5 months ago, I got diagnosed and on Elvanse.

At first, it was a life-changing magic pill. I made completely out-of-character impulse decisions like: Let’s list & process all issues that can be fixed with a phonecall or email right now! After less than 60 minutes, 70 % of the weight from unfinished tasks was off my shoulders.

But more and more it became clear that I need my old crutches (lists, timers, methods, …) and the meds. It’s still pretty great, because when I make the decision to do one item from the list, I can do it without feeling like cutting into my own flesh. I just make the decision.

Lately, especially on meds, I’m pretty hard into doomscrolling. Reading on Reddit frontpage (still there) and commenting my stupid opinion / “insight” to a wild mix of posts.

Currently recovering from the flu, which didn’t help, and a lot of urgent todos got stacked up, deadlines missed.

Of course I know what needs to be done, and I’m starting. Got a browser plugin to limit certain websites etc. It’s slow.

I think I should try a therapist who is specialised in ADHD. Not so much to process trauma from a life living undiagnosed, but rather to help me get all that done, get to a sustainable level of productivity.

Dr. K. said something interesting in a recent video. People can’t just make a conscious decision like “hey, I should stop being a slob and instead improve myself 2 hours straight per day!” or “I want to be someone who gets up early, eats a healthy breakfast, works out, has a completely different life!”. It’s a different part of the brain that executes this, and you can’t just order it around.

Anyway, life changed for the better, a lot, but I want to pick up the pace.

  • Zorsith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    15 hours ago

    Damn, just being able to say “I’m gonna do _____” and actually, y’know, DO IT, sounds fucking amazing