|
Sorry to hear of the suspension
Calvin,
Sorry to hear of the suspension. It's late to go now to human resources, but you know what? I would go anyway. Here are a few thoughts.
I don't think you have anything to lose at this point ... But I would go to HR with the following attitude ... First of all, remember to get adhd accommodations, etc., you would have to go through a serious clinical evaluation beyond probably any you have had so far ... you probably don't want that. So I wouldn't really go seeking the official adhd thing ... I don’t think you can come in after the fact and get the official accommodation anyway. I think that needs to be done from the git-go.
I would do this: I would go and try to initiate a conversation about what a person with your habits needs to do. Frankly, if meds don't help you, you're going ot need to 1.) get an assistant or 2.) do other work in exchange for having someone do your paperwork or 3) pay someone out of your own pocket to do the paperwork.
Basically, brother, it's time for you to face up. You don't have to say the phrase "adhd." In fact, unless you have an extremely enlightened work environment, I would not use the term. But you do need to make clear that you simply do NOT do tedious paperwork well and that you need some adjustment or help with that aspect of the job. Frankly, that’s something you needed to tell the boss on day 1.
For example, if there a staffer you could pay to do this work for you? A secretary you could pay a little extra to do this on the side? ... Maybe a secretary could take your papers home at do it at night and charge you some extra money. This could be an informal deal just between you and her or you could have the support of the company on this. The ideal move for the adher is to offer to do what they do well for more hours in exchange for outsourcing the paperwork.
Either way, you've got to quit hiding this weakness. It doesn't work. I know: jobs are hard, and we're all afraid of losing our job if we own up to our disorganization and executive function problems.
But this just past year, I made a major shift in my job to minimize my adhd. In fact, I'm doing work that others do not want to do and in some ways it takes more time. But I decided that this was work that actually fit my adhd as it involved a lot more time out of the office, on my feet, interacting with people, etc. Guess what, extra time or no, my stress level went down dramatically this past year.
I know this can be hard to conceive, but remember, there are millions of rich people on this earth who do not do tedious paperwork well. Doing tedious paperwork well is not a precondition for success in life. The trick is that other people have found work and arranged deals that would play to their strengths. Know your strengths and really sell them to the company. The goal is convince the company that it will profit if you can do what you do best and get help with the rest.
So if I were you, I would propose a deal ... ask for a 3 month extension. Say just give me three months to turn this around and if I haven’t, you can let me go. But then say I really have been terrible with paperwork all my life and I need help in doing it. I’m willing to pay for this or do other work in exchange for having help with this.
Trust me: there are all sorts of solutions ... maybe you'll have to sit down with someone and do your paperwork right next to them exactly when they are doing it! ... Maybe you sit down with the boss’s assistant for 15 minutes each day. You've got to not be afraid of being different. Time to fully own up to your uniqueness. Do WHATEVER it takes (legally, morally of course) to get the work done, no matter how foolish it seems to an outsider ...
Come clean, cut a deal ... talk and chat around, find out secrets others are using ... there may even be easy software that others use ... But you're probably so embarrassed by the adhd that you imagine that everyone else easily files their records flawlessly ... I guarantee you that is not the case.
Quote
|