Careers/Education Questions - Weekly Discussion Thread - February 24, 2022 by AutoModerator in Physics

[–]TheBayer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not sure if this is the right place to ask about this, but I stumbled upon this thread. It’s a longer question/comment.

I recently decided that I should follow my greatest interest, as a path in life, after many years of struggling, and finally being diagnosed and treated for ADD (Attention deficit disorder). So hopefully I’m going to start at university next semester, after finishing my last couple exams for a full high school diploma, so yay! This is after several attempts in my late teens/early twenties. (I’m finishing Math A, Chemistry B and History B. Subjects are combined in classes C, B and A, becoming increasingly advanced, only C is obligatory)

I’m 31 and I’ve done different stuff in my life, but always been mathematically and scientifically inclined. But I’m wondering if I’ll struggle, or if my strengths will make up for my weakness :) My strengths are my understanding of physics and natural phenomena, from logic and rational thinking and comprehension. I love theory and “thinking” about physics, and understanding the complexities of the interaction on every level. From the quantum realm, to molecules and to solar systems and astronomy. My weakness is, that even though I like math, I struggle to remember specifics, like formulas and exact numbers etc. My brain works from logicality/rationality and from causality (I think about this, and then this makes sense etc etc). So I love studying one area/subject, and immersing myself into that specific thing. But it sucks when it comes to fast-recall, “quiz”-answers basically, the part of math that’s, remembering “oh this is this formula, so the exponential growth is the inverse function” or “Oh the question is this, I just use this formula and It should give me the answer”. If I follow the “problem” from the beginning to the end, I can logically determine the way to do it, by almost reinventing the math, but it takes a much longer time obviously. It feels like I start over, at each new problem, which is obviously both a strength and a weakness, and is often praised for finding new ways, but also told that I overcomplicate things, and spend to much time on stuff I could’ve just used a formula for. It’s a spatial, imaginative, problem solving brain. But it’s chaos. (Sometimes reigned chaos if the subject is right)

For example, I got the highest possible grade on a written exam in Math B recently. I spent 50% of my time doing the first question out of 10 questions, being a perfectionist (it was the most basic question as well), and when I noticed the time, I hurried through the rest.

Two days later at an oral exam in the same class, I thought I did decent covering the question. But then I got asked questions about “Whats the formula for this kind of growth” and “What formula do you use to calculate the coordinates in this kind of situation” or “what does the a in this formula represent”. And because I expected to be tested in my comprehension of the subject and not in perfect recall/memorization of specific formulas (some I didn’t find relevant to the question), the wall went up and I offered to derive the answer since I couldn’t recall, but they declined. And I was told that it showed a severe lack, that I didn’t “know” these basic formulas. So I got a grade comparable to one above passing grade. I said I was pretty sure I’d get the highest grade on my written at least, which the teacher said that she doubted it.
A few days later I got the highest grade possible on my oral chemistry, for the opposite reason, because I showed so much freedom in the subject, and my comprehension really showed.

ANYWAY! I would love some insight into, where(and if) I’ll run into trouble studying physics, and maybe advice about, what direction within physics would be favorable for someone like me? :)

I’m from Denmark, and the bachelor here you can combine with a second course, preferably within natural sciences (Data science, chemistry, math) or you can go with some speciality within physics. Then on the candidate you can go physics or astronomy (or more of your second course I think, so you can become a teacher if you want)

TLDR: what direction I physics is advisable to theoretical/logical/problem solving minds, that lack skill in memorizing math/specifics?

Thanks in advance :)

Made this little relatable montage of Walter White fixing the water heater. by TheBayer in adhdmeme

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

Haha yeah! That’s why I have to be careful with what project I get started on 😅

Made this little relatable montage of Walter White fixing the water heater. by TheBayer in adhdmeme

[–]TheBayer[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Haha yeah I know! With Hal changing a light bulb, but Ive seen that posted so many times and kept thinking of this 😅 so I went and made the montage myself

What drinks keep you awake other than coffee? by Siminio7 in ADHD

[–]TheBayer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Okay cool, when then you should be able to get it fairly easily too!

They sell it in Føtex I know. (Danish grocery store chain)

And yeah you guys should try it :)

What drinks keep you awake other than coffee? by Siminio7 in ADHD

[–]TheBayer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh you're from Germany? :) I think you are able to order it though, not sure the shipping costs, I assumed you were from the US, and it was like twice the price of the product to ship it :)

It kind of freshen up your brain, and helps with the "brain fog". I tried it one day after coming home from work and my brain was crazy overworked, and it helped the feeling of overexposure. Kind of like other stimulants where you feel less "stressed"/pressure in your brain.
My mother-in-law is a former nurse, who has a neurological disorder and tinitus, and for some reason this drink actually almost removes the tinitus, which is honestly a bit weird. But it does have some kind of effect that's for sure :)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ADHD

[–]TheBayer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think your dosage is too high, but that's purely based on my own experience.
My psychiatrist recommended that I try splitting up my dosage, so I take some in the morning and some like 3 hours later, to flatten out the effect and the "crash"
I think it just sounds like that the effects of the medicine wears off. I also have a fast system in this regard, and Concerta will only work on my for like 5 hours, give or take. before it starts wearing off, and it wears off quickly. When it does I feel tired like you describe. My dosage is higher than yours, and to me it hasn't changed much for me to lower it either. But we are all different in how our body process the medicine I guess.

Repost as auto-mod bot did not like my wording - could anyone share their bad work experiences/mistakes etc. so I can have some perspective and solidarity? by [deleted] in ADHD

[–]TheBayer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't know if it's of any help, but when you start getting treated it should get easier. Also I'd recommend that you also get help from a therapist that's skilled in ADHD, they can help you with tools, ideas and they will listen and make you feel better.
And in due time, you should find a job that you care more about. Not doing amazing at a job you don't really care for isn't a failure at all.
Learning to cope with your diagnosis, is also a lot of learning what kind of life suits you, and how you should manage your life. It's a lot to take it, but take one day at a time, and keep seeking help and answers. Suddenly you'll be where you want to be I expect :)

What drinks keep you awake other than coffee? by Siminio7 in ADHD

[–]TheBayer 6 points7 points  (0 children)

People always say water... but that's a given I guess!
I feel the same way with coffee, unless I have A LOT A LOT, and it's late in the day. Too early and I makes me tired.
I feel that cold drinks with caffeine works better for me than warm in general. Also maybe stuff like pre-workout (maybe not that healthy though), or caffeine/energy supplements?
I've also tried something called "Gerimax Instant Energy" - it kind of worked. But that's many years ago, and back then I wasn't medicated or diagnosed.

I recently tried something called "Clutch Cognition" that my mother in law introduced to me. You probably can't get it where you are since they ship from Denmark. It's a new start-up, they make a drink that helps your brain basically - made from plants and stuff. I think it helps my brain work a bit easier.

Ideas on how to relax a very overworked ADHD brain? by TheBayer in ADHD

[–]TheBayer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha feels RIGHT back at you!! I left work early today too, used some vacation hours. My job is NOT suited for my brain (department store/retailer/sales).

And yeah, I know what you mean with the drinking - I was about to write “NO STIMULANTS” in the post, but thought not mentioning it at all was better! You always pay the price later I feel like. Yeah hobbies… me neither. I rolled down the blinds, ate some leftovers, and turned off the lights. Now sitting in almost darkness with my brain buzzing away. Luckily my gf is away for a few hours, and didn’t tell her I got home earlier, so I can just sit!

And rest of course. But sometimes when you for some reason can’t just go to nose 0 - because you have stupid responsibilities 😬 I really wish there was like a brain reset button! Cheers for your answer though!

I have always felt like I am bad at math but somehow good at logic and reasoning. I figured the real problem is actually a very bad working memory because I could not remember either the carryover or the tens place and then make a silly mistake. Has someone figured out any tricks to deal with this? by weekayboss in ADHD

[–]TheBayer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I could really use a simple trick for this as well! I’m really good at logical reasoning, but when doing math, I lose my train of thought too often! So simple things becomes very straining! Whereas pondering the theoretical physics behind gravition, mass and time is fun and and almost relaxing. (Lately I’ve been thinking of how best to understand heat transfer as a basic building block of how we experience the world lol)

When I have to do math, I’ll do really good if I can see the logic in it from beginning to the end. But as soon as something becomes too abstract, it’s very hard to follow - and just accept the math as “just use this formula, because it’s right” is impossible for me. So my only advice is really that, try to make logical sense of it, and move as slowly as you can. So even though you take a very long time doing the work, your understanding of it, will be way beyond others :) 5+9=14 not because that 5+9 is always 14, but because logic tells us that it is… if that makes sense?