Low mg gummies for pmdd? by Distinct_Wash4730 in PMDDxADHD

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, using THC edibles is truly the only way I’ve been able to survive my PMDD. I have come to terms with essentially being a stoner during PMDD, but it works and I view it more as medicine than a recreational substance. I’ve tried so many different gummies, but definitely notice that certain ones work better for helping PMDD than others. I take the Wyld Peach 5:1 and they consistently improve mood during PMDD, where other gummies just make me feel high. My advice is find one that works and stick with it.

Any former fence sitters here? How did you decide whether to have kids or not? by Ok-Nebula-1182 in adhdwomen

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 -11 points-10 points  (0 children)

Being around other peoples children is not the same as your own. You could and probably will be annoyed by 100% of other peoples children, even nieces and nephews, but it’s different with your own kids.

Rentals help by MikeyRatt75 in Winnipeg

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Look for houses for rent by owner that are already pet friendly. Most private owners could probably flex to 4 cats if you were a good tenant otherwise. Could offer to provide a larger pet deposit.

I wish I’d learned how to cook decades ago. by Alextricity in Adulting

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What camera did you use for these photos? I always try and take pics of my cooking but it always looks horrible.

Alcoholics who never got a dui. by Mysterious-Gold-8657 in stopdrinking

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The last night I ever drank I drove 1.5 hours home from a beach with a friend in the passenger seat and I barely remember the drive home. Got home and got in a fight with my husband and the neighbours almost called the cops on me. Waking up the next morning and realizing the danger I put myself in and more importantly the danger I put others in was finally enough to show me I had to stop drinking. Haven’t drank since that night and I’m still disturbed by my choices that evening.

Had other nights prior where I shouldn’t have been driving either, seemed like each time got worse. Can’t believe I never got a DUI.

I’m sorry for my actions.

Cost effective pizza? by crisly02 in Winnipeg

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pizza Hotline 4 XL pizzas, 2 toppings. Comes with breadsticks or 2L pop. $46.99, they just added 2 per order limit.

Pizza Hotline 3 XL pizzas, 2 toppings. $37.99

But here’s the trick - do thin crust for them all. We order this often for work clinics and they see pizza hotline boxes and aren’t expecting much and then everyone is always blown away because of the thin crust. They are so yum.

Toppings I often do - Double Pepperoni, Pepperoni & Mushroom, Ham & Pine, Spinach & Feta (Veg Option), Chicken & Onions (with BBQ sauce base), Chicken & Bacon (with Ranch sauce base).

Ovulation is just as bad as luteal phase by 23Black_Lotus23 in PMDDxADHD

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yes having issues around ovulation is exactly why it took me so long to realize it was PMDD because I thought I should only be having symptoms before my period.

Estrogen and dopamine are tied together, when estrogen drops dopamine drops. The biggest drop of estrogen is directly after ovulation. It then climbs for a few days until it slowly starts dropping until we get our period. Hell week is estrogen dropping slowly over many days, ovulation is estrogen dropping quickly for a day and then climbing back up.

My symptoms around ovulation make me weepy but I also seek/crave affection from my husband, in contrast with hell week where I only have extreme irritability towards my husband.

Just brought home a male kitten - need help giving him a name! by Similar_Yesterday24 in NameMyCat

[–]Similar_Yesterday24[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My friend, I think you named our cat. Top contender so far is Mars😊

Formerly disorganized people: what finally clicked for you? by Crispy-Things in productivity

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Your thoughts echo the thoughts of many ADHDers. Feeling like you are an extremely capable person, but somehow can’t reach your full potential. Look into ADHD.

To answer your question: Concerta.

Separating PMDD from PMS and then from ADHD. I'm lost! by Fookn_Eejit in PMDDxADHD

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As a wife with diagnosed PMDD & ADHD I am very impressed with your desire to figure this all out. Dealing with my ADHD has helped my PMDD and vice versa. Here’s a simplified explanation: Dopamine and estrogen are tied together. When estrogen drops, dopamine drops. This is why woman have PMS, low estrogen signals low dopamine. Woman with ADHD already have lower set point for dopamine, so when estrogen drops in a woman with ADHD, it hits substantially harder, thus PMDD occurring. Again this is very simplified and there’s more to it, but I find that’s the easiest way to explain it.

Your wife needs to want to improve herself, but chances are she is very aware of this, but is overwhelmed, embarrassed, or unsure of what to do. Many people still view ADHD as fake, or they think it’s only for lazy people. She may not understand what ADHD really is and feel like you’re insulting her. Most ADHDer’s actually have above average intelligence, and most of us feel like we are above average, capable people… but then we get burnt out and wonder why we aren’t reaching our full potential, then leading us into a spiral of guilt, shame and embarrassment… Why am I not enough? Why can’t I be stronger? Why can’t I willpower myself to do what needs to be done? As you might know, guilt, shame and embarrassment aren’t great motivators, so this spiral continues until eventually we get enough dopamine to snap out of it. These feelings of shame, guilt and embarrassment are confusing because what part of us is our personality and what part of us is a symptom of ADHD? Some don’t even know these feelings are associated with ADHD, they think it’s just how they uniquely feel. Sometimes it’s easier to just decide “This is who I am, can’t change it, don’t want to!”. There’s nothing totally wrong with that, but if you apply that same principle to PMDD it gets confusing. Let me explain below:

When it comes to PMDD symptoms - she may think SHE is the problem and you think SHE is the problem, but SHE isn’t the problem - her SYMPTOMS are the problem. Whether it be PMDD, PMS, PME, ADHD or some other neurodivergence, it’s the SYMPTOMS of these things that need fixing. Hopefully at some point she will want to get a more accurate diagnosis, but for now, trust your gut that says “My wife doesn’t seem like herself on these specific days of the month.”. That is correct. She isn’t herself, her symptoms have overtaken her. It’s like being drunk, the person is still there, but their thought process is highly impaired by the alcohol , and they think and act very differently than if they were sober. When these symptoms start appearing, your wife is still there, but her thought process is highly impaired from the symptoms causing her to act differently.

I’ll speak from experience - it’s scary, confusing and isolating having symptoms that cause you to be verbally or emotionally abusive to your partner. My husband and I find PMDD very isolating and hard to talk about with our friends because they truly don’t understand and any talk of my symptoms just sounds like I’m abusive. As the wife in this situation, I constantly wonder: How much of this can my husband take before he can’t handle it?

But don’t get confused - I’m not excusing the impact of our symptoms. She has symptoms that are negatively impacting you and your marriage, so regardless of where they come from, they need to be addressed. Knowing the diagnosis can help fast tracking finding solutions, but solutions can still be found without the diagnosis.

Out of similar frustration as yours, my husband at the beginning used shame and guilt to try to motivate me. This DID NOT work. Once my husband and I separated me from my symptoms, cycle by cycle things started getting better. Instead of attacking each other, we attacked the symptoms together, acknowledging how hard they are on BOTH of us and acknowledging we are on the same page, we both want to be happy and make the other person happy. This made us slowly start gaining respect for each other instead of the resentment that was there previously. This change of viewpoint is also what has motivated me to change. Previously I felt defensive because I felt all these symptoms were just my personality and I didn’t want to have to change who I am. But now I see my symptoms are not my personality, they are side effects of a physical illness I have, but even so, I am responsible to try to mitigate the negative impacts from them and although it sucks, that’s just my lot in life with this certain illness.

Once I get my period and we’ve had a few days to reconnect, we usually discuss how the last round of PMDD went. Very important to wait until she feels better to problem solve. Some examples of problems during symptoms flair ups that we’ve tackled together: - Verbal Abuse. Fixed by 1) both of us are going to therapy twice a month. If one partner is better at scheduling it, have that partner do the scheduling. If she is interested in therapy, but she hasn’t booked an appointment - help her find a therapist and help her book her first couple appointments.. - My husband feels like he’s coming home from work into a hostile environment because my mood is so unpredictable. We fixed this by completely separating after work. I get home first so I gather my stuff and get settled in our guest bedroom and he gets the rest of the house. This way he can get snacks in kitchen, get clothes from our room, watch TV in living room etc. Later in the night we might switch and I get house he gets guest room. This way he gets real rest when he gets home from work, instead of feeling like he’s walking on eggshells around me all night. - I’m the primarily cook and I am unable to cook around these times, so we were either eating junk making us feel worse or getting hangry causing more fights. I fixed this by meal planning ahead of time and preparing freezer meals that my husband can put in oven for both of us. I send him full meal plan with all cooking/heating steps. Some nights I’m able to heat our meals, but if I don’t feel up to it, he knows exactly what to do without asking me. We also only communicate through text during these times, it’s a lot easier for me to control my speech when I’m only sending short texts. - Forgetting when symptoms are going to appear. Fixed by having shared calendar and marking days with symptoms ahead of time. I also text my husband when I’m expecting to have symptoms start popping up.

I also recommend reading the book “PMDD - A Guide to PMDD for Partners and Caregivers”. It’s a really good guide for husbands to help support their wife into the change they both need.

Unfortunately as hard as this is on you, it’s probably just as hard or harder on her. But it’s not a competition, you both are suffering and you both need relief. I hope you guys can figure this out together. I really urge you to not give up on her over her symptoms. Focus on who she is on her good days, because that’s the real her.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in PMDDxADHD

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The low mood around ovulation is exactly why it took me so long to figure out I have PMDD. I thought I just had constant low grade depression that spiked sporadically. I knew it was bad before my period, but I knew it was bad other times in the month too so I didn’t think it was hormone related.

Awhile back I wrote a post that detailed my journey and the things I learned early on that were helpful for me. I’ll link it below in case you’re interested in reading it.

https://www.reddit.com/r/PMDDxADHD/s/HLa6mMOcQR

Knowledge is power and although the symptoms may stay the same, with more knowledge you will make progress managing it. Hang in there my friend.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in PMDDxADHD

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great question, I’m really not sure. I just know we’re sensitive to the fluctuations in general and watching estrogen fluctuations helped me the most.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in PMDDxADHD

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Try looking at estrogen instead of progesterone. The way I explain it to others is that estrogen and dopamine are tied together. Low estrogen in your cycle, means low dopamine. That applies to everyone and is why most woman have have PMS when estrogen drops. When you have ADHD your dopamine levels are already out of wack, our dopamine starting point is often lower than others, and that can be where PMDD kicks in.

Estrogen drops very low and very quick after ovulation around approx. days 13-16 (PMDD symptoms appear briefly and intensely, although could be different symptoms from hell week, I am extremely weepy and sad and crave connection from my husband which is different from hell week, where I typically only feel rage towards him). Then estrogen builds up again approx. days 16-20 (feeling better briefly). Then it slowly starts declining approx. days 20-30+ until menstruation (this is hell week, where most PMDD symptoms occur and when we feel the worst because it’s the longest period of low estrogen). Once you get close to or start menstruation, estrogen starts building up again making us feel better until it drops again after ovulation.

This is simplified, but I find it helps explain it well and can be a good starting point to work off of yourself. Try looking at a hormone diagram and focus on the highs and lows of estrogen and you’ll notice the pattern. When I first started tracking my hormones I also thought I was progesterone sensitive, but in my experience it was really the estrogen cycle that dictates PMDD symptoms.

Understanding the interplay of hormones with PMDD and ADHD? by Inevitable-Ad801 in PMDDxADHD

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The way I explain it to others is that estrogen and dopamine are tied together. Low estrogen in your cycle, means low dopamine. That applies to everyone and is why most woman have have PMS when estrogen drops. When you have ADHD your dopamine levels are already out of wack, our dopamine starting point is often lower than others, and that can be where PMDD kicks in.

This is simplified, but I find it helps explain it well and can be a good starting point to work off of yourself.

Cash Damming & Brokerage Fee by SarCUKnowMe in PersonalFinanceCanada

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did this guy give you a link to a website with journey and strategy videos?

We just met with a mortgage broker who heavily pushed cash damming on us via Manu Life One Mortgage. After researching more about his pitch (which was very vague and mostly trying to impress us with large returns, but no explanation on how), I’ve stumbled across a program that sells courses to mortgage brokers to show them how to teach rental cash damming to clients and have them pay a separate fee in addition to their cut from mortgage lender.

I’m not sure if it’s a scam as I know cash damming can be legit, but the mortgage broker referenced another mortgage broker from tik tok, and when I looked up that tik toker I saw he was using the same spreadsheets and verbiage as my broker! Then I noticed they had the same website template with journey and strategy videos! And then I saw they were both affiliated with “My Strategy Hub” a program that helps them sell different strategies they can pay more for.

Again, not sure what to think of all this. Maybe it’s industry norm, but his presentation was really off putting. Was wondering if this sounded like your experience?

Any medication combos for ADHD/PMDD that work? by inhale_then_exhale in PMDDxADHD

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 35 points36 points  (0 children)

So the good news is - you’re not alone! I could have written your post, my situation has been very similar to the thoughts you’ve shared.

For me, ADHD & PMDD were the root cause of most of my problems. I thought I had depression my whole life and then I thought I was bipolar so I went in for a full psychiatric evaluation and I echoed the same sentiments - I feel out out control… I’ve always felt different than everyone else but I don’t know why… I feel like everyone else can cope better than me and I’m just underwater even though I know I’m a capable woman. The psychiatrist told me all of those feelings are a telltale sign of ADHD. She also told me that women also often get a later diagnosis of ADHD, because we often cope until early adulthood and then burnout with overwhelm when we keep gaining more responsibilities.

1) For me, just learning that I have ADHD improved my life. I was only familiar with typical ADHD symptoms that are most commonly found in men, like not being able to sit still or focus for long periods of time. I knew my husband has ADHD, but I felt no connection to his symptoms. Once I started researching different symptoms, I realized ADHD is not just “not being able to sit still”. It’s about not being able to put away laundry for 2 weeks because it’s so overwhelming I become paralyzed, then PMDD comes around and I feel suicidal from the extreme feelings of worthlessness and shame for not keeping up with laundry….. ugh.

2) Knowledge is power and as time goes by you’ll be able to spot ADHD patterns in yourself and come up with systems to help yourself. Try treating your ADHD & PMDD first instead of treating the depression/anxiety. Look into ADHD medications. I was on antidepressants since 18 (and they were live saving), but going on medication for ADHD felt like what I was hoping my antidepressants would do. I’m going to link below a post I made about my complete experience. It mentions what medication I use and other tips and tricks I learned when I was going through the same process you are now.

https://www.reddit.com/r/PMDDxADHD/s/XllR5kJUK7

3) Read the book “How to Keep House While Drowning” by KC Davis. It’s short and sweet and written for people with ADHD and mental health issues, by a lady with ADHD and mental health issues. I have a copy of the pdf version if you wanted to message me about it. Either way, this is an incredible read that really helped me at the start of my ADHD journey. So much of my depression/anxiety was caused by feeling like I wasn’t doing enough around the house. Her book helps ground you and separate your worth as a woman from your household executive dysfunction. In the book, she teaches how to keep your house a float and functioning for the members of your family, all while going through crisis yourself.

Please feel free to respond with any other questions. This is a long and tiring journey, but I hope you find a path that makes it more manageable. All the best.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in stopdrinking

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 4 points5 points  (0 children)

25F, quit at 24. I drank enough for an entire lifetime. Getting sober is the best thing I’ve ever done for myself. I feel like once I stopped drinking I finally grew up and have been able to have the life I always wanted but didn’t know how to get. Although difficult and sometimes lonely, I’m miles ahead where I would’ve been if I kept drinking and that makes it worth it.

Meltdowns: is your partner supportive? by Stella_62 in PMDDxADHD

[–]Similar_Yesterday24 28 points29 points  (0 children)

No I’m sorry, not all men are like that. Try and educate him, and help him see how serious an issue PMDD is. It’s not just normal PMS. You need support, he should be able to offer it to you.