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.
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.
Wow! You've had it rough. I wasn't diagnosed until I was on my second college degree - nursing. I would read and study for hours and make poor grades. I spent 10X more time trying to learn and remember things. Than when I was on the medication for ADHD, I would read a paragraph one time and think wow this is what it feels like to be able to think like others! I used to read and reread everything and still not comprehend. I knew I wasn't stupid, but felt that way before the medication. I also would loose things, misplace things I had already filed or put away.
I don't know, I am dependent on my stimulant. If I don't take it I cant function. I don't go in to withdrawals, but I have to take it to function. So what do you call that? LOL
Treatment of a condition, same as diabetes.
Dependence on a medication doesn't mean you're weak, or 'addicted'.
It means you can depend on medication to do what it's supposed to do, successfully.
VivaLasViejas,
I love the elevator idea. Try my "2 real, 1 imaginary" next time you go out to eat.
Ergo2002 & puffinsrule also pointed out another oxymoron about us; despite having such trouble in school, after dropping out, failing out, etc., we end up with degrees. Not just one, but multiple, and advanced degrees. I myself have 4, along with multiple certifications and professional licenses.
It it got me to thinking, is it because we get board, look for the shiny and new? Is it because after our "first" education experience was a dismal failure, we shoot for the stars? ....Because we can learn something new quickly? Another degree is a distraction? Is it after the dismal failure of our first education we either get diagnosed and treated, self treat, develop coping mechanisms, or a combination? Or is it because growing up we were thought of as dumb, a slacker, lazy (the nuns loved to use this to describe me), or flakey, and now we have that in our psyche (just as a 90 lb anorexic/bulimic sees themselves as obese)?
in writing this I can't point to any one reason for me, just a combination. I love the shiny and new of learning. I also get a euphoria from accomplishment.
If if you have ever seen the movie, or read the comic/graphic novel (I love these lots of stimulation) "Darkman," tho whole premise is all the tactile nerves in his body are severed to help him deal with immense pain. Lacking this stimulation, his body dumps adrenaline "hoping" to feel. This gives him great strength and endurance.
i feel that because of my poor social abilities and being labeled flakey growing up, I am starved for those feelings that come from social interactions, despite having healthy relationships now. Because of this, accomplishments (like degrees and professional licenses) are that much "sweeter" and give me that euphoric rush.
I would love love to hear other's thoughts on this.
Growing up with those labels, I was pushed to be the stereotypical "jimmy Dean" (complete with biker jacket). One of my part time jobs in college was working as a bouncer at a biker bar (talk about shiny and new...) There came a point where I started to like myself for who I was, including the ADHD. I think I knew I liked myself, but finally admitted it. I did not like the person I was, if that makes sense. I became the bad boy, but for good.
i use to be the person that would berate a cashier that was slow, new, or screwing up when there is a long line of customers. Now,mi am the person that berates the customer in front of me acting like I use to. Think in liking myself, I never want to see anyone else treated that way, my freight train of a brain knows what is truly right and wrong, standing up for what is right today is always shiny and new, and I have the strength to do it.
That at does not mean that I am a saint.
"Cause I have prayed, I just behave,
cause saints and sinners are quite the sameness"
Religious Man, theme from movie "Nacho Libre"
to put it simply, the why is saint, the how is sinner. But there is some hint of truth to all of us, just bu the nature of this board, being drawn to the healing arts. Perhaps it is a way that we project "I am a good person."
I don't really know. I use meditation, prayer (yes I believe in God, but not organized religion), and self reflection regularly. This thread has caused me to take a deeper look at myself. I have learned more about me and ADHD from hearing these other stories.
There were here aspects of my life that I felt were part of the ADHD, but I just chalked them up to "my screwed up life." Now I see that they are part of or a result of the condition.
Banterings, you bring up some really good points.
I know I struggle with feeling inferior. I think as a result of all of the times of never being good enough, I feel I must prove myself over and over. I need recognition like I need air.
I feel the need to continually learn and improve in the hopes that, one day, I will be deemed good enough. I know that it is twisted, but it is truly how I feel. It is nearly a compulsion.
However, on the flip side, even though I am constantly learning, I still have that hopelessness, so I don't do anything to earn that recognition. I have stopped at two degrees, and I am afraid that I will fail certifications, so I don't take the tests. I recognize this as self-defeating, and I am working to change, but regulating feelings and emotions is incredibly hard for our "shiny tribe."
One of the things that I have discovered in my research and in my own life is that ADHD has similar symptoms to bipolar disorder. When we are engaged in a new adventure, we are on top of the world! But when the newness wears off, well...
We've all been there, in the dark, reminding ourselves of what is good and wonderful in this world, searching for what will make us feel better.
Treatment of a condition, same as diabetes.Dependence on a medication doesn't mean you're weak, or 'addicted'.
It means you can depend on medication to do what it's supposed to do, successfully.
Of course not!! Addiction is NOT the same as dependence, anyways. I"m just saying, I'm dependent on my meds, in both ways. I depend on them to help me and I am dependent on them to function. When I don't take them, I don't function in the capacity that I did even before I was taking them. That's all I was saying.
I admit, I am naive, and I'm here to learn. So, If i'm not understanding something, please enlighten me. :-)
ps: I just re-read that, and I'm not trying to come across as snotty, just in case that's how it seems ;-)
It it got me to thinking, is it because we get board, look for the shiny and new? Is it because after our "first" education experience was a dismal failure, we shoot for the stars? ....Because we can learn something new quickly? Another degree is a distraction? Is it after the dismal failure of our first education we either get diagnosed and treated, self treat, develop coping mechanisms, or a combination? Or is it because growing up we were thought of as dumb, a slacker, lazy (the nuns loved to use this to describe me), or flakey, and now we have that in our psyche (just as a 90 lb anorexic/bulimic sees themselves as obese)?
.
For me, it's because I am finally being treated after being told my entire childhood that I didn't have it. I DO have it, and I have almost every symptom, so I have no idea how it was missed. I also have NLD, and now that I am on meds I realize that I'm way more intelligent than I ever thought I was. I CAN do math, I CAN comprehend science. I just have to learn it differently than most.
I can say that I'm addicted to school. Its even crossed my mind to just keep going....forever. haha. I just love learning, especially now that I can take the time to focus on things.
That's why I'm here. I can't even begin to tell you how much I have learned just by reading on this forum. :-)
Of course not!! Addiction is NOT the same as dependence, anyways. I"m just saying, I'm dependent on my meds, in both ways. I depend on them to help me and I am dependent on them to function. When I don't take them, I don't function in the capacity that I did even before I was taking them. That's all I was saying.I admit, I am naive, and I'm here to learn. So, If i'm not understanding something, please enlighten me. :-)
ps: I just re-read that, and I'm not trying to come across as snotty, just in case that's how it seems ;-)
Oh! No, you didn't come across as snotty. I was hoping I didn't come across as lecturing. I might have misread your thread, I missed the "LOL" at the end of it.
Anyway, I was just repeating what my doctor told me when I was grumbling about having to be on medication for depression, He said it was just treating a condition, same as you'd treat diabetes. It made such eminent sense to me that I have used it often since then to help patients come to a point of acceptance.
We're good!
Oh! No, you didn't come across as snotty. I was hoping I didn't come across as lecturing. I might have misread your thread, I missed the "LOL" at the end of it.Anyway, I was just repeating what my doctor told me when I was grumbling about having to be on medication for depression, He said it was just treating a condition, same as you'd treat diabetes. It made such eminent sense to me that I have used it often since then to help patients come to a point of acceptance.
We're good!
:-) That's a really good way of looking at it, and it's so true. I totally agree that it is treating a condition, just like any other. I just think there is much to consider before someone starts taking them, I don't think the choice should be made lightly, thats all.
For example, I didn't think about what would happen when I want to have a baby, and I'm there now. I can't stop taking them while I'm in school, and while I'm told I can continue until I conceive, and even during my pregnancy at a low dose, that makes me so nervous. So, I'm putting it off and my damn eggs are gonna dry up!
Totally different subject, lol. There I go.
I love this thread.
Glycerine82,
Look into B vitamins; like 5 hour energy. It only has the caffeine of a cup of coffee but lots of B.I have been "stuck" overnight, and used what ever I could buy to normalize myself.
canigraduate,
Trying to be good enough is NOT twisted. We have heard our whole lives that we are not good enough, just like the anorexic/bulimic is never thin enough, we are never good enough.
I am just the opposite with tests. I don't need the class room time (especially if it is something I have been doing hands on). I just pick up a study guide and read the terms and their definitions.
Certifications just mean that you took a test and passed. Theoretically, it means that you know the material. It does not even mean that you can apply the material (that is a practicum). If I can do something and have, then taking a test is a piece of cake for me.
Unfortunately employers want to see that certificate and for some things you need it to do without supervision.
Just go for it! I think that you will surprise yourself.
Debi Fischer
6 Articles; 78 Posts
Wow. Is all I can say. Maybe I see some of myself in this-however-I also run on warp speed, and love the Internet. I can never have enough to do, have a great memory, I can remember things someone said to me 30+ years ago. And yes, I am guilty of working as an agency nurse for years, I used to explain to my friends that when I walked in and didn't know where anything was it was like a big adventure. I have had people tell me if I did only one of the things you do it would be enough!
I have never thought that I really had ADHD, just that I was different from most of the people I worked with. Oh, and did I mention that I have 5 degrees? I love coffee and diet Pepsi freezing cold. I have recently started doing weightlifting at a gym with a former professional bodybuilder. I have lost 20 pounds in 4 months, breaking a sweat and challenging myself really helps keep my attention and of course I want to look 10 years younger. I recommend this as an intense workout.
I was on the treadmill next to someone the other day at the gym. She has gone from, 217 to 137 in a year and is off all her meds for hypertension, and cholesterol and was also pre-diabetic. She said all her stress and problems fell away when she started weight training.
Well, I am off the topic.
The bottom line is you are very articulate and a great writer. I see a memoir in your future!