain only has constant, distracting inner monologue (maybe) when he's really tired. It helps me be kinder to myself when I think about that.

  • @rainlesure4690
    @rainlesure4690 Před rokem +1

    I love you're videos so much. Especially the ones on ADHD .Because growing up I didn't hear anything positive about my ADHD I heard I was slow or stupid. And even now I live in constant fear that I'm going to get yelled at for missing something or forgetting to do something because my attention was elsewhere and my parents still talk to me like I'm stupid witch I find hilarious. However I'm not stupid I just don't think the same as everyone else.

  • @darkangelprincess101
    @darkangelprincess101 Před rokem

    The more I learn about ADHD and autism and the more videos of people talking about their experience with it the more I'm convinced I have both

  • @Hi_Im_Akward
    @Hi_Im_Akward Před rokem

    Im 30yo and currently undiagnosed. On a waitlist for an assessment for ADHD and Autism. Thank you for the laughs, I'm pretty constantly stressing out about this and how little support and tools I have and it's nice to have relatable content. Today was extra hard, almost had a meltdown in the grocery store today. Your channel truly means a lot to me and helps me in more ways than you know.

  • @rachnab04
    @rachnab04 Před rokem

    I got diagnosed with ADHD as an adult too and I appreciate you sharing your story

  • @PaniACoCo
    @PaniACoCo Před rokem

    Tiktok pushed me to get a diagnosis, and it has changed my life. I felt like a failure since I was 11, but now I'm proud of myself for how far I've come. Medication has also helped a lot.

  • @jannetteberends8730
    @jannetteberends8730 Před rokem +1

    A tip for your medication. I get my meds in a Baxter rol. All the medication for the week are in a rolled up strip of sealed plastic bags with the date and time you had to take it. The roll is for a week. So there are 7 * 4 plastic bags on it. (I take my medication 4 times a day) My pharmacy delivers the roll each week at home. They are originally for older people.
    I’m from The Netherlands, so I’m not sure if this system is also called Baxter rol elsewhere, but with the description the pharmacy will understand what you mean.
    Searching on internet will give you a picture.

  • @voltron4212
    @voltron4212 Před rokem

    I love the last one about feeling guilty about being happy. I don't necessarily feel "guilty" about it, but I have times when I wonder why I'm happy, or how it could be possible for me to be happy.
    On the flip of that, I also desperately avoid or flee particularly dark or bleak "entertainments" that invoke feelings of anxiety, depression, or grief.

  • @visualinotion3957
    @visualinotion3957 Před rokem

    The inner monologue is one key thing I really want to discuss with a therapist as soon as I can. It is really worrying to me that the only times it shuts up is when I'm focused on something, like writing, or F:'%@ DRUNK.
    I have podcasts on most of the time while doing shores so I don't listen to myself.

  • @sadiemcintire1054
    @sadiemcintire1054 Před rokem +1

    Turns out everything I thought made me less than or just uniquely shitty at being a functional person was a either a symptom of my ADHD or a result of childhood trauma. I'm taking medication for my ADHD and my anxiety and I'm doing a lot better now, but part of why I have an anxiety disorder is because I was using anxiety as a coping skill to help me remember things and maintain focus.. turns out being on edge all of the time to remember things isn't normal.

  • @Viv008
    @Viv008 Před rokem

    You've helped me, as I have recognized way too much of my self in this video. I drink coffee to fall asleep (among many other things mentioned.) Thank you.

  • @gingerr9004
    @gingerr9004 Před rokem

    Dude that’s a real thing…. So good at masking the abuse that no one had any idea and it was so hard to turn it off that now I can’t turn it back on man…. Let’s just say it’s been tough and medication has been part of that journey… I love your videos. Silly shit like not feeling alone really help the healing process. Thank you 🙏

  • @Teenangst16
    @Teenangst16 Před rokem

    All of this resonated with me so much, I was laughing and tearing up at a bunch of these.

  • @JHU349
    @JHU349 Před rokem

    omg the "arent we all" kills me!! I struggle extremely with my dylectia and the amount of people telling that they too think the readings for a class are not simple, so no big deal.... is stragering.

  • @JenWren4
    @JenWren4 Před rokem +1

    The people pleasing thing has been PHYSICALLY beaten into my DNA to the extent that when I try not to do it I have physical manifestations of withdrawal. Lose bowels, vomiting, panic attacks, dizziness. It boils down to me being a physical wreck if I try to avoid toxic relationships. It's debilitating. And sarcasm is my shield to emotional anything. And it's so bad I told my son yesterday I loved him and he asked me if I was serious. WTF. My boys know I love them because I show them but apparently I don't SAY it enough. That broke me. I went to my room and cried quietly for the rest of the night that day

  • @aina3387
    @aina3387 Před rokem

    Videos like this are how I know I don't have ADHD, but also remind me that my brother is so ADHD that it is hard for him to function.

  • @Trix897
    @Trix897 Před rokem

    I wasn’t diagnosed until I was 44 and it took 3 years to fully accept it. Once I went on stimulant medication, the change was pretty much instantaneous, but it took about 2 years for me to acclimate to the new way I was seeing the world.
    Am I a people pleaser because my parents viewed my undiagnosed ADHD that they didn’t want me to see a therapist or psychiatrist for in order to get a referral for testing as me being lazy and undisciplined?
    Absolutely. Definitely have CPTSD as a result of that mess, especially considering the fact that I’m a professor’s kid and my family are all high achievers.
    I’m finally reprogramming myself from people pleasing and the first step was disconnecting from my parents. It made a HUGE difference.
    Also, for the record, I currently have 362 tabs open on the Safari browser of my iPhone. Working memory issues are definitely a thing.

  • @teshlafreeman4040
    @teshlafreeman4040 Před rokem +4

    So for real lol my therapist said I have adhd because of severe trauma but really I feel nearly every bit of that..deep lol

  • @Hometowngirl321
    @Hometowngirl321 Před rokem

    OMG, what you’ve been describing is just like me!! I have MS which affects my cognition. I can be thinking about doing something, go to do it and within 3 seconds I forget what I was going to do. It’s crazy, I know, so I feel for you Prof. By the way I just love your videos and your wonderful sense of humour, it really makes my day better to watch them. 👍😄🤩

  • @athena1047
    @athena1047 Před rokem

    Right there with ya. Be kind to yourself. Thank you.

  • @dod2304
    @dod2304 Před 6 měsíci

    Ooooh your descriptions of "is it lotion or hair creme"? And...did I actually take these pills or did I just think about taking them??? Gah!! I have a good pill box. If I feel like I can't be bothered to refill it for the next week, sheet! I'm in trouble!!! I can't thank you enough for these descriptions. My kids sometimes make me feel like a bad person. I feel bad enough with that kind of judging/scolding. I'm going to share this with them. I'm so grateful.

  • @_N0_0ne
    @_N0_0ne Před rokem

    It’s nice to see I’m not alone. Thank you kindly

  • @Awsomonium
    @Awsomonium Před rokem

    I LOVE these. IT helps to see someone else talking about some of the same things I experience.
    Question for my ADHD people out there: Does your filter ever just break? Doesn't matter what your doing, it can be in the middle of a conversation, or at work or home. All the...how do I say it...all the senses, like the sounds, smells, colours, etc come in at once and you just have to stop for 10 seconds or so to put the filter back up than you have to try to refocus on whatever else you were doing?

  • @thoughtfulone8312
    @thoughtfulone8312 Před rokem

    I feel we are one person. My inability to remember a second ago and being afraid of the past and future. Afraid of being loved and hated. Afraid of being alone and with someone.

  • @MatthewTheWanderer
    @MatthewTheWanderer Před měsícem +1

    I was diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome (or Autism Spectrum DIsorder) when I was 28. Although I have never been diagnosed with ADHD, I strongly suspect that I have that, also.

  • @caroljo420
    @caroljo420 Před rokem

    🤣🤣🤣 I can SO relate to this!!! I never heard the term neurodivergent before, but yup! That's me! I have epilepsy, I'm bipolar, and I suspect I'm on the functional end of the autism spectrum. That one, however, has never been diagnosed, and I'm 70 now, so I think maybe I don't need to worry about that.

  • @miyabeck8770
    @miyabeck8770 Před rokem

    My personal favourite ADD thing that I deal with is loosing my phone constantly but always knowing that my brother will know where it is for me, we r connected and he is my best friend

  • @rattea798
    @rattea798 Před rokem +2

    I’m slowly thinking I have adhd more and more but I kinda don’t want to admit it to myself. I related to all but two of these videos. Especially for the AirPods thing. I started using only headphones because they’re bigger and easier to find . I’m also not sure my parents actually believe that adhd exists so I’m not sure what to do about that

  • @frizzelfrazzel99
    @frizzelfrazzel99 Před rokem +1

    Even my inner monologue is all over the place!!

  • @siobhan2578
    @siobhan2578 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I appreciate this video so much. Thank you

  • @walking_the_gyre
    @walking_the_gyre Před 9 měsíci

    As a therapist, if a therapist doesn't see through you like a glass pane, there are others of us.

  • @Geolstud
    @Geolstud Před 9 měsíci

    All of this hits home for me.

  • @fleuroster5258
    @fleuroster5258 Před rokem +5

    Yesterday I told my friend I sometimes forget that some people like my closet friends literally exist. Sometimes I’m like wait I should write a message to this friend not that they think I’m a bad friend and after that I don’t text until 3 weeks later or more. She was shocked about it, that’s this can happen. Btw I’m not diagnosed but I know my brain is not complete how it should be

    • @Catlily5
      @Catlily5 Před rokem +1

      If people move away I often forget about them (most of the time).

    • @misstere5132
      @misstere5132 Před rokem +1

      This is an autism trait as well. Adhd and autism are closely linked

    • @RutabegaNG
      @RutabegaNG Před rokem +2

      This is one of those symptoms I did not see in myself until decades after I was diagnosed. Always had it, I just didn't recognize it until I saw someone mention it.

  • @shersmk90
    @shersmk90 Před rokem

    The chaos in all of these vids, separate and together! wow! How are you still alive?

  • @KiaMiaProductions
    @KiaMiaProductions Před rokem

    You totally hit the nail on the head with the spoon thing. 😊 I love u so much for this video. Ive NEVER been diagnosed but I've always known i didn't think the same. I constantly have an inner monologue, i imagine in full out scenes and comic strips. 🤣 Tbh, weed has helped me to understand my brain. Like the drinking soap. I literally look past things right in front of me. Caffeine makes me sleepy. I can enjoy my own company and be hilarious. 🤣🤣 This video made my heart happy. It's on thing when folks relate to one regular stuff, it's a whole nother level for folks to connect to quirks. 😜

  • @lillymoonstar8
    @lillymoonstar8 Před rokem

    I got into the purposeful habit of going “I’m so silly” instead of saying “I’m so stupid” when I mess up due to my adhd and in other ways because of the fact I personally think it fosters a better self-image and healthy attitude towards yourself

  • @astraamarante6233
    @astraamarante6233 Před 5 měsíci

    Was waiting for the “no” But did not expect a perfectly cut scream! 😂
    Also, can relate with the masking. I’m a girl in a household with a mother who had me at 36 and doesn’t realize she’s internally misogynist, so thanks to her insecure nitpicking, I can’t differentiate my normal behavior from masking, and I think that subconscious masking is part of why I’m so friggin tired all the time 😭

  • @studiosandi
    @studiosandi Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you for sharing and making it entertaining at the same time.

  • @clarysstoryboard3317
    @clarysstoryboard3317 Před rokem

    My reaction to prolonged happiness isn't "I don't deserve this" because I've been away from a really bad environment long enough to know that I do and I'm constantly feeling so exhausted that my sentiment is "whether I deserve it or not, I need this break" but instead of feeling guilty I feel suspicious.
    My instinctual thought process is "oh, things have been going a bit too smoothly, the next catastrophy is just around the corner. Brace yourself now while things are calm, so it doesn't come as as much of a surprise" and that's a whole 'nother kind of ouch.

  • @mmerriman4995
    @mmerriman4995 Před rokem

    Reading the comments it seems a lot of us had very late diagnosis.
    In my late 20s diagnosed with dyslexia.
    In my early 30s diagnosed with depression.
    In my late 60s realized I have always been ADHD!
    Working for others was so challenging and disappointing I bailed on traditional employment and created my own job. The good news is my 27 year old art school has been very successful as I am the janitor, the teacher, the secretary & more. The multi-layered challenges have kept my interest without disappointing any bosses.
    I don't make a lot of money but I don't have a lot of internal stress and that is priceless.

  • @loserchips1112
    @loserchips1112 Před rokem

    I'm decidedly neurotypical, as I can't relate to any of these, but I will say that almost everyone in my life has ADHD. My entire group of friends, my siblings, and the content creators I watch.
    Because of this, I've gotten very used to ADHD behavior and see it as normal. It's nice to have a good idea of how it all works despite not experiencing it myself, so I can help people in the future on the fly if they needed it. So i can proudly say I've NEVER said "it must be great to have ADHD, so much energy!"

  • @catlady743
    @catlady743 Před rokem +3

    Huh... I relate to a lot of this.

  • @dod2304
    @dod2304 Před 6 měsíci

    I HATE HATE HATE when people say, "Just write it down!" Or, even better.."If you were better organized you would n't lose things so often!"!!!😡

  • @killmenow756
    @killmenow756 Před 9 měsíci

    YES! Just yes. I felt every one of these in my ADHD bones!!

  • @river-collective
    @river-collective Před rokem +1

    I went "wait most people don't have inner monologues all the time", then I remembered I'm in a system, we don't have inner monologues, we have inner dialogues.
    Can't even think without someone answering.

  • @MsScully25
    @MsScully25 Před rokem

    I feel called out by almost each of these. I am really considering getting tested for ADHD. I had some of these issues my whole life, but I never got tested as a kid.

  • @jillhagen
    @jillhagen Před rokem

    Dang, all of these were so relatable.

  • @ArsenicJulep
    @ArsenicJulep Před rokem

    I share so many of these things.
    I tend to hear the same song in my head over and over for days. I have to play other music to make it go away.
    I remember conversations I had 40 years ago but often forget if I’ve taken my medicine in the morning.
    I feel like the years since 2015 have been really traumatic and I’m less able than ever to cope with the fear of loss and disappointment. Everything feels like it triggers emotional disregulation.
    Do not want to have a iPhone that requires AirPods because I know I will constantly be losing them.
    The last time I was too happy? Um, never?

  • @jmackey4751
    @jmackey4751 Před rokem

    So relatable.
    1. My inner voice is like Jim Carey in Ace Ventura without meds. It's A LOT.
    2. I left my keys in the drivers door while in a meeting at the bank. By some miracle they were still there.
    3. I cannot own air pods. I have neon green corded ear buds and I still lose them.

  • @crystaltiaratuesday
    @crystaltiaratuesday Před 22 dny

    Chesko is going to be the reason I get diagnosed, I just know it hahaha. That car key in the ignition thing, 100% done it so many times.

  • @SomethingWellesian
    @SomethingWellesian Před 9 měsíci

    So, interesting in light of the video description and the “aren’t we all a little ADHD?” clip at about 2:30-my experience was pretty much the complete opposite to yours. What you saw as individual personality quirks in yourself, I thought were just completely normal for everyone, neurotypical and otherwise, until I started being recommended ADHD-related CZcams videos and saw way more of myself in them than I expected (or honestly felt entirely comfortable with).

  • @ellenmorrison5614
    @ellenmorrison5614 Před rokem

    Omg the must make everyone happy and panicking if you don't hit so hard with me. Especially this time of year with buying Christmas presents.

  • @memoriea
    @memoriea Před rokem

    omg I do not know what I have, I am definitely not neurotypical. But, boy does this all resonate with me. Thank you for helping me laugh at myself and feel ok with myself for a moment.

  • @tychozzyx9439
    @tychozzyx9439 Před 8 měsíci

    7:00 My headphones are a necklace set with magnets to link them when you aren't listening. As it turns out, modern construction puts steel guards on exposed 90° angles like pillars and doorways. I have one set that lives on my work desk leg and one that lives on the wall in the atrium. It has raised my successful find rate dramatically

  • @shawn_anigans
    @shawn_anigans Před rokem

    Your videos make me feel better when I’m depressed :)

  • @electroracc5225
    @electroracc5225 Před rokem

    I have issues with guilt and shame. I think that's where my obsessive drive to please people comes from. Feeling like I'm a jerk if I don't make everyone happy all the time. I also have a similar issue with achievement, where I feel I need to be exceptional at all times or I'm worth nothing. In college, I routinely balanced 15-19 credit hours along with a work study job building sets for the theatre programs at school and the local arts center (that wasn't for credit, though,) performing at both (occasionally being in two at once, which was.. challenging..,) and president of the GSA for 3 years. People were amazed at how I did it. You can imagine how devastating it was for me when COVID destroyed my body and mind to the point where I became disabled.
    For awhile, my C-PTSD manifested through severe OCD. I'd wash my hands till they bled cause I was scared I'd get sick and infect people (awfully glad I got a handle on it before the pandemic.) I was so consumed by a feeling like I needed to keep control over everything, and a fear of awful things happening without warning, that I had myself trapped in a loop of magical thinking which convinced me for MONTHS that I killed David Bowie by not going to karaoke the night before he died.
    People commonly think of OCD people as being super logical and organized, but my room was always a disaster because I hoarded too much (I might NEED that box of fruit snacks with two packs left!,) and I thought I SOMEHOW could kill my mother if I didn't step over the same number of sidewalk cracks with each foot. I would count how many steps were against one wall or another in Pokemon games and alternate accordingly. Made Rock Tunnel a nightmare. OCD is more like EXTREME anxiety and obsession with personally-defined superstitions. I finally got it under control (I'd put myself at 20% of the nearly untenable symptoms I had before) when I started smoking pot, and now I'm a medical user for anxiety as well as muscle spasms and chronic pain.
    Also, I discovered I had ADHD when I tried stimulants recreationally (coke, Adderall, even meth,) and while my friends with more tolerance than I had were euphoric and horny, I just found my thoughts went from an entire committee of different, often conflicting, inner voices, into a streamlined, calm, inner MONOlogue where I could line up my tasks and complete them in order, as opposed to starting like 6 different projects and finishing none of them. I eventually got on Rx stimulants, and they changed the game in terms of my productivity.
    For what it's worth, obviously I don't know your medical history nor do I expect you to disclose it, but I can personally say I've had luck with Concerta (XR Ritalin) not giving me a crash or driving my anxiety as bad as Vyvanse or Adderall did. I'm less productive with it, but I have way fewer panic attacks and BPM spikes. I've also found nothing better for my C-PTSD, bipolar 1 (both depressive and manic sx,) fibromyalgia, sex drive, appetite, and insomnia than ketamine treatments. I broke down so many of the constructs and traumas directing my life, and had beautiful experiences which showed me my own value and the importance of letting things go. I doubt I could meditate had I not tried it. I had a feeling psychedelic therapy would work for me, because mushrooms showed me the beauty in the world, acid showed me the world can still be fun, MDMA showed me I'm actually an extrovert despite spending too much (by my definition) time alone and that people don't automatically dislike me on principle, and then ketamine was the big one, cause a single night trying it recreationally and sniffing a relatively small amount led to me waking up the next day feeling like my "back door option" of suicide was silly because I felt empowered to change my own life for the better. Might not be for everybody, but it sure helped me.

  • @KismetSarken
    @KismetSarken Před rokem

    Um, thank you. Just watched this and I think I need to see my doctor. I don't know if I have ADD/ADHD but it sure sounds like I might. Glad I found your channel Professor.