• shootwhatsmyname@lemm.ee
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    7 hours ago

    Like telling someone who’s missing both legs to get better shoes so they can keep up.

    On the flip side, someone with legs isn’t gonna understand the point of prosthetics because it would be totally useless to them.

    ADHD has definitely opened my eyes to how much we humans subconsciously assume we know everything based on our own experiences.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      Like telling someone who’s missing both legs to get better shoes so they can keep up.

      But it’s not. You’re confusing material conditions with psychological conditions. The brain is far more plastic than the leg (stump). And neuroatypicals regularly develop coping mechanisms that would be the envy of any paraplegic.

      ADHD has definitely opened my eyes to how much we humans subconsciously assume we know everything based on our own experiences.

      I think people will often divert to “This won’t work on me because I have ADHD” and often miss that lots of advice is just bad or otherwise useless to the public at-large. The “Bootstraps” mentality of self-help gurus constantly assume you have more free time, more financial slack, and more raw dumb luck than the average prole.

      I can’t count how many times I’ve seen “just go door to door handing out resumes” pitched as a solution to a few million people rendered unemployed during a recession. I routinely see InsanePeopleFacebook tier “smart savings” advice that amounts to either comically unrealistic spending/savings rates or recklessly foolish investment tips. Then there’s the Common Wisdom that only survives the first two years out of high school. “Just go get an X”, be it a vocational career or a law degree or a ticket to the next boom town or a rich spouse, works right up until too many people take the same advice.

      “Haha, you can’t trick me into joining your MLM because I’m neurdivergent” signals that you’ve made the right choice but often for the wrong reasons. As a result, it just opens you up to a different kind of affinity scam (“We invented an MLM for ADHD!”).

      Rather than self-segregating and embracing alienation, we need to recognize the fundamental economic game as rigged and tackle it with a unified front.

    • easily3667@lemmus.org
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      5 hours ago

      Also one of those things is visible and generally comprehensible to others.

      Someone getting annoyed because your advice didn’t work for them due to their specific mental patterns…is very different from missing a leg.

      • shootwhatsmyname@lemm.ee
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        7 hours ago

        Probably could have worded that better but there’s no perfect analogy :/

        I was trying to say that when you look at someone missing legs most people immediately understand certain areas of life are more challenging for them than for yourself. You might even treat them with more respect because of this and support them when you’re able.

        However, looking at someone with ADHD, you can’t see their prefrontal cortex or neurotransmitters at all. Thus it usually doesn’t make sense why life could be more challenging for them than it is for yourself.

        The reality is most of us default to projecting our own life experience on others as hard facts (sometimes leading to false assumptions other people’s intentions). We could all really benefit from looking at people around us with an openness and curiosity, knowing that there’s a lot we don’t know and can’t see