r/videos May 30 '17

This guy's presentation on ADHD is excellent

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=JowPOqRmxNs
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u/skoolhouserock May 30 '17

I got diagnosed last week (I'm 35), and I've been on this site for 5 years. You are so fuckin right.

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u/CleverDuck May 30 '17

Have you joined r/adhd and subscribed to YouTube's "How to ADHD"? The creator of How to ADHD is engaged to a guy who didn't get diagnosed until mid 30s either. They'll soon be doing a special about life as a late-diagnosed person. :)

.
Ps: welcome to the Cool Kids Club! :D one of us. One of us. One of us.

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u/truthdemon May 30 '17

I was diagnosed last year and didn't know about this subreddit til now, thanks for this!!

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u/CleverDuck May 31 '17

It can be quite an echo chamber and negative, but still has good info, life hacks, and resources. :)

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u/skoolhouserock May 31 '17

I'll check it out, thanks!

And my son (who was diagnosed 6 months ago) calls us "ADHD buds," so I'm happy to be included in yet another cool kids club!

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u/CleverDuck May 31 '17

Ah! That's so fun for the munchkin. He's got someone just like him to share all the ADHD secrets with...! :)
Best of luck to yall. I don't have any spawn, but I definitely think growing up w/ a diagnosed parent would have made life a lot smoother.
Don't get me wrong though, mom did a fantastic job, but I definitely owe her a cabin in the mountains for all she had to endure. X'D.

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u/WeRip May 30 '17

how did you go about getting diagnosed?

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u/frogsexchange May 30 '17

Go see a psychiatrist and talk to him or her about it. Don't say you want drugs, say you think you have ADHD

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u/skoolhouserock May 31 '17

Went to see my family doctor. My kiddo was diagnosed about 6 months ago, so once she also heard my symptoms it was a no-brainer. I was expecting it to take a really long time (it did with The Boy), but I guess it's so common she didn't make me jump through hoops.

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u/faryl May 30 '17

Congrats on your diagnosis! I was 30 when I got diagnosed.

Isn't it nice to realize your whole life hasn't been your fault?

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u/skoolhouserock May 31 '17

Yes. It is. At the same time, it's tough not to look back at failed relationships, career ventures, etc and think "what if I had been diagnosed earlier?"

But, can't change that. Onwards!

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u/faryl May 31 '17

I totally get that.

It's like there's a mourning process for what/who you might have been. I also sometimes get down on myself for not having more self-compassion when I was younger.

When I catch myself feeling that way, I usually end back up realizing that if things had been different then, I wouldn't be who I am now - and that any of those changes would have meant missing out on so many of the people & experiences in my life that I love so much. The "what if" game can go both ways.

Treatment helps with some stuff - but I still find myself repeating patterns. The difference is at least now, for example, I know, "ok - I am super enthusiastic about XYZ right now, I love it, it's the best thing ever, it's life changing, it's my new favorite thing above all other favorite things.....and in 3 days or a week or a month, I'll have moved on and have a new favorite thing". Somehow it not being "my fault" makes it easier for me to "own" and have a sense of humor about it - instead of how I used to just get embarrassed about going "all in" on something, only to never follow through.

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u/skoolhouserock May 31 '17

How did you manage to write all that stuff about me?? My timeframe is a bit longer, usually 6 months to a year of HEAVY immersion.

That's actually the cool/bad thing about Reddit. You found a new hobby? Here are a few hundred people who know everything you need to know and talk about it constantly!

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u/CleverDuck Jun 02 '17

Hey by the way, How To ADHD juuust released this video, interviewing an ADHD Life Coach who has ADHD himself and was diagnosed at age 43. :)

https://youtu.be/DNCDwUv_gkQ