top | item 46015322

(no title)

AgentMatt | 3 months ago

I also believe it to have been easier with ADHD in the distant past. My reasoning is that in a small, but tighter group there will be others who can compensate for the ADHD person's executive function deficiencies. But the ADHD person might bring enough of a benefit by occasionally going down rabbit holes or discovering stuff that's off the beaten track that the group will still tolerate them.

discuss

order

R_D_Olivaw|3 months ago

This a where I lean also.

I forget where (and I really ought find it again) but I recall some linking of ADHD as simply the kind of traits that are necessary for survival -esque scenarios.

I know that I don't feel as awkward and weird when I'm in nature or building huts or what have you. Seeing the abundance of what nature has to offer and the possibilities actually feels far better than being in a concrete building and being forced to walk ONLY in designated walking areas.

My ADHD always feels the worse when I realize that I have to abide by _insert_arbitrary_deadline_here.

thewebguyd|3 months ago

> My ADHD always feels the worse when I realize that I have to abide by _insert_arbitrary_deadline_here.

Similar here. For me, if I'm given some arbitrary deadline in the future, it almost guarantees I'm not going to do the thing until the day before, or depending on the task, hours before it's due.

"Hey webguy, we need this report by the end of next week" means I'm not doing it until Friday afternoon, and I have no control over it. Doesn't matter if I try to work on it earlier, just won't happen.

It's having an interest based nervous system. We crave novelty, urgency, interest, and challenge to do anything.