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Grief Cycle
Personally, I don't read the massive amounts of literature on the subject of ADHD. There, I admit it. I discuss books that other people have read! I have had this particular discussion. There are documented "phases" of the diagnosis process for ADDults, among other things of course. I do recommend some discussion and/or reading about it, Sari Solden has touched on the subject in Journeys Through Addulthood.
http://www.sarisolden.com
"Roadblocks
After Initial Treatment
You may be one of the first-generation "ADDults" diagnosed over the past several years. This diagnosis most likely brought you enormous relief and hope, even if mixed at times with feelings of grief and loss. Your diagnosis may have been the end of a "Crisis of Confusion," a long search for answers about an array of confusing, baffling, and very troublesome symptoms that you struggled with your entire life. If you are like many adults who weren't diagnosed as a child, the pervasiveness and seriousness of these kinds of struggles may have been invisible to all except those closest to you. Eventually, you may have taken a battery of tests that confirmed the difficulties that you and others may have written off as character flaws.
Finally, after many years, you understood why you felt so different all your life. You knew why so many things never made any sense to you, or why you had so much trouble in some areas even if you did well in others. You began to understand why your life course had led to dead ends and frustration, despite your ability, interest, and early promise.
After this startling discovery and diagnosis, you may have started treatment that probably consisted of education about AD/HD, as well as medication that brought you relief from the most troublesome symptoms. You suddenly could focus, you had energy, and you agreed with the people who said getting treatment was like putting on glasses for the first time. Things began to look up for you, and you let yourself begin to hope again. You may have felt that finally your problems were solved, that everything would now be OK. During this initial period of treatment, you may have received counseling and gone through what we call a "grief cycle" (see chapter 1), where you mourned your losses, felt anger at lost opportunities, and eventually came to what we call "acceptance" of your AD/HD. You may have attended conferences, where for the first time you met other adults like you-a whole new world of people-and realized you weren't alone. This experience was exhilarating, comforting, and educational; you may have seen dazzling slides of brain images and become somewhat of an expert on neurotransmitters. Many of you went home determined to begin your new life. Just think, a new you! This time you could do it! ....."
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