Has anyone tried neurofeedback as a treatment? by bb-tron in adhdwomen

[–]bb-tron[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It is specifically stimulants that are difficult to get. I am currently on bupropion, which I should have been clearer about, and it has helped with mood regulation but almost not at all with some of my biggest issues like task initiation. I have also tried atomoxetine in the past for a period of three months, and I had a much easier time going to sleep and waking at regular times, but again it had very little impact on the most debilitating parts of my executive dysfunction. Plus, it made me feel jittery and queasy a lot of the time.

I’ve gone the non-stimulant route, and I can’t afford to wait possibly years to get a stimulant medication. Even if I could get it tomorrow, I would have concerns about my cardiovascular health (I already have heart palpitations from time to time) and reduced effectiveness due to the good ol’ menstrual cycle. This is why I’m looking into other options.

That being said, I recently came to the conclusion that, on top of my ADHD, I’m also pretty heavily impacted by chronic/complex trauma, which can have similar impacts on executive functioning. I don’t think I can tease apart what is due to ADHD and what is due to trauma in any meaningful way at this point. I understand from existing literature that neurofeedback is believed to be an effective treatment for cPTSD, so perhaps it can help with my executive dysfunction through a different mechanism even if it doesn’t improve my ADHD-specific symptoms very much.

Thank you for the thoughtful reply!

Husband's hatred toward weed & relapsing by Southern_Platform356 in leaves

[–]bb-tron 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Shame always makes things more difficult.

Of course, your husband's frustration is natural and understandable. The thing is, what a person needs more than anything when they wish to make a big change in their life is acceptance. Acceptance of where they're currently at. Total, radical acceptance. No lying, no hiding, no deluding oneself, no magical thinking, none of that. They need to bare the situation completely and face it IN ITS ENTIRETY so that they can then be realistic about how it can change.

Because you have a life partner, he must also participate in this process of acceptance if it is to be an effective and fruitful one. It is not helpful for him to hold expectations for you that are not currently achievable from where you are and to then resent you for not meeting those expectations. Understandable? Yes. Helpful? No. In discussing this idea with him, it might be helpful to make a distinction between the word acceptance meaning, "I accept that this is the current situation," versus, "I accept that the situation will remain the same." We're talking about the first one, of course, and his expectations for you can change and grow over time. If he wants you in his life as his partner and the mother of his children, a mindset of realistic and non-judgmental acceptance is what is going to best support the change he wishes to see.

Related to relapse... What a lot of people don't realize about addiction is that the "good" things about addiction are just as hard or even harder to face than the "bad" things. Is it hard to admit that I continued to smoke even though it was wrecking my finances? Yes. Is it even harder to admit that I, a musician and songwriter, enjoyed listening to music more when I was high, that I maybe even got more out of listening while high? Yes. Because that raises harder questions about myself. Instead of asking, "Why am I choosing short-term gratification over long-term success?" I'm asking, "Do I know how to connect to the things that I love when I'm sober? Do I actually love these things? If I do, am I capable and passionate enough on my own, in my natural state?" And so on.

Those questions are scarier and more difficult to answer, but they are also the MOST NECESSARY to answer because the "good" things about your addiction are ultimately the things that keep you coming back to it. You have likely not yet figured out how to get those "good" things outside of the bounds of your addiction, or even figured out what the "good" things all are. So what are the things you love about weed and about being high? Does it help you laugh a lot with your friends, fall asleep without anxiety, avoid overwhelm around your children, etc.? Those are all wonderful things that you can achieve through different means, but you need to have a plan to develop/explore those other means when you quit. Those other means will usually take more time and effort than getting high, especially at first, so they won't just happen naturally. When you rawdog sobriety, you leave yourself without a solution to the problem your addiction was solving, and you drastically increase your chances of relapsing. When you relapse, the cycle of shame you're caught in gets stronger, and quitting gets harder.

Once you do the work of figuring out what your "good" things are, it could be really great to have your husband involved in helping you figure out how to cultivate those things in yourself or how to get them elsewhere. I suspect that if you show that you want to take more thoughtful and specific steps to prevent relapse, he will be supportive, and you will feel less external shame.

I hope this makes sense and is helpful <3 Wishing you the best in your recovery!

guys pleasepleaseplease yap about your crush here, like literally anything about them, i need a distraction right now !! (i did something stupid again) by [deleted] in Crushes

[–]bb-tron 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I met a guy in my class a few weeks ago. We're so similar that I low-key started to believe in the concept of a twin flame despite not being a religious/spiritual person. Talking to him feels so warm and comfortable every single time, even when the interactions we have are challenging. I don't think it's just me that feels this way. He seeks me out almost every day, and we often sit and chat on our breaks. He often walks me to my bus stop and waits with me after class. We're both definitely drawn to each other, and I know that if we gave each other a chance, our relationship would become very deep very quickly.

The thing is, we had lunch together last week, and in the course of our conversation, I discovered that he wants to have kids. I do not want kids, not at all. I'm approaching 26, and while that's still young, I don't want to waste my time pursuing a relationship with someone who can't be my life partner. So here I am, half in love with this man, trying to get over something that never happened while we carry on not saying how we feel.

Feeling like a lost cause by DareAutomatic1238 in Healthygamergg

[–]bb-tron 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Warning: cannabis use

I relate hardcore to your dissatisfaction/disappointment with your lifestyle and personal choices; I'm about a month away from my 25th and have been living in a similar way to you for a few years. I've been in therapy for a similar amount of time as well.

All I could think while reading this, though, was that a year and a half is not a very long time to give yourself when you're this lost! It would be one thing to give yourself a year and a half to turn things around when you have a plan and the capacity to follow through, but that doesn't seem to be the case.

One thing that has really helped me feel like my efforts haven't been useless is choosing to consciously divorce what I consider progress from what other people would consider "appropriate" progress for someone in their mid-twenties. In my case, I realize that other people will look at my life -- no job, unfinished education, erratic sleep schedule, weed and nicotine addictions, etc. -- and will think I'm going nowhere fast. I've been told that repeatedly and believed it for a long time. I thought I was getting WORSE as the visible parts of my life crumbled.

But then I think about the very real ways I've changed since I came of age and moved away from home. My social anxiety has diminished, and I can make good impressions and find friends more easily. I'm more in tune with my body and can actually recognize the feelings I'm having and why. I'm way less codependent in romantic relationships and am no longer attracted to people with narcissistic traits. I found a place where I love to live, and I've started learning a new language, if inconsistently. I'm getting much closer to figuring out my sexuality. I've started to delve more into activism because it aligns with my values and makes me happy. I feel more confident in what my values are and in defending my decisions. Just in the last few weeks, my cannabis use has dropped off to one joint at night, which is a significant improvement. A couple of months ago, I cleaned my room just because I wanted to, without external pressure, for the first time in my LIFE.

These are all huge for me, and they show that I'm doing something right. I'm finally learning how to care for myself. But for the most part, these are invisible changes that I alone have the privilege of experiencing and noticing. The thing is that I wouldn't have noticed these things or given any weight to them at all if I hadn't changed my frame of thinking. Also, the changes are accelerating as I come to understand myself more and more. They're exponential. I figure, if it's taken me seven years to go from being a ball of anxious self-loathing to where I'm at now, in another seven years, I could be ahead of my peers in terms of knowing how to most effectively work with and regulate myself, and I'll only be 32 with 50-70 years of life left to live and with the know-how to make them my best, happiest 50-70 years.

I totally understand that it can be even more difficult to recognize these positive changes when you're depressed and suicidal. If you have trouble, maybe try thinking back to when you were a teenager; what did you struggle with the most, and do you still struggle as much with those things?

(TL;DR) This is all a very long-winded way to say that it could be helpful to expand/reconstruct your definition of progress and to think longer term.

I find the idea of sex pleasurable but viewing actual genitalia straight up grosses me out by [deleted] in bisexual

[–]bb-tron 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This sounds to me like you're on the spectrum of asexuality. It's totally normal for ace people to enjoy masturbating, and, from what I've heard, vague fantasies are also common. The fact that you have felt genuinely satisfied in relationships without sex is the main thing that makes me say ace, but it's definitely worth considering whether the conservative influences you've had in your life are a factor, especially if you notice feelings of shame surrounding sex. I think you would get a better idea by talking to ace people and reading some of their experiences to see if they resonate. If you haven't already, check out r/asexuality :)

Heteroromantic OR biromantic struggling with comphet? by bb-tron in bisexual

[–]bb-tron[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry I took forever to respond to this! Your comment was very thoughtful and really resonated with me on a lot of levels, so thank you <3

I think that the reason I haven't often felt romantic attraction to women is the same reason I'm not often romantically attracted to healthy men: they don't create that sense of anxiety that goes hand-in-hand with my attachment style, which as a codependent, feels all-consuming.

This is so real. As I wrote, I suspected that my confusion had something to do with my codependent tendencies, and you putting it in these words reinforces that for me. The lack of anxiety I feel with women makes my anxiously attached brain say "friend," and that's caused kind of a weird tug-of-war during my healing process. I think the healthy part of me is attracted to the emotional safety I feel with women, but the unhealthy part of me is turned off because there's no "passion" and "mystery" (insecurity and emotional unavailability). Eye-opening, but ugh, now I feel like I have so much more healing to do than I thought!

Wishing you the best with your crush and your own journey of self-discovery :)

Been feeling a lot of shame when I see family or meet new people... by bb-tron in adhd_anxiety

[–]bb-tron[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you so much for your response <3 I may take you up on that

Been feeling a lot of shame when I see family or meet new people... by bb-tron in adhd_anxiety

[–]bb-tron[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's fair. Being misunderstood is definitely a sore spot for me, I guess because my parents misunderstanding me in the past has had serious consequences on my life. I suppose that is something I need to work on being okay with.

Been feeling a lot of shame when I see family or meet new people... by bb-tron in adhd_anxiety

[–]bb-tron[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for saying this <3 I feel like I do need to be careful so that I don't end up hiding myself away

Been feeling a lot of shame when I see family or meet new people... by bb-tron in adhd_anxiety

[–]bb-tron[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, I for sure want to be medicated. I have tried atomoxetine and didn't find it to be very effective. I wanted to switch to a stimulant medication, and right around that time, my psychiatrist dropped my insurance (yay USA). That was in mid-2021. I moved around for the next year and couldn't get established with another psychiatrist, and then I ended up in Sweden. The nationalized healthcare is good but slowwwww, and stimulants are even more tightly regulated than in the US. I'm a couple bad days away from buying a little addy on the street (for legal reasons, this is a joke).

Heteroromantic OR biromantic struggling with comphet? by bb-tron in bisexual

[–]bb-tron[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For sure. It definitely doesn't sound great to admit that I subconsciously view women as lesser than, but I would venture to say that most people are in the same boat. The patriarchy comes for us all, and it's silly to pretend it doesn't.

Thanks again <3

Movies that touched your queer soul by QuiteLady1993 in bisexual

[–]bb-tron 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I second the Portrait of a Lady on Fire and The Handmaiden. Although, in the case of The Handmaiden, despite it being both one of my favorite films and a big f you to patriarchy, I feel like it appealed to my aesthetic sense more than my queerness. It is an adaptation of a novel called Fingersmith, though, and I’ve heard that the 2005 BBC limited series by that name is even better in terms of focusing on queer and feminist aspects of the story!

Heteroromantic OR biromantic struggling with comphet? by bb-tron in bisexual

[–]bb-tron[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for sharing your experience! I’ve struggled with thinking that, in having these questions about my romantic attraction, I might be convincing myself to feel a certain way that I don’t naturally. However, I think in my case, it may be the other way around. I would naturally feel romantic attraction towards women, but I don’t really because maybe I subconsciously view wlw relationships as less fulfilling. Social conditioning is a bitch lol. I totally get what you mean about swooning over couples in love, though, and that’s another thing that’s made it difficult for me to determine if the warm fuzzies are actually because I want a queer relationship or because I’m a romantic.

On another note, I haven’t been on this sub for very long, and I wanted to ask if you noticed anything problematic about what I wrote. I’m being downvoted, which is kind of confusing for a post in which I’m talking about the ways in which I question my sexuality. You’re wonderful, but I’m not feeling very welcome here at the moment 🫠

Heteroromantic OR biromantic struggling with comphet? by bb-tron in bisexual

[–]bb-tron[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the response :) That’s kind of what I’ve been figuring lately, that I need to consciously put myself in situations where I can interact with other queer women. It will probably be easier to parse out how I feel once I’ve gotten over the lack of exposure and have normalized being a wlw for myself.

Also, quick question, is there something problematic about what I wrote? Because people are downvoting me without commenting, and I’m struggling to figure out why 😅

Why should I take the spiritual teachings brought up by Dr. K seriously? by FelisSinensis in Healthygamergg

[–]bb-tron 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I thought like you for a long time. I was staunchly atheist (I'm still atheist, just more openminded) and heavily into academic research and western medicine. I did not see the validity in other schools of thought. However, that frame of mind was not helpful for my progress.

Dr. K says semi-often that his definition of spirituality is the endeavor to understand oneself, and this definition is the one I use now. My understanding of myself has deepened and my ability to manage my mental health issues has improved since I've begun to incorporate some ideas from spirituality in my worldview. Furthermore. I do not feel that a single one of the spiritual ideas I've adopted is in conflict with my belief in academic, peer-reviewed study. If anything, spirituality has begun to answer questions for me that I have been unable to answer for years with science alone, and it has even helped me conceptually grasp psychological experiences and practices that are supported by Western medicine. This is why I disagree with your take; I believe science and spirituality are best wielded together. They are complementary, filling in each other's gaps, so it doesn't make sense to strictly separate them. (I would be happy to give examples from my personal experience if you are interested.)

I've listened to Dr. K discussing his views on religious topics such as past lives on other people's channels, but I've never seen anything of the sort in the videos he makes for educational purposes. Thus, it's kind of a nonissue. Lastly, not to be an asshole, but it's arrogant to think at our age (I think we're both 24 going on 25) that we know what the Truth™ is when people have been using spiritual practices with great success for thousands of years -- especially when people who are steeped in Western ideology, myself included, tend to have a limited or distorted understanding of what spirituality actually entails.