I'm Not Flaky, Lazy, Or Stupid...

I have ADHD. Not the cool Tom Cruise/Ty Pennington kind, where you can act out and make lots of money, either. I have the kind where people label you as stupid, flaky, and lazy. I wanted people to have an idea of how it feels to never be in control of your own life. To get a glimpse of the nightmare of doing your best, and never, ever being good enough. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

I have been pretty vocal in my defense of ADHD sufferers in some threads recently, so it will probably not surprise you that I have it, and a pretty bad case.

Most people that I know don't "believe" in ADHD. They think it is a case of "boys will be boys," whatever meaning that holds for them, or that "she's just a daydreamer."

Some people think back to that one hyperactive kid, the one who got in trouble all the time in the first grade because he couldn't conform to the structure of a classroom, when they picture someone with ADHD.

Some people have a slightly clearer view and know that there are different kinds of ADHD. They know that some sufferers act out and that some seem to be in their own world.

The rare few who understand the condition know that it is a serious mental illness. Statistically, boys tend to get the more outgoing, hyperactive, aggressive types of it. Girls tend to get the inattentive, daydreaming types.

I have the inattentive kind of ADHD. To see me, I look normal. I even act normally, most of the time.

However, the things that go on in my head... {shudder}

My symptoms started showing when I was four. I constantly lost things. I would put on mismatched everything. I would wander off in the mall when things caught my attention. I got left behind a few times because I was enthralled and didn't hear my parents. I had a hard time following directions and would forget what someone had just said to me. My parents thought I must have a hearing problem.

So my first test was a hearing test. I passed that, pretty easily. My hearing was fine. My parents assumed that I needed more discipline and structure, that I was just flaky and a little absent-minded. It helped, a little, although my behind would never be the same.

I started kindergarten and did pretty well. They expect you to be flighty there.

First grade... not so much. I was a smart kid and could do the schoolwork, but I had problems with impulsivity and remembering to turn things in. My name lived on the naughty board. I couldn't stand the disappointment in my parents' faces, so I tried harder.

I had so much anxiety back then that I had severe insomnia. I would lay awake in bed at night and try to figure out why I was so bad. I prayed to God to make me a better girl. I prayed to God to fix me so I could be good like the other little girls and pay attention in class. I prayed to God to make Mama and Daddy not get so mad at me when I got in trouble for daydreaming, or leaving assignments at home, or for leaving my things at school.

My parents and teachers thought that maybe first grade was too easy for me, that I wasn't paying attention because I could already read and write.

My next test was an IQ test. I passed it, too. The powers-that-be decided I was "Gifted-and-Talented" and sent me to a special class. This helped, a little. The class was faster-paced and wasn't as repetitive, so it was easier for me to tune in. My name was still on the naughty board most of the time.

Things continued this way for a while. I was smart enough that I made good grades because I could pass the tests. Even when I didn't do the homework and missed deadlines, I could get by. I skated through each grade with A's and a couple of B's. That wasn't good enough, though. My teachers thought I was lazy, that with a little effort, I could get straight A's. That, if I would just apply myself, I could do my homework and pay attention in class and really be somebody smart.

It took all my effort just to do as well as I was, and everybody wanted more. My parents thought I could do better at home if I just tried a little harder. My teachers thought I could be a superstar, if I would just work a little harder. I cried myself to sleep most nights because I just couldn't figure out what they wanted from me. Nobody could explain it, either.

I heard over and over, "You're so smart. I don't understand why you don't try harder." Nobody ever listened when I said that I was trying as hard as I could. Nobody ever believed me.

I tried my hardest until the seventh grade. Then puberty hit.

I thought my life was stressful before, but once hormones hit... yeesh. My grades fell through through the floor. My life at home was in turmoil. I could barely remember to brush my teeth regularly. Forget showering daily. I was lucky to remember to even eat on a regular basis. My weight fluctuated horrendously as I would forget to eat for a day or two at a time, then gorge on sweets and junk food to make myself feel better emotionally.

Teachers are not equipped to see this. My parents had their own problems, as their marriage was starting to break up, and didn't even notice me most of the time.

Some other events happened and I ended up with an adopted brother and parents who were in a state of wary detente.

My new brother was six years old and wild. He had ADHD and acted out, like a champ. This led to him getting diagnosed very early.

However, my parents didn't "believe" in ADHD. They thought my brother's problems could be fixed with discipline and structure (sounds familiar, doesn't it?).

They worked with him and worked with him, and eventually he was able to keep it together in school.

He started smoking marijuana when he was eight years old. He claims it helped, a lot. It must have. He didn't end up in trouble nearly as much after that.

The result of all of this is that I and my problems were shoved to the background. I felt let down. I was valuable to my family, but no one was interested in my issues. I felt like my family could only see me if I acted like everything was OK. I felt like my problems were invisible to them. I couldn't trust anyone to see me as I was, to believe me when I told them I was having trouble. But I was able to manage and survived puberty fairly intact.

So, fast forward to my high school years. At this point, I had pretty much given up on ever being good enough for my teachers. My parents had divorced and remarried each other, and were in the process of breaking up again. I had also given up on being good enough for them. I was passively suicidal.

I prayed to God every day to let me have a tire blowout when I was alone in the car so I could die an a car accident, or to let me have a quick, deadly disease. I had suicide fantasies. I couldn't follow through, though, because my precious baby brother, the adopted one, was the first one home and I was terrified he would be the one to find me.

I prayed to God to just bring me home to Heaven, because life here was just too hard.

I still functioned, though. I passed my classes, barely, and got into a good university. Life got even tougher. I couldn't function in social situations and developed few relationships. The slight support network I did have at home was gone and I was completely on my own. I had to learn how to pay my own bills and function as an adult without much guidance.

I did okay the first couple of years, as I was excited about this new, shiny experience. Then reality set in. And it was hard and bleak.

I became actively suicidal. I had plans, oh, so many plans. I started practicing cutting my wrists. I researched the right ways to do it so I would bleed out. I decided that was too dramatic and would hurt my family too much, so I came up with several, less flashy, plans. I thought maybe I would just go "missing."

Eventually, I came out of what I later realized was a severe depression. I graduated, although it took me five years, and got a job. I hopped from job to job the first few years, and eventually settled down into a job as a typesetter at a print shop.

It was a low stress job, but it required a lot of attention to detail. A LOT. Which I was terrible at. So, I developed strategies to help me. I would proofread things three times and send them back to the customer to proof read. I don't know why, but no one proof reads their own stuff. This worked for a few years. I was able to focus in the beginning, because it was a new, shiny experience. But that didn't last long.

My job was boring. And repetitive. There wasn't much there to capture my attention. I tried to help out in the front office and in the press room to give me enough variety so I could focus, but my boss wanted me in my cubicle/box at all times.

I got in trouble, time and time again, for typos. For small mistakes here and there. For being late. For not following through on an email. For not being good enough. "You're so smart. I don't understand why you can't try harder and do this!"

I was eventually fired after six years. I had given up trying to be good enough, and my boss had given up trying to deal with me. He didn't care that I was trying my hardest. He didn't care that it took all my effort to be sub-par. He didn't want to accommodate me with a proofreader or give me any slack for mistakes.

I was costing him money, so I had to go.

I had gotten my CNA certification, so I started working full time at a nursing home. It felt good to help people, so I decided to go to nursing school because I couldn't pay back my student loans at minimum wage. My husband was footing most of my bills.

I had thought I was stressed the first time I went to college. Hoo, boy.

I came on to allnurses and complained because I couldn't pass nursing school tests. And one of the commenters suggested I get tested for ADHD.

I passed this test, too. With flying colors. Apparently, I have a bad case of ADHD. My doctor was amazed that I had been able to function as well as I had. He immediately started me on meds.

I started out with Ritalin, which was OK. I felt a little more "normal." I could walk into the kitchen and remember what I went in there for, the first time, for the first time in my life. I still couldn't study.

So I started Vyvanse. Big mistake. I became a raging psychopath in my head and a raging witch on the outside. I hit my dogs, I fought with my husband, I wanted to murder people in WalMart and thought about ways to do it. It was awful.

I gave up meds completely until after I graduated, I just tried harder. And passed with B's and C's until I graduated. And my nursing instructors said: "You're so smart. You do so well on the floor. I don't understand why you aren't doing better in class." I couldn't tell them I had ADHD. It wasn't a real disease, after all, according to every one I knew. I didn't trust nurses to be any different.

After that, I tried Adderall. It worked for a couple of hours. I was super nurse! Then I was starving and couldn't focus for the rest of the day. It didn't matter if I took more or not. Apparently, I used up all my focus in that first burst.

Then I started getting dizzy, my heart would race, and my ankles would swell. I would get angry and have outbursts at work. Apparently, stimulants make me nuts and put me into heart failure.

So, no more meds for me.

At this point, I have given up trying harder. I have given up trying to do better. I muddle through my days at work and take the criticism as it comes. My patients thrive, but my charting... well, it takes me longer than most because I have to check everything three times, and I'm sure there are still holes.

I am working now as a traveler/agency nurse, so that I can leave and start a new place before my ADHD gets bad and I start messing up. Each assignment is new and shiny, so I can do it for a little while.

I still have the daily struggle with forgetting where I put my keys, making sure my clothes match, and remembering my lunch. I have backup deodorant in my car and my nurse bag. I have a realtor-type lockbox on my door so I don't lock myself out anymore.

I am not flaky, lazy, or stupid. But I just can't try any harder. And I am OK with that.

It's funny you say that because I have always been a caffeine junkie and I had an unnatural attachment to ephedra when it was still on the market as a "work out aid". I appreciate the information and I will consult a specialist. It took a huge effort and a week of headaches to detox myself off of diet Pepsi since I don't like coffee. I no longer take ephedra but only because it is no longer an option. To a certain extent stimulant meds scare me because although I know from professional experience if I did truly have ADHD they would help me focus and I don't have an any history of addiction the remote possibility of addiction tends to prevent me from seeking medication therapy

I thought I walked this road alone.

I have the classic ADHD, diagnosed at 27. I started on Ritlan, was not strong enough. I now take Dexedrine (Dextroamphetamine), it makes me tolerable. I did not like Adderall at all. My wife can tell when I have not taken my medication, that is because she wants to kill me.

canigraduate, I suspect that there is more to your story than you let on here. Some of the descriptions fit my life except you leave out the coping mechanisms. I am going to touch on some more characteristics of ADHD, some of them are taboo.

As as TamaraUsher alluded to, we self medicate. That is how many of us get through school. (I suspect canigraduate knows what I mean). Whether drugs, alcohol, or caffeine, we do it because it helps. Drugs like marijuana (OP's brother) and alcohol make life interesting, shiny, and new. Drugs like cocaine and meth only cause us to focus and calm down. As TamaraUsher alluded to, drugs and alcohol do not affect us like other people. Amphetamines do not give us any euphoria. Our tolerances are high, and even when inebriated, our brains function very well. We can drink a sailor under the table and be in work at 6:10am (10 minutes late as usual).

Time means nothing to us. One minute, one hour, ten hours, it is just a bur. What time is it? If I see sun it is day, else it is night. I get there when I get there.

We teach ourselves OCD. Soon as you come in the door, keys on the hook by the door. If we don't put them there, we might as well throw them in the garbage, because we aren't going to find them. That's OK, because above the key hook is a cabinet with 2 duplicates of each key. Two because WHEN (not if) we lose our keys, we just grab the duplicate. There is a chance of forgetting to have another set made, so we have a back up to the back up. At that point, we get 2 more sets made.

I sleep 2-4 hours a night. I remember the first time I stayed up all night, 8th grade. I still go 2-3 days sometimes without sleeping. The longest I went was 5 or 6 days. I got a lot done. I have achieved REM sleep while conscious. Reality blended with a dream. That is how we go so long without sleep.

Lack of impulse control: as TamaraUsher said, I too wonder how I am alive today. We are brutally honest. We will tell you exactly what we think. Most people can't deal with that.

We are creative. We connect dots and see trends that others miss. Our brains work too fast that people think we are stupid because they cannot understand such complex thinking. That coupled with (I don't think it is the true) dyslexia. We are always superimposing numbers or letters, usually it is only 2, right next to each other (not the whole word). The "I before E" rule kills was. Thank God for autocorrect on computers.

We have antisocial tendencies. That is a combination of us not having good social skills to begin with, coupled with being told we don't try hard enough our whole lives. With the lack of impulse control, we reach a point and don't care what anyone else thinks. Get close to us, we are the most loving, best friend you will ever have. Our pets know that about us, they understand us better than people do. Get close to us, your life will be all the more richer for it. We do act like a jackass sometimes and will probably offend you, please forgive us.

Couple our impulsiveness with risk taking, all that energy, creativity, poor social interactions, and the need of social interaction by human beings, and many of us are quite promiscuous. Just as we have a high tolerance for drugs and alcohol, so to with this. It takes 3 lovers to satisfy us. Unlike drugs and alcohol, we actually experience a euphoria from sex. To us, this can become addictive.

As the OP said, "the things that go on in my head." He go to some really dark places.

We live in the moment. The only time that we comprehend is now.

Our minds are always going. We solve complex problems by running "simulations" over and over again in our heads (whether we want to or not).

We thrive on stress. We write our 36 page senior thesis the night before it is do and get a B+ on it. Stressful environments make us focus. We like chaos, it is like a jumbled up jig saw puzzle and our minds can piece it together and we can navigate the chaos.

We teach ourselves disorganized organization. We throw things in piles, but I know which pile it is in. One word to define our lives; clutter.

We can hyperfocus and shut out the world when we want to. That aggravates people close to us.

The internet is like crack cocaine to us. We navigate so many web pages simultaneously and so fast, normal people can not look at our computers for more than a minute. It is the ultimate in sensory stimulation.

We remember everything, recalling is another issue, It will come to us at 2:30 AM, 8 hours after we needed to remember it. We may call you at 2:30AM to tell you that we remembered it was "Bugs Bunny." (That time thing and impulse control.)

We see the world differently. We see patterns, we have to look at the big picture and know how things work and how everything fits together.

The emotion we feel most is frustration.

Smart phones have saved us, we can now remember phone numbers and appointments.

We kick butt at Jeopardy.

If we could take one pill, make the ADHD instantly go away, and be a normal person, we would NOT do it. We recognize that it is a strength. The world we see is beautiful. We realize that we move too fast for everyone else. We know the advantages it gives us. We know that it is a gift from God.

canigraduate, thank you for writing this. I am jealous of your eloquence with words and how you convey your thoughts. As I write this, I go through my checklist, I am second guessing my self as usual, fearing that my brain is thinking faster than the words I type and I sound like an idiot. Thank God for that impulse control issue because I tell myself, "post it."

Embrace your gift. From the movie "Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" with Gene Wilder, my favorite line is: "We are the music makers, And we are the dreamers of dreams"

These are the first 3 lines of the poem "The Ode" by Arthur O'Shaughnessy (1874). It has nine stanzas, although it is commonly believed to be only three stanzas long. The opening stanza is:

We are the music makers,

And we are the dreamers of dreams,

Wandering by lone sea-breakers,

And sitting by desolate streams;

World-losers and world-forsakers,

On whom the pale moon gleams:

Yet we are the movers and shakers

Of the world for ever, it seems.

Finally those with ADHD see our lives in Metallica's song; "Nothing Else Matters"

So close no matter how far

Couldn't be much more from the heart

Forever trusting who we are

And nothing else matters

Never opened myself this way

Life is ours, we live it our way

All these words I don't just say

And nothing else matters

Trust I seek and I find in you

Every day for us something new

Open mind for a different view

And nothing else matters

Never cared for what they do

Never cared for what they know

But I know

Oh, one last thing, we use metaphors to describe the world and express our thoughts. Poems and songs are great ways that we can illustrate our thoughts so others can understand.

Thanks, banterings. I am so ADHD lately that it's taken me this long and about five attempts to digest your post. I feel like I need to smack myself in the head to reboot, sometimes. :)

As far as coping mechanisms go, I am terrified of being a druggie and catching STDs after seeing some things I probably shouldn't have as a child. I am odd in that my addictions are mostly fiction-related. I read way too much. I watch too many movies. I love long-running TV shows. I have probably read a couple hundred thousand books.

I'm a caffeine addict, too. I used to smoke, until my Mom got breast cancer. I drank in college, but I can't stand the feeling of being out of control. Same goes for marijuana, plus pot makes me feel stupid.

I have a problem with food, too. I fluctuate up and down 50 or 60 lbs every five years. I obsess about exercising, then I obsess about eating. Currently, I'm in fat mode.

My Dad, who is in denial about his ADHD, is a church fanatic. We went to church every time the doors opened. He taught Sunday school, led Bible studies, was active with the youth group, etc. Now he takes college level seminary courses for the fun of it.

My baby brother has turned to drugs and alcohol.

My blood brother, who was diagnosed as an adult, is a workaholic and sports fanatic. He has played so many sports that he has worn away his cartilage in most of his joints and given himself degenerative arthritis. One summer, he played on four softball teams.

My mom, who was diagnosed in her late forties, was an artist. Her addiction was mainly arts and crafts. She painted, knit, and crocheted for hours a day.

I think it's interesting to see how all of us ADHDers channel our addictive tendencies.

Not sleeping comes natural. Pushing ourselves not to sleep is a form of self medicating. Our energy keeps us going, sometimes forgetting to sleep. We find that when we push not sleeping for days at a time saps our energy, slows us and the world down.

for sure; this sounds familiar. one of the main reasons i restrict my eating and sometimes stay up all night is kinda like you said - it's a natural 'high' where hyperfocus is easy to access. undereating and undersleeping - not to a dangerous extent, just enough - helps my concentration and efficiency like whoa. idk why but it does.

Specializes in CVICU CCRN.
mdzieger,

One of my coping abilities was learning to skim textbooks. Another that I found that when I had to read (study) doing many things helped me concentrate and absorb the knowledge. Cartoons were always on when I did my homework. As I write this, I have one eye on Adult Swim on Cartoon Network.

I as many others (many who may not admit for professional reasons) self medicated. I can tell you, caffeine is a hard drug. For or my undergrad I use to buy caffeinated spring water to make a mug of expresso, was down a handful of No-Doz, then pick up two 1-liter bottles of Jolt cola and a pack of giant chewy sweet tarts on my way to my 8 am class.

I too study/learn with constant background stim. I have a bizarrely successful visual memory - very nearly photographic for numbers and blocks of text, as long as it's 5 lines or less. I can remember lab values for a long, long time. Weeks even. Just don't ask me the patient's name....

As long as people can tolerate me being chronically late and occasionally wearing mismatched clothes, I've been very successful in my career. We shall see what nursing holds. So far, so good. However, I too dread the days when things are no longer shiny and new.

Back in the old days when I was training horses and competing full time, I used to stay up for days on end. I was a definite self-medicator. (And still am, with legal substances that are no less harmful, I've found). Breeding season, foaling and show season always coincided. My drug of choice was full octane coca cola with instant coffee granules. I always liked the super dark tasters choice. It foamed up nicely and hit like a freight train.

These days it's redbull. Or, should I say, was. I forgot to eat for three days or so during finals, lived on redbull and espresso, didn't sleep, went for a run, and ended up with a 48 hr cardiac admission to have all my electrolytes replaced and a nuke med stress test. Apparently after you've surpassed the 40yr mark, your cardiac system doesn't find that behavior quite so cute.

I'm thinking off all of you...kindred spirits. As my father used to say, where would he be without his brilliant scatterbrain?

*hugs*

Sent from my iPhone using allnurses

My heart breaks reading this. My 5 year old daughter is very likely ADHD (still trying to get her tested).

I see many of the same things in her that you describe so eloquently.

I can't imagine demanding she try harder all the time, or her crying herself to sleep unable to figure out why she is so "bad."

I'm so sorry it took so long for you to get a diagnosis.

Your story inspires me to fight even harder for my daughter. No child deserves to feel that way.

Thank you so much for sharing.

Specializes in Transitional Nursing.
It's funny you say that because I have always been a caffeine junkie and I had an unnatural attachment to ephedra when it was still on the market as a "work out aid". I appreciate the information and I will consult a specialist. It took a huge effort and a week of headaches to detox myself off of diet Pepsi since I don't like coffee. I no longer take ephedra but only because it is no longer an option. To a certain extent stimulant meds scare me because although I know from professional experience if I did truly have ADHD they would help me focus and I don't have an any history of addiction the remote possibility of addiction tends to prevent me from seeking medication therapy

Here's the thing though. IF you truly have ADHD, stimulants won't work on you the way they work on people who abuse them. They literally slow your brain down, so you can think.

I'm prone to addiction, (nothing substantial, just an addictive personality---common in those with ADHD), and I am just very, very, careful to NEVER take more than I am prescribed. IF I feel it's not working, I talk to my doc. For me, stimulants don't make me feel any different physically, just mentally.

One thing you do have to decide though, is if you wan't to be dependent on a medication like a stimulant, because your body WILL become dependent on it.

I struggled with the decision for a few years. My husband finally begged me to please do something about it, so I gave in and it's like a whole new world.

Thank you for sharing your story. I know first hand how vunerable this made you feel. It was a great service to us in sharing this story so that we can see a real face behind a disease that people mistake for behavior. Hopefully, you reached someone that needed to know how heartbreaking a disorder like ADHD is.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.
for sure; this sounds familiar. one of the main reasons i restrict my eating and sometimes stay up all night is kinda like you said - it's a natural 'high' where hyperfocus is easy to access. undereating and undersleeping - not to a dangerous extent, just enough - helps my concentration and efficiency like whoa. idk why but it does.

And this sounds familiar to me, only with me it's bipolar and not ADHD that drives the urge to under-eat and under-sleep in order to get that "high". I love my highs because I can get so much done in so little time. Only trouble with me is it doesn't stop there.....the ability to focus goes away the higher I get, and then mania sets in. I'm inattentive and easily distracted---I'll sit there at a desk piled high with work and not be able to do any of it. In fact, at one point I thought I had ADD, but many symptoms of BP are the same as those of ADD/ADHD. So it's interesting to read through this thread, because while I don't have the condition, I recognize and can even relate to a lot of its symptoms.

Specializes in ID/DD, CM, UM.

Thank you for sharing your story! I was diagnosed with ADHD 7-years-ago in my first year of nursing. I had similar experiences growing up where I just tried so hard and could NOT get it together. I lost things (and still do, but not as bad), someone would tell me something (and I could not remember 5 min later, even though I can remember my first day of kindergarten, LOL), oh it goes ON and ON. I had periods of depression and all of that too, for YEARS. Medication helps me, but I've also learned some adaptive strategies with note-taking/organization, talking to others online and learning more about it, exercising, eating healthy. I look at it as more of a difference and completely embrace it as being part of me. From my perspective, it sounds as if you are figuring things out and accepting of the diagnosis, and you have come a long way. I'm concerned though. I hope you are traveling because you want to, not because you want to leave before any of the "ADHD" comes out. It does not have to be like that. PM me if you'd like.

Just a quick background, but please read through or skip to the 2nd paragraph I about medication. I too went through my childhood with ADHD and much of my early adulthood with ADD. My parents were aware that I most likely suffered from this chemical imbalance of the brain labeled ADHD, but at that time had heard too many "war stories" about putting children on medication and probably rightfully so choose not to, instead elected for behavioral modification and counseling. Both of which help, but like all ADD-er's I would manage to periodically screw-up somehow and/or do sub-par school work even though my IQ was repeatedly tested and scored in the 140's. As a young adult every job I had my bosses couldn't decided if they wanted to promote me or fire me, but I usually saved them the trouble by eventually quitting as when my performance issue(s) began negatively impacting my job security. I didn't become a quitter because I didn't care or wanted to, it was because after years of living with ADHD my self worth and confidence wasn't very enduring.

The reason I wanted to reply to you is that I started taking medication 15 years ago and my life has been a complete turn around. I'm not saying it was "only" because of the medication, because like you I had a handful of Doctors who started me on medication and either they didn't really do anything for me, or I didn't like the feeling or side effects, and I would eventually stop taking them. I now know it is because none of all the possible medications available for us, it's important that you realize not "one size (dose) fits all". That's why it's extremely important that you find a Doctor who knows this and closely monitors the doses and effects until the right medication and right dose is realized. It took me almost 4 months of bi-weekly reevaluations, with many periods of frustrations as he increased (lower dose had no effect) and decreased (higher dose had adverse side effects) and frequencies (BID, TID, etc) which made it really hard for me to "stick with the plan". I often had the same old thinking that "this ain't going to work" and wanted to just quit trying, but thankfully I didn't. Then one day I started noticing a change and after another month or so of some minor tweaks I discovered an amazing new world where my brain was "quiet" and simple things that for some reason were so hard in the past, actually were simple. I've had to do some dose adjusting through the years and I still have day to day and "life problems", but they don't seem so complicated. I could go on and on about how medication changed my life after living, or should I say "surviving" years without it, but my point is when you tried these medications, did you give it time and really work with your Doctor to find the right medication, dosage, and frequency? I just take one medication (and I'm not going to say which one because it doesn't matter and it may not be the right one for you) but I know for some ADD-er's it takes a combination of a couple different medications. It will change your life because like myself, I didn't know there was this better "world" (for lack of better words) until I found the right medication and then worked really hard with my Doctor to find the right dose. A few times I have got myself in position where for various reason's I ran out and couldn't get my prescription filled right away and my mind reverted back to the I call it "Committee in session" (only fellow ADD-er's will understand what that means) and I can't believe I lived like that and was able to accomplish the things I did. Do I want to take 3 pills a day to make my brain work, hell no...but I do it because I now know what it is like to live both ways and I would go crazy if I had to go back to that unnecessary chaotic life of before. So please, if you haven't already, find a Doctor (or psychiatrist) that specializes in Adult ADD and stick it out, because if you do I PROMISE you it will change your life in way you can't even imagine and you'll begin to see all the benefits and positive qualities that ADD gives you. The same qualities you have now but can't appreciate them because the negatives far outweigh the positives. I've talked (typed too much) but I wish you luck in whatever path you choose, but I can promise you one thing for sure, you're life issues in regards to your ADD will continue to repeat the same pattern of short-live/term successes followed by eventual defeat of some sort to where you finally decided to just "move on", that is unless you find the right Doctor who will work closely with you to find the right solution(s). It's obvious by your detail semi auto-biography that like myself and most ADD-er's that no matter how much we think we can change and learn over time to "manage" or ADD on our own (how many times have you said to yourself...never again or I can't believe I did that AGAIN?) ... we can't, or brains don't work like that unless we get the proper brain chemistry (and yes this is usually through medication) to allow it to.

Thanks for reading this far and I hope you take what I've said in to consideration. I wish you the best because I've been where you are and it sucks, but the balls in your court, nobody is going to do it for you.

amandawdm, thank you for your concerns. I am alright with traveling. It has more to do with my husband's penchant for getting promoted, then having to move out of state, than my ADHD. It just happens to work out well for me!

jjbroderick22, thank you for sharing that and for your concerns. I admit, I haven't pursued the medication angle aggressively because I am tired of wading through seas of doctors who don't know much about ADHD, or any mental illness, for that matter. Also, since the heart failure episode, I am very wary. I do believe that I need to find a good psychiatrist, though. I have moved three times since last summer, and am using that as an excuse not to look for one! Procrastination is one of my most prominent symptoms.

Which is why I am writing this and not unpacking. Hmmm.

Later!

Thank you for sharing you story. It's awesome that you found a way to nurse that complements that different way you think and process.