Actually no.
Everyone is not a little ADHD.
Yes, sometimes you forget your keys, or lose the remote, or lose track
of time. But that does not make you
ADHD.
That has been one of the many “helpful” things I have heard
since my diagnosis 10 years ago. “You just need to try harder.” Ok, how about
you tell that to the paraplegic about walking.
It helps them as much as it helps me.
“But Liz, that’s not the same thing.
They can’t help that they can’t walk.” Yeah, and I can’t help that my
brain doesn’t brain the same way yours does.
In the time since my diagnosis, I have done a lot of
research and a lot of soul searching. It’s
been a struggle understanding all the ways I am different. It has helped make a lot of my childhood make
sense, but also made me mourn the childhood I could have had. The education I could have had. The grades I could have had. The organization in my life I missed. The social connections I missed. I have felt different and as though I didn’t
fit in most of my life. I never
understood why people shared looks with each other after something I said or
did. I still don’t. It’s hurtful, but I don’t know how I can
change that. I will probably never understand
people’s behaviors towards me. Facial
expressions can be lost on me. Social cues
can be lost on me. Jokes can be lost on me.
I am awkward AF.
I never fit in.
I’ve been socially awkward my entire life.
Getting my diagnosis at 36 was HUGE for me! My entire
childhood suddenly made sense. The more I read about it, the more
lightbulb moments I’ve been having. I was the oddball but didn’t know I
was. I didn’t really feel it until middle school. 8th grade was
when I started to notice that I didn’t really fit in with anyone. That
year I was noticeably bullied.
I was the kid in kindergarten who learned the lessons quickly,
then got bored and went under the table to play with the carpet (and luckily, I
had a great teacher who understood what I was doing and allowed it as long as I
was still learning)
I was the kid in 1st grade who never completed all the work and
had to stay in from recess and stay after school...and still wouldn't’ have it
done, but I did have a tally for my mom as to how many bugs flew in and out of
the windows. This was probably the first year I was given the “lazy”
label. “She’s far too intelligent to be doing this poorly, she must just
be lazy.”
I excelled in math and science (when the topics were of interest),
and absolutely failed at writing and lecture classes. Hands on is definitely
how I learn, which is why majoring in Art makes so much sense for me.
7th grade was when kids started calling me names, but I didn’t
think much of it.
8th grade was the year I realized I was different but didn’t know
why. Three girls in my Social Studies
class made me aware of that. Thanks, mean girls.
I was super outgoing until that 8th grade year, I used to
introduce myself to new kids to my school, and I thought I was making friends
easily...it’s one of those things that I wish I knew, but I’m glad I
didn’t. I wonder how much more awkward I would have been if I had known.
I grew up not completely caring what others thought of me, but I
also didn’t know that I should care. Not fitting in hit me hard when I was in
my 20s and 30s. I had groups of friends, but I never really felt like I
fit in. And looking back, I really didn’t. I would hear coworkers making plans
for happy hours but was rarely invited. I joined a softball team, and even
though I did have a couple of close coworker friends on the team, I still felt
left out. I was just weird and didn’t know it. I was probably that kid that
people made fun of behind my back, and thankfully I didn’t know it. Not
knowing how to fit in and not knowing why I didn’t fit in was probably one of
the best things for me, I didn’t get hurt.
My brain thinks in the literal, concrete, black and
white. Abstract ideas are difficult. Getting my art degree has been a struggle,
and I’ve failed classes because I took the assignments too literally.
My executive function won’t function well
enough for me to get off my ass and clean. I see the mess. I
know I need to deal with the mess. I WANT to clean the mess. But I
can’t get up and actually get it done. Which in turn makes me feel like a lazy
asshole. I feel like a useless lump most
days.
My eating habits have gotten much worse in the past year or
so. I go through 2-3 gallons of milk a
week. I try to eat. I want to eat. DJ tries so hard to get me to eat an actual
meal. Some days it works, others
not. I’m still in the middle of the “healthy”
weight range for my body size and type. I keep snacks to graze on which helps
most days, but I know I’m not eating enough.
I don’t like to chew. My jaw gets
tired. Or I decide it doesn’t taste
good. Or I just get bored with eating.
Therapy helps, but I still have a long way to go
ADHD is not just a matter of not being able to pay attention or
being easily distracted. It’s a frontal lobe issue. It’s executive functioning
issues. Its finding and keeping motivation for tasks that aren’t of
interest. It’s hyper focusing on one task for hours and being unable
to switch gears to something else. It’s being socially awkward, and unable to
read social cues. It’s really wanting to get up and clean those
dishes, but not being able to. It’s doing the dishes, but as soon as
someone else acknowledges it, anger appears and you no longer want to clean. It’s
hating the mess but hating yourself even more for letting it get that way. It’s
being embarrassed to have anyone over, so you just stay alone all the
time. It’s not wanting your family to know just how bad it’s
gotten. It’s being tired. All. The. Freakin’. Time. It’s getting
super overwhelmed and over stimulated and not being able to deal with
it. It’s exploding into a temper tantrum because you can’t regulate
your emotions. And it’s different for every single person out there with ADHD.
It’s having other mental disorders co-morbidly. I’m still on the hunt for
proper diagnosis’s so I can get the treatment and support I need.
My ADHD manifests itself in many ways. I’m a rude
interrupter. I can’t always read body language, facial expressions
or social cues. I say or do things that I don’t know I shouldn’t be
doing or saying which then causes people around me to look at me weird all the
while I don’t understand why. I don’t have that little voice inside me that
stops me before verbalizing things on my mind. I’m an over-sharer. I will tell my life story to anyone who will
listen. I don’t realize I’m getting too
personal. People get embarrassed for me. It’s like my train of thought leaves the
station before the conductor even realizes it, and by then it’s too late to
stop. I get overwhelmed by tasks very easily. I let daily tasks
go for too long. I forget important things all the time. I
have alarms set to go off every 10 mins from wake up until I leave for work or
school to keep me on task, and sometimes even that doesn’t work. Bills rarely
get paid on time. I lack motivation to do pretty much anything most days. I’m
tired all the time. I can take a 6-hour dead-to-the-world
nap and still be absolutely exhausted. But at bedtime my brain won’t
shut up and it keeps me awake until way past midnight most nights. And that’s if I’m lucky enough to actually
fall asleep. When I finally fall asleep, I
crash. Hard. Makes it almost impossible to wake up to an
alarm. I have time blindness, and task paralysis. Tasks take longer
than I think they will, so I never allow enough time for anything, and that’s
if I can even start the task to begin with. I was late to work
pretty much every day when I worked at the preschool. I was lucky to
have bosses that understand, to the point they made jokes about
it. It took me years to find a job like this. And then the pandemic
hit and I was furloughed (and eventually laid off) and home all day every
day. My “I can do it tomorrow” hit me at all time high. I knew I
didn’t have anything going on the next tomorrow and the next tomorrow that I
just kept putting it off until my place is still such a disaster that I’m too
overwhelmed to start. Everywhere I look there are piles upon piles of just
crap. Everywhere. I put something down and say “fuck it”…
I have weird clothing sensitives. If my socks don’t fit me
perfectly, I get frustrated, even angry sometimes. They can’t
slouch. They can’t twist. The toes have to be in the toe spot,
perfectly aligned. The heel has to fit in the heel spot. I have
been known to pull my socks off and throw them across the room in a rage
because they aren’t fitting the way they are supposed to.
I hate hair in my face or touching my neck. Not just one
random hair, but all of it. I have to either have my hair up or tucked
behind my ears to keep it off my face. I get mad when I’m doing something,
and it falls in my face. I tend to chop my hair most often in the wintertime
out of frustration of everything it gets caught in.
Sweatshirts that don’t stay up when I push up the sleeves, another
thing I have been known to rip off and throw across the room in a rage. I
purposely have a certain zip-up sweater on the back of the chair on my art desk
that has the good kind of sleeves that push up and stay up so I can be warm
while I art.
I don’t like my hands wet or touching wet things. Wet cotton
squeaks. Cotton balls squeak. I can hear it and feel it. Moving my
socks from the washer to the dryer kills me some days.
I hate when I hurt other people’s feelings. I will replay
the event in my head for years. Even after everything is deemed ok. I
pride myself on being nice to everyone. But because of my inability to
know what the right thing to say is, I inadvertently say hurtful things.
And people don’t tell me because they assume I did it on purpose. I
promise you I didn’t. I’ve started telling people this to give them a head’s
up that it could happen, and I want them to let me know if it does so I can
correct it.
I’m constantly looking for approval, probably from a lifetime of
feeling like I’ve been letting others down. A perceived slight can affect
me for days to years. Another reason why I thrive on being the nice
one. I don’t want others to hurt the way that I've been hurt myself.
Being given constructive criticism in front of others can cause me hurt and
shame. My dance teacher used to correct my movements in the moment, which she
should because it’s easier to remember rather than later, but it made me feel
singled out and embarrassed. Some nights I held back tears for even the
smallest corrections. I ended up quitting dance because of this.
I’ve heard all the suggestions.
Sticky notes. Making lists. Setting alarms. Apps. Setting more alarms. Do
the same thing every day to form a routine.
Sticky notes become invisible after a while. Lists disappear into my piles. Alarms get
ignored. Apps never work. Routines don’t exist in the ADHD world. I can do the
same thing every day for months, then one day I forget a step and the routine
is fucked.
When I talk to people about why I did the thing I did (or didn’t
do the thing I was supposed to do), and I’m told to stop making excuses and
just do the thing. I’m not making an excuse, I’m explaining why. I’m tired of
trying to explain myself. I wish people
would just understand and stop judging me. ADHD is too misunderstood by the
average person and so many people just refuse to listen or learn.
“ADHD was created by the pharmaceutical industry to push pills.” “ADHD
isn’t a real thing.” “People use ADHD as an excuse to get legal meth.” And the
worst one, “Adults can’t have ADHD, children grow out of it.” I wish I grew out of it. In actuality, ADHD symptoms get worse as you
get older. Hormones affect how well your
meds work. I’m lucky to get a couple of good
weeks a month. The rest of the month almost always goes to shit. And don’t even
mention what menopause is going to do to me.
The government makes getting our meds difficult. They have classified the meds as “controlled
substances” and I have to jump through hoops every single month. I can’t even request a refill until I’m
almost out of meds, and then I’m expected to remember to refill before I take
the last pill. I can’t refill my meds
using the pharmacy app, I have to call.
My psychiatrist must recertify my meds need every 3 months or I can’t
get any more. We’re treated like
addicts. We get accused of being drug-seekers when we have to call multiple
pharmacies for meds when the government causes a med shortage. It’s not like my
ADHD is going to go away. This is a lifetime disability. And yes, it is
considered a disability by the ADA.
I’m tired. I’m tired of the hoops. I’m tired of explaining
myself. I’m tired of struggling. I’m
tired of the chatter in my brain. I’m tired of feeling like a useless lump. I’m
tired of the looks I get when talking about my struggles. I’m just so fucking
tired of being tired.
(The font throughout won't match up and I have no idea why...)