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I'm so sorry about your situation . . .
I wish I had an answer, since I'm going through the same thing now. I was just diagnosed about two years ago, and my last job was a job I thought would be perfect. I also let HR know about my ADD--the first time I've ever done this--because after years of bad jobs, I knew that I had to cover myself.
Sure enough, about 7 or so months into it I was in trouble--making mistakes, missing deadlines. I "came out" to my boss (a lovely woman who I still see), and she helped make sure I got as much accommodation as they could "reasonably" give; indeed, they were more reasonable and tried harder than I ever thought they would. But in the end, the accommodations I needed were more procedural, and the dept. head didn't think that would work, so the let me go (so I could get unemployment).
So I've been looking since July. I've changed direction a couple of times, and now I'm (finally) going with my gut instinct, which is it's better to have two part-time jobs that are mildly interesting than one full-time job that very interesting but not flexible. I haven't found anything yet, which is very stressful since my unemployment ends next month.
I've read zillions of articles about how to find jobs you love when you have ADD; I've taken many workshops about job seeking. But what I want is an agency or directory that lists ADD-friendly employers specifically, not just a vague list of job titles.
I'll probably end up doing temp stuff, unexciting but fairly steady, until I either find something part-time or my husband starts making more money, whichever comes first. The pressure on me to make enough for my health insurance is almost unbearable.
It's funny that the most successful job I've had so far is administrative assistant. I know why now--there was a lot of change in the department, everything from personnel and mission to office location--and my boss let me take a lot of classes and was supportive of me taking on larger projects. He was also the most direct boss I've had since I left New York--Boston seems to be the passive-aggressive epicenter of the universe. If there was a list of places where people with ADD should NOT work, Boston would be right up there.
So I've digressed and it's been mostly about me--but I hope that you see that there are others who are just as frustrated, sad, annoyed as you. Doesn't help with the bills, but at least you know you're not crazy--everyone else is. (If you haven't read any of Edward Hallowell's books, I'd highly recommend them, especially "Delivered from Distraction" and "CrazyBusy").
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