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re: Mom wants to fix me
I’m 29 years old and was diagnosed when I was 17 years old as a senior in High School. My Mother has had a hard time understanding it all and still wants to try to make me better. It’s so difficult for me to explain my brain and how I function to her. I moved back in with my parents a year ago while my mother was going through a bi lateral knee replacement. She was then hit with a colon cancer diagnosis and chemo treatments for the majority of this year. It’s difficult to live with her “constructive” criticism, and her constant need to tell me that I need to go “talk” to someone about everything. I think she is actually the one that needs to talk to someone about it, because it is mainly things that bug her, not me.
I know your mother is just being a “mom” and she wants you to not hurt, and feel the pain that being “different” may cause. What persons of that generation though, it is hard for them to understand that it is different out there in the world today. People are more accepting of these types of disorders. She just wants to protect you… :-) Before all of the problems with my mother’s health came around, I used to get so upset with her when she’d say things like she does…. Now, I’d rather have her trying to overstep her motherly bounds and annoy the mess out of me, than not have her at all.
The best way to get my mother to somewhat understand what life is like for someone with ADD is for her to make a phone call to someone, and take notes of that phone call, and then have me talking right next to her for someone else. Then throw a couple of random channel changes on the tv, a radio turned on, and a beach ball thrown around. When she hung up the phone (BTW.. the person on the other end knew ahead of time what we were doing), I asked her what her conversation was about, and if she can remember the main point of their conversation….. She didn’t.
I told her that is a little what it is like to have ADD all day every day. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. She got the point that I was trying to make, but it never once stopped her from trying to protect me and fix my ailments.
Good Luck with everything!
I’m proud that my brain is different! Having ADD is a portion of who I am.. It is not all of who I am.
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