• 2 Posts
  • 14 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 9th, 2023

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  • Hm. Let’s have a look shall we…

    Glances through post history

    You seem to have form for making inflammatory comments and when people react negatively, understandably so, you accuse them of being overly sensitive or that they should “calm down”.

    If you meet one arsehole, you’ve met an arsehole. If everywhere you go, you meet aresholes, maybe it’s time for some introspection…



  • All I wanted to do was to spread some hope among those of us who are anxious about the meds situation 🤷‍♂️.

    Guess some people who are never going to be happy.

    Maybe we should create some kind of tier list that they’d be happy with.

    A tier: AADHD - diagnosed as a child but only classic hyperactive symptoms. Medicated until they “grew out of it”.

    B tier: BADHD - diagnosed as an adult but only after battling bureaucracy and paperwork.

    C tier: CADHD - paid for a diagnosis. Basically faking.

    D tier: DADHD - struggles through life, relates to all of the information available but can’t afford to go private and can’t work out how to make their way through the NHS process due to crippling untreated ADHD. Basically wannabes.


  • Really sorry I don’t have the right kind of ADHD after having to wait years for the right kind of doctor.

    For all those people who are waiting to be seen and/or can’t afford to go private; no one, diagnosed or not, knows what’s going on in your head. If you suspect you have it and it’s causing you issues, if you see the memes and laugh then cry because you relate: welcome to the club siblings. The dues are high and there are no perks.

    To all the gatekeepers out there: you’re not helping. Anyone.

    I “knew” I had ADHD for 9 months before being diagnosed. I tried to go through the NHS, but that shit is not 💫ADHD Friendly💫. So I paid to be assessed. I scored 5/6 of the initial diagnostic criteria and scored positively on 17/18 of the follow up criteria. I was offered medication after they explained the side effects. I chose to be medicated and it was life changing.

    After 38 years of not knowing why I was different; I finally found my people. I know who they are.




  • ThisismyusernametoADHD UK*Permanently Deleted*
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    1 year ago

    Sorry to hear that you’re struggling. But congrats on being able to get more meds. Hope they last until the situation is sorted.

    I’m off elvanse for now and using amfexa - haven’t noticed any withdrawal symptoms, but I’ve only been on elvanse for a couple of months. Should I be looking out for anything in particular?

    My provider seems to think the situation might be sorted with a couple of months so 🤞




  • Or the “step-by-step” guides that are missing a step. Or assume a bunch of knowledge. If you don’t tell me I need to download a special compiler to install this thing, it’s not step-by-step.

    I found one the other day that failed to mention that I had to put some code in config to make it work. But they had put a screenshot of the code they used, just hadn’t referenced it in the steps 🙄.

    I’ve also seen one of the main devs respond to a user on GitHub saying that the bug they were seeing was not a bug because it was caused by the third-party system and “that’s just how it is”. Completely ignored the fact that the user could not achieve the intended behaviour from the integration. Was this information anywhere in the notes? Of course not.






  • I’m 38. Diagnosed with combined (everything) type ADHD 2 months ago.

    The experience for being on meds for me has been life changing. I’m on elvanse (vivanse in the US). It’s like suddenly being in the driver’s seat of my own mind. The guy that was driving before was an idiot. I can now just choose to do stuff.

    What struck me is that not only are you playing on hard mode, but everyone else is playing on easy mode and telling you it’s hard mode. “Life is hard” means something completely different to everyone else.

    Definitely try it again. Medicating ADHD is really well understood and incredibly successful for so many people. I think it’s insane not to give it a go and see if it’s right for you.

    The stigma around being medicated is completely backwards imo.


  • Yeah I think about this one a fair bit.

    Let’s compare hyperfocus to an actual super power, like the ability to fly: “I can fly” “Oh that’s so cool! Can you show me” “No. I don’t get to decide when it starts” “Oh” “Or when it stops for that matter. Or even where I’m going” “That sounds… debilitating” “Yes”

    This is hyperfocus. You can’t decide when to hyperfocus. Or when it should stop. Or what you’re going to focus on. It is not particularly helpful.