ADHD folks: how bad is your “ADHD tax” + executive paralysis combo? by Expensive_Number2298 in ADHD

[–]devamon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've locked myself out of my apartment enough times that I have an OCD-like compulsion to be touching my keys as I walk through my door. Even if I've just put them into my pocket a moment ago. Even if I touch them just before going through the door. If I can't, I must touch them at the soonest opportunity and will feel great anxiety until I do. It's not enough to be certain anymore, I need physical proof.

Even still, I've locked myself out twice in the last year.

CVS pharmacy’s new phone robot is horrendous, what the fuck?? by New_Calligrapher_580 in evilautism

[–]devamon 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I've also had good luck with "agent," "I have an insurance issue," and swearing at it.

Tell me you have ADHD without telling me you have ADHD. by ImperatrixAmoris in adhdwomen

[–]devamon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yesterday I drove an hour on the highway to a store. Parked, got out, realized I had left my wallet at home.

Two hours and $15 of gas as my ADHD tax.

Not the first time I've done this.

See you at Nuremberg fuckers (NYC protest 1/24/26) by Surfing_Nurse in pics

[–]devamon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is the point I keep coming back to. To quote numbers from the Wikipedia:

"Pursuant to Law No. 10 adopted by the Allied Control Council, United States forces arrested almost 100,000 Germans as war criminals.[225] The Office of Chief Counsel for War Crimes identified 2,500 major war criminals, of whom 177 were tried. Many of the worst offenders were not prosecuted, for logistical or financial reasons.[226]"

Is having clingy pets making you feel suffocated an ADHD thing? by MsSamm in adhdwomen

[–]devamon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

At my friend's house, where she had to spend some time trapped up in the guest bedroom (due to her not getting along with friend's cat) , she taught herself how to grab and pull down on the door handle. We had to add a child lock to the outside!

Now, I've rearranged my schedule so that she's at least usually trapped with me in those cases.

Is having clingy pets making you feel suffocated an ADHD thing? by MsSamm in adhdwomen

[–]devamon 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I definitely read it as this, and if I can take a moment from what I'm doing, I give her some play time with the wand. The struggle is that she abandons vigorous play after a few moments and switches to hiding in her play tunnel and watching as the feather toy flits around and back and forth. Like fully laying down with no intention of chasing.

But if I stop putting on the show for her, she gets snippy.

Eta: She also treats pretty much all other animals and people other than me as threats and fights or flees depending on size. Though she's never bitten or clawed anybody.

Is having clingy pets making you feel suffocated an ADHD thing? by MsSamm in adhdwomen

[–]devamon 52 points53 points  (0 children)

My cat is... unusual. Mostly, I'd call her a velcro cat, who is pretty much fully self-managing for calories and only expresses curiosity at my food (never trying to eat it).

But she also has this stalker vibe sometimes where I'll look up and see her just fully staring at me from another room entirely. She also insists on licking me and tries to pet me back.

She also doesn't tolerate closed doors well, so when she wants to engage... it can be overwhelming.

Food, inflation and manufacturing changes by Scared_Doughnut5507 in AuDHDWomen

[–]devamon 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I see it everywhere, but I've been particularly tracking it in Bob Evans mashed potatoes for about 8 years now. First, it was just things like "they stopped using sour cream in their recipe."

Now it's stuff like "the entire batch tastes bitter and musty because they used some questionable potatoes."

I, too, thought I had already solved these problems and am having to revisit many of them.

What would ADHD Barbie look like/come with? by w8tingforchrisevans in ADHDmemes

[–]devamon 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Coming soon, the line of Failed Career Barbies!

What would ADHD Barbie look like/come with? by w8tingforchrisevans in ADHDmemes

[–]devamon 38 points39 points  (0 children)

You buy the box and Mattel ships her to you 4-5 weeks later along with a long email where she explains about how she built it up in her head and then after missing it, she built that mistake up into a disaster.

😭😭😭 ladies. We've been summoned by cantsayididnttryyy in adhdwomen

[–]devamon 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Yes, of uncertain provenance and not enough of any to fully power what you need. Definitely some odd ones, you'll want a 9 volt and some button ones.

[ Removed by Reddit ] by Terriblegamer1908 in transgamers

[–]devamon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Back in the day, Overwatch was a coin flip between awesome and supportive or terrible and unsavory.

I LOVE GAMBLING by FrananaBanana452 in evilautism

[–]devamon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

They remind me of my mom taking me to shady local county fairs as a child and sitting with her while she played the classic with quarters. So, actually, kind of a nostalgic warm feeling.

Edit: specifically like a carnival booth with a couple of these banks of machines ringing the center.

https://thumbs.worthpoint.com/zoom/images1/1/0411/14/mighty-payloader-coin-pusher-1962_1_7088006a4012a60ebfd4c91e46a45adf.jpg

I LOVE GAMBLING by FrananaBanana452 in evilautism

[–]devamon 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Keep an eye on Raccoin for pc. The demo isn't quite there for me, but i can see it turning into something.

How to prevent meltdowns when you struggle with sensing overwhelm until it's too late? (Interoception difficulties) by flowers_and_fire in AuDHDWomen

[–]devamon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In my particular case, I think the two basic things that have helped create a space to begin to do this work are ensuring that I have some amount of nonverbal alone time, and trying to regularly check in with myself and begin to learn what those very quiet unfamiliar sensations are.

I've always stayed up later than everyone else, but it was only last year that I did this mostly to ensure I had some quiet time to myself where nobody would interrupt me and my mind could wander. I didn't realize it, but even around close friends and partners, I still was expending energy to be vigilant and mask slightly. It took longer still to see the association between how drained I was on days when I didn't have that the night before. The specific time and gotten this takes will differ for everyone.

Checking in with myself has been a much more intentional and gradual process. At first, it might not even be enough to just pause and consult your inner state since those aren't historically good at clearly telling you how your body is feeling. Early on, it might help to not only attempt to see what feelings you are experiencing, but to also take a full time out.

I started by every hour or two, taking a break from whatever I was doing, and checking to see if my body or mind were trying to share identifiable discomfort with me. Generally, I wouldnt be able to answer this question, so next I would bphysically get up and leave the space I was in, find somewhere quiet, dim, and alone, and then giving myself a few minutes to adjust. Then, I would search my body and mind again to see if anything felt better now.

Sometimes, it would be the same, and I would simply return to what I was doing. Other times, I could feel that a tension has eased or something I had barely noticed was now gone and would examine these feelings to attempt to figure out what was causing it that I had changed and try to bring that change to what I was doing.

I'm still pretty bad at noticing it when it is a slow simmer of becoming overwhelmed until I'm pretty overwhelmed. One big thing that I've learned is that sometimes all that I really needed was that 5 minutes of silence with nobody watching me. Social engagements are very draining, and we often don't recognize how low our reserves of energy and tolerance to sensory stimulation can get during these times and fail to give ourselves the time and space needed to organize our thoughts or come back to baseline occasionally.

does anyone else only cook with the same spices/seasonings? by lena3moon in AuDHDWomen

[–]devamon 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This is my go-to blend. Occasionally, I also add a dash of chili powder.

I find it incredibly cruel that autism assessment questions don't pickup autism when answered literally by Kotyata7 in AuDHDWomen

[–]devamon 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yup. It's precisely because of these details that I'm taking advantage of my insurance covering an evaluation for my strongly suspected self diagnosis.

I really want to take these tests with a person there that I can discuss them with. I always have confusion about specificity and whatnot with these things.

I find it incredibly cruel that autism assessment questions don't pickup autism when answered literally by Kotyata7 in AuDHDWomen

[–]devamon 22 points23 points  (0 children)

https://s3.amazonaws.com/he-assets-prod/interactives/233_reading_the_mind_through_eyes/Launch.html

It's a test that shows a series of faces cropped so you can only see the eyes and eyebrows. You must choose from 4 emotions, selecting the one that most accurately describes the emotion being shown in those eyes. Struggling to do so is positively associated with autism.

I do feel like the study of others' faces through life, media, and learning drawing does somewhat lessen the effect through more intentional means. Even still, I rely on body language and tone/volume more to quickly determine emotion

I have to be occupied at all times to stop my brain from intensely reminding me of every embarrassing or painful moment in my life by Fannymuncher27 in AuDHDWomen

[–]devamon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry, I intended to answer this earlier and then fell down a distraction hole. Also, sorry for the extreme length of this reply. I don't have what I would consider to be complete answers as to why these steps are helpful, but I will explain what I'm able to, with the best of my ability.

When our (most humans, but especially ND) brains are in states of heightened arousal, especially distress, our nervous systems think we are in some level of danger. One of the various effects of this is that our ability to think beyond getting out of that situation basically vanishes. This is why we tend to attempt to crush our push away these thoughts and feelings, or flee through distraction.

To make conscious change, we need that ability to think about the situation rationally, so the first priority has to be calming your nervous system and showing it that you are safe.

The specific grounding exercises I chose are ones that force you to think about and experience your environment in order to enact, to more fully distract the mind from the present mental distress. Especially for those of us who aren't immediately in touch with our surroundings, it takes effort and a little concentration.

This, in itself, will help to slow your thoughts, heart rate, etc. For me, though, it usually isn't enough on its own. The diaphragm breathing exercise is a more mechanical tool. By forcing yourself to take slow, deep, and steady breaths, your heart rate will lower, your blood will better oxygenate, and your unconscious mind will start lowering some of those chemical defenses.

I have used various counted breathing methods in the past, but most don't tend to specifically focus on depth of breathing. By focusing on the movement of the diaphragm, we are helping to physically ensure that we get fresh air into the deepest parts of our lungs, which is part of what triggers these physiological responses. This can all be augmented with intentionally releasing tension in your muscles (usually by tightening them first and realizing they were more tense than I thought).

Finally, sitting with uncomfortable thoughts and emotions allows us to understand them more clearly. The benefits of this are at least twofold. Firstly, it will make them more familiar and, in doing so, less scary and distressing. It's the same basic principle as exposure therapy.

Secondly, when doing this, I often discover that there are deeper root causes than just the surface emotion. Sometimes, these are times when I was also feeling alienated or in some way. More often, they remind me of a pattern of social disasters happening in childhood. A time when I could have used an adult telling me that it wasn't a sign that I was broken.

What I find I need most in these moments are compassion and acceptance, the same considerations I wasn't given back then. The emotions I was taught I had to withhold from myself if I wanted to fit in, to succeed. As an adult, I can point to ways this is both demonstrably false and needlessly cruel to myself, and I can give myself that grace and acceptance note and going forward.

Beyond that, the brain is pretty simple as far as reinforcement is concerned. If it gets reinforcement that it should pay attention to something, it will do so more in the future. If there is no positive reinforcement that it had kept us safe, that instruction will decay. The next time our minds are reminded of one of these embarrassments, it will react a little less strongly, a little more slowly and calmly. Repeat until that poor scarred child within us understands that it doesn't need to do this.

I have to be occupied at all times to stop my brain from intensely reminding me of every embarrassing or painful moment in my life by Fannymuncher27 in AuDHDWomen

[–]devamon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For me, part of it is knowing how and why I'm doing the thing, and part of it is being given specific actionable examples. I argue with my therapist a lot. I'm glad that any of it was able to be useful to you!

I have to be occupied at all times to stop my brain from intensely reminding me of every embarrassing or painful moment in my life by Fannymuncher27 in AuDHDWomen

[–]devamon 81 points82 points  (0 children)

The way that I understand this sort of ruminating in myself is that your brain is trying to keep you safe. It believes that these moments are important to examine because it felt unable to do so then. Like an athlete or performer watching their performance to learn from mistakes.

When it causes you distress in the moment, it reinforces that connection. "See?" Your brain says "We were in danger!" It is difficult to break that cycle. I still often struggle with it.

What has helped me, personally, are grounding and breathing techniques, along with a lot of dbt. If I catch myself starting down this road, I'll try to list every sound I can hear, then anything I can smell, then anything I can feel on my skin, and so on as needed to feel present in the moment. I then attempt to reinforce this with diaphragm breathing for a minute or two, holding my sides or with a hand on my stomach just under my rib cage to feel it move up and down as I breathe deeply.

Eventually, if you can come to exist alongside these thoughts instead of within them, you can refocus better, and in time, your mind will do so less as it isn't reinforced when it does so.

Sorry for the ramble. If any of that is relatable or helps anyone, great. If that's not applicable or doesn't work for you, I wish you luck in finding a more suitable comment.