writingadhd:

thatadhdfeel:

tadhdfw every friend turns into a mom friend around you

usually i laugh it off because it can be hilarious (being mom-ed by a 6′ 3″ frat bro who’s younger than you is a trip yo) but sometimes it just… really wears on me.

people with adhd are still adults even if we don’t always seem like it. and sometimes we act goofy and chill because if we didn’t, we’d lose it over always being treated like a child. which really really sucks.

so sometimes your character may ignore well-meant advice because THEY AREN’T ACTUALLY A CHILD DAMNIT and that can throw all kinds of conflict into personal relationships and such.

fuckingconversations:

pazdispenser:

CBC made a good documentary on adult ADHD and part of it really caught me off guard because i swear they repeated verbatim my life story for the past 3 years

full programme here:

http://www.cbc.ca/natureofthings/episodes/adhd-not-just-for-kids

My ADHD manifested in excellent in-class work. Excellent understanding in discussions. Excellent participation. 

My ADHD manifested in piles of homework left undone until the last possible minute, while I stared at them, thinking; “I want to get these done. I understand the theory. It would take 10 minutes. I want to start, why can’t I start?” 

My ADHD manifested in fantastic reading comprehension – nigh impenetrable focus on interesting topics the first time I’m reading about them. 

My ADHD manifested in a complete inability to focus on reviews or re-reads, mind skittering sideways and away whenever anything was boring or repetitive. I sat down to study, my books open, my eyes on the text, and my brain clawing its way out the back of my head to focus on something else – anything else. Focus, focus! [No.]

My ADHD manifested in Articulating wings half-finished but still beautiful, in beautiful lineart and half-hearted coloring. In stories written passionately for days until I forgot it existed and never returned. In projects started and forgotten and started and forgotten a thousand times until my bins of project supplies piled up and my bank account shriveled down. No, it will be different this time – I LOVE this new thing. This new thing is my world, my destiny, my Everything. I CREATE and CREATE and CREATE and never FINISH. 

My ADHD manifested in confusion and surprise as time slithered away, hours passing like minutes and minutes seeming endless by contrast. An inability to gauge how much time had passed, was left, a task would take. An inability to hold dates in my head, because time didn’t feel consistent or even real.

 My ADHD manifested in watching someone talk and not understanding a word they said – literally hearing sounds and translating out only nonsense. In thoughts so loud I couldn’t speak coherently. In a conversation across the room shattering an idea I was trying to hold. It’s hard to think when you’re already thinking about everything around you. 

writingadhd:

adhdpeep:

“if you forgot it it must have not been important”

buddy. pal. you underestimate the power of my forgetfulness.

list of things i remember forgetting this past week:

1. my own birth date

2. my sister’s name

3. how old i am – told someone i was 19, my sister asked if i was 24, i’m still not sure

5. i ate dinner twice because i forgot i already ate

6. i’m sure there’s more i’m just forgetting

so if your character has brain farts (or blonde moments, like i used to get teased about in school) that’s totally normal