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Living with ADD Beyond Tips and Tricks

How do I move from "dealing with" ADD to "living with" ADD and thriving as a result of ADD?
ADDiva Blog | Tuesday August 25th - 11:54am | More August 2009 Blogs
 

"Honestly, how much of our lives ARE spent with ADD at the helm? If I am truthful, 100 percent."

Linda Roggli - ADDiva Blog

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Does ADD define me?

Of course not!
That’s a silly question!
Everyone knows that ADD is only one small part of me.
I am MORE than my ADD.
Right?

Then why are there websites and podcasts and books and organizers and therapists and, yes, ADHD coaches, who are eager to help me “deal with” my ADHD? They have tips and tricks and advice oozing from every pore and every page.

“Break the big job into smaller ones.”
“Begin with the end in mind.”
“Stop working on the computer two hours before bedtime.”

I’ve spent a lifetime memorizing these and hundreds of other helpful tips and tricks. I have schedulers and timers and colored folders and project management software. I’ve even recommended them to my clients. I know HOW to get organized, be on time, deliver on my promises. Yet I’ve mastered none of them. And frankly, I’m tired of trying.

I can’t shake the feeling that the world ‘out there’ believes that the operative word in Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder is “deficit.” That’s awfully close to “deficient.” And a long way from “fulfilled,” which is the adjective I’ve chosen to describe the rest of my life.

I unconsciously fall into it, this sense of being “less than” those perplexing folks whose neurotransmitters play together nicely. And I am usually unaware that I have clicked into my compensatory mode, either tap dancing to cover my deficits or applying a thick layer of my most effective tips and tricks. I can fake being “normal” for a while, but I have no endurance. The facade melts and I am exposed.

Now that I’m older, I don’t cringe nearly as often as I once did when I was “outed” as an ADDiva. But I do take a look at my patterns. With as much “work” as I’ve done with therapists, coaches, books and all the rest, I am dismayed to find that sometimes my gut response is still shame, followed by an urgent need to “try harder.” Even deeper though, is my realization that I am simply exhausted by the effort. It’s not worth it any more. To my body, my psyche, my energy.

Surely, surely, I can release the growling undercurrent that monitors my ADD-ish behaviors. Or at least notice it before it controls my thoughts and actions. When I’m on my deathbed, I don’t want my last words to be: “Well, I was almost linear!”

Of COURSE there is more to life than dealing with ADD. Everyone knows that. It’s the popular answer, ADD wisdom du jour. But honestly, how much of our lives ARE spent with ADD at the helm? If I am truthful, 100 percent. ADD isn’t a mask I can take off at night. I am not “more” than my ADD. I am ADD and ADD is I. Or perhaps ADD R Me.

So the harder question is: how do I move from “dealing with” ADD to “living with” ADD and thriving as a result of ADD? How do I look ADD in the eye, acknowledge its breath and depth and treat it as a respected ally instead of a pesky nuisance to be shooed away and thwarted at every turn?

I don’t have the answer. This inquiry deserves more than a flippant remark or a cliched retort. My suspicion is that each of us will make peace (and friends) with our ADD with as much variety and creativity as our wild-child brains allow.

So I invite you into the question. How do YOU go deeper, beyond the “let’s fix it” stage. How do you put your arm around ADD and walk down the road with it, knowing that there is one absolute certainty: that ADD will never desert you. It is yours (and you) for as long as you live. How do you move from “endurance” to “fulfillment” starting right now?

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3 Comments:

  • Posted by BrendaNicholson - Oct 13 2009 @ 1:52 PM
    Insightful
    Wonderful post, Linda, as always! I surely don't have the answers any more than you do, but I do know that I am who I am (thanks Popeye) and that's not likely to change much. The other day my 21 year old daughter (who also has ADD) told me that she can't wait to be 80 years old, because then she can be herself and people will just chalk it off to old age. Perhaps we are the eccentrics and the creatives in the world and wouldn't it be a dull place without us? I think the key is to focus on the positive rather than the negative. It's a daily challenge for me, as I suspect it is for many ADDers. Learning to love and accept ourselves - hopefully we don't wait til we're 80 to do so.
  • Posted by Gemini62 - Sep 1 2009 @ 1:57 AM
    Just taking baby steps right now
    I'm just getting used to the idea that, for better or worse, I've been had by ADD. It's part of me (and here I thought all my scatter-brained idiosyncracies was just from being a double Gemini with Scorpio rising), part of who I am. Its bad habits have pretty much ruled and ruined my life, but its hyperfocus can be an asset when I'm in a creative mood, or reading or studying (now, if I could just make it stop the hyperfocus at times that I should be shutting down for the night, or getting ready for work or church in the mornings...but, no, rebellious child that it is, it wants to play on Facebook, chat on forums, check e-mails, anything but slow down and get ready for bed, or get ready for work or church). It hates interruptions, too, which really doesn't help me at work, where my job is nothing but interruptions. As for me, I'm just taking baby steps right now, stumbling and falling as I learn to navigate my way through all the emotional ups and downs I'm experiencing right now. One moment I'm excited to be coming to a better understanding of why my life has always been such a mess, then I'm sad when I remember things that should have worked out, but didn't, resentful that I got blamed for so much that was out of my control, angry that no body ever considered ADD could have been a factor in my many failures in life. The baby steps I'm taking now, the nutrition, exercise, and getting more rest, I can already see, will be very helpful to me. But, I will be happier when I can forgive myself for the way I affected the people in my life. There is a ripple effect, all my past misbehaviors pulled some innocent people into a whirlpool of destruction. They have forgiven me, but can I ever forgive myself?
  • Posted by kdog - Aug 30 2009 @ 6:43 AM
    Thank you for your post
    Currently, my strategy has been to be angry or sad about it and to learn to apologize. I haven't bought into the notion that ADHD can be an advantage. Maybe for others, but I don't see it for me. Like you mentioned, I'm also getting to know some of my behaviors. I need to get to know them but I don't have plans to become friends with them. One of the reasons I go to coaching is to continually remind myself, like some go to an AA meeting, that I can't manage this on my own. I need help if I am going to do my best. I just keep telling myself that if great athletes need coaches to do their best an average guy like myself could sure use one.
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