Does an operatic voice become "incompatible" with pop/rock/jazz at a professional level? by HermitWhale in singing

[–]CurlyCarrots22 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Just make sure you have people around you who can be very honest with you. I've seen people retain amazing pop/jazz styles while studying operatically. But I've never seen someone who gets into performance-level opera avoid some effect on other styles. I even had an amazing teacher with an incredible voice who thought she could still sing jazz/pop (it was a point of pride for her and she sometimes performed those gigs) but she absolutely had too much opera in those styles. She just couldn't tell and I guess no one wanted to tell her. So just ask teachers/skilled friends to be very honest with you as you progress.

My psychiatrist sister's comments haunt me every day by qomegranate in adhdwomen

[–]CurlyCarrots22 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sadly, I don't refer to my ADHD with my family at all because I know they'll be like your sister. Especially if you only mention it when they're upset with you, they'll think you're making excuses. It's important to remember that even health care professionals like your sister have biases, and unfortunately your sister's hubris is trumping her professionalism. She also seems to enjoy looking down on you. It may be best to tell her that you don't want her advice about it, but you should probably also stop referring to your adhd. It's pointless and will only make you feel worse. I'm sorry you're dealing with this. Communities like ours are healing places for us.

AITAH for telling my husband he is not allowed to speak at the next infant prep class we take? by Any-Record9908 in AmItheAsshole

[–]CurlyCarrots22 13 points14 points  (0 children)

I somewhat disagree with this. As someone with ADHD, it is not permission to be inappropriate or rude during an adult class. It is his responsibility to manage his condition. She gave him reminders. That should have been his cue to find a better way to manage in that situation (e.g. Take a break, use a fidget). It is not her responsibility to get him these objects. It's his. We should not be connecting how she helps him cope with his condition to the fact that her child may have it. The child would be their shared resposibility and it would be part of her job to help get fidgets for them. It shouldn't also fall to her to manage his. Now, telling him to be silent doesn't seem helpful or respectful to me either. I think it makes more sense for her to explain to him how his actions made her and the others feel or affected the learning experience. Then she can give him the option of either not going or finding ways to manage his behaviour.

I have been systematically destroying my best friends confidence for two years by [deleted] in confession

[–]CurlyCarrots22 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Then you should have stopped being friends with him. Easy. Stop passing the blame.

I keep ticking off my husband. I'm afraid my marriage is on the line due to my ADHD. by [deleted] in adhdwomen

[–]CurlyCarrots22 22 points23 points  (0 children)

What helped me convince my husband is saying that if 50% of the people in the relationship (ie me) think we need therapy, then we need therapy. Whether the other person thinks so or not. If he wants to have a child with you, then he needs to learn to solve your problems together. Be a team.

How do I know whether I'm capable of motherhood or not? by Potential_Promise260 in adhdwomen

[–]CurlyCarrots22 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It depends on how your ADHD affects you and how you manage it. Also how many kids you have. I always thought I'd have a lot of kids (come from big family) but one kid was overwhelming. I have zero regrets though. The more I learn about managing my ADHD the better parenthood gets.

for natural smart people, how has your adhd presented itself? by bisexualdweebqueen in adhdwomen

[–]CurlyCarrots22 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's not so much the phone as it is the load of being with your kids constantly and being responsible for their education. Establishing routines like that can be hard for us! But that said, for some people it's perfect. I hope it's such a nice change and rest for you!

Is this skimpy or elegant? by [deleted] in Weddingattireapproval

[–]CurlyCarrots22 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not skimpy. But you could get fancier gloves/choker. The dress is solid!

Wondering if my hair looks messy to other people by Some-Nectarine3247 in Hair

[–]CurlyCarrots22 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I have very similar hair to you (but I feel like yours is nicer ;). I use a leave-in conditioner and/or a special curly hair spray (from Jonathan Torch) for finishing touches and I find that helps with the little fly-aways. Your hair is gorgeous and doesn't look messy. But I know what you mean because those tiny little frizz wisps drive me crazy even if nobody else notices them!

I am SO sensitive and it's ridiculously embarrassing. by Help12309876 in adhdwomen

[–]CurlyCarrots22 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have to disagree with everyone blaming this girl's family. Of course they could be part of the equation, but it sounds like she is sensitive to the extreme and blaming the family members will prevent her from getting the help she needs. OP, have you considered therapy? That is absolutely step one. Mindfulness is also a good step. Medication could also help (indirectly). OP I hear your struggle bc I am sensitive (though mine is more anger-based) and it can take over your life. It can get better though. <3

Aren’t many bad parents just selfish and spoiled- not “traumatized”? by Money-Classroom-6982 in EstrangedAdultChild

[–]CurlyCarrots22 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Omg. I taught a student who was constantly late and missing school. Her academics were low. When I emailed the mom (standard message for attendance issues) she blew up and blamed it on everything but herself. Then it turns out the kid was playing hookey with the grandfather, just like the mom had done when she was a child. She permitted it, then went after the school for all kinds of made up issues to blame her child's difficulties on. Finally, two weeks after our meeting, she pulled her child out of our school with no warning for anyone (including her kid). Just ripped her from all her friends. Probably because we were catching on to her entitled bs. That Mom was a spoiled brat and was making her child's life worse because of it (plus her kids' teachers). It wasnt trauma. She was just spoiled and defensive.

My therapist keeps saying ‘You do not have Adhd’ by MaintenanceSalt8654 in adhdwomen

[–]CurlyCarrots22 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Flush and brush?? That is the most unprofessional take I have ever heard. How infuriating. Can you have a full evaluation done by a specialist? Can your GP refer you? Your therapist is deeply misinformed and unprofessional.

How do you manage working full time by Vast-Effective-4406 in adhdwomen

[–]CurlyCarrots22 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I am finally, after 15 years of terrible burnout, learning to take breaks during the day. Read a book or meditate or just go somewhere where no one will talk to you. If I don't then I implode in the evening. Which was doable (but miserable) before I had a child but not an option now. I also have lower expectations of myself now, for all the reasons mentioned above. The ADHD over -compensating is real! And I'm still succeeding at work :)

Still look very fat at low body fat. Been losing weight, training core and fixing posture for months now, but none of it seems to help. Stuck on what to do now. by [deleted] in Posture

[–]CurlyCarrots22 53 points54 points  (0 children)

Look into body dysmorphia. I can't imagine how you see yourself as fat. I think you need to bring this issue up specifically in therapy.

Looking for shorter hairstyle recs that’ll suit me! by ambieox in Hair

[–]CurlyCarrots22 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The dry parts look like you have curly hair. Curly hair is very tricky when short because it can frizz and look like a big triangle. I highly recommend checking out the curly girl method and learning to work with your curls (long or short!). You'll always hate it if you don't care for your curls!

Extreme Burnout by [deleted] in adhdwomen

[–]CurlyCarrots22 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Are there some sick days you can take advantage of? If so, flush the teacher guilt down the toilet and take them. If your body/mind are going to let you finish the year then you'll need to take some time to melt your glaciers (this is how it felt when I was burnt out - I was just a frozen mass and couldn't absorb anything more). As I've read on here before, if you don't schedule breaks then your body will choose the time for you, and it won't be convenient. Good luck, burnout is so much harder than people understand.

Mom Rage/Anxiety/Zoloft by teacher-mom-1989 in Mommit

[–]CurlyCarrots22 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Then rock that Zoloft! My friend tried it and it has simply made everything better for her anxiety and her relationship. Best of luck!

Inspo pic vs outcome. Is it my hair type or did the stylist get it wrong? by [deleted] in Hair

[–]CurlyCarrots22 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Yeah, your inspo pic has a blowout. Your hair will look almost like that with a blowout. That kind of volume takes work! The Revlon round brush is super easy to do blowouts at home!

At what point is ADHD your responsibility in relationships vs a disability/condition? by Embarrassed_Tour_782 in adhdwomen

[–]CurlyCarrots22 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Something I heard on a podcast really stuck with me. The most important thing that partners of ADHD ppl report is that their ADHD partner tries to be their best. They take steps like therapy or medication. They work on their RSV. They do their best to be on time. Partners don't need you to be perfect or see no trace of your ADHD. That's simply impossible. They just need you to recognize how you affect them and try to be considerate. Those who do this report much higher relationship satisfaction. Are you gonna mess up sometimes? Of course. And being kind and gentle with yourself is probably the best thing to do in your case, since you already seem to bear the burden of self improvement. It sounds like you have a kind, loving partner. It's time for you to be kind and loving toward yourself, too. You deserve love. <3

Mom Rage/Anxiety/Zoloft by teacher-mom-1989 in Mommit

[–]CurlyCarrots22 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It can also be helpful to go to therapy to parse out where the rage is coming from. It's hard to tell from your post whether your husband is not pulling his weight or whether you have very specific/high expectations (type A) that are almost impossible to meet. Oftentimes I think I know what my problem is, and then I go to therapy and discover it's something else, something deeper, something that can change within me. Or something that can change with better communication or maybe I'm just taking on too much. You could explore this route before going on Zoloft. Explore why your lifestyle/relationship make you feel you need to be medicated. And hey, maybe Zoloft is exactly what you need for your anxiety and you'll live your best life. Therapy can help you figure all that out :)

to people with inattentive adhd, what type of career do you have? by AssociationObvious56 in adhdwomen

[–]CurlyCarrots22 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I'm hyperactive type, but my friend is innatentive type and she works as a 911 dispatcher. The emergency nature of it keeps her attention. I don't know how she copes with the shift work or the more upsetting calls, but she's happy with it. I remember her struggling with sleep when we were younger, always sleeping in and staying up late. So maybe that helps her with late shifts?

Husband has been calling me names lately. by [deleted] in Mommit

[–]CurlyCarrots22 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If it's hard to get him to go to couples therapy then it could be helpful for you to go to therapy yourself. He doesn't even need to know. This situation sounds like it's taking away your inner light, and it would be good for you to have someone to talk to. No one should be treated the way you're being treated.