• Lumidaub@feddit.org
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    2 days ago

    Edit: lolshit wall of text about ADHD of all things. Sorry!

    Attention DEFICIT is a misleading term. It’s more an issue of not being able to willingly direct your attention.

    That’s why ADHD brains hyperfixate on something and we’re are unable to switch to something else, even though we KNOW we should/want to/have to do the other thing - we can’t direct our attention away from the thing our brains are hyperfixating on.

    What sometimes looks like rapid “task switching” is again the inability to direct our attention so it flips around uncontrolled.

    This also often leads to a weird state of paralysis where we’re doing absolutely fuck all because we can’t activate our attention properly but we’re yelling at ourselves on the inside to DO THE FUCKING THING YOU FUCKING LAZY SHIT.

    For ADHD brains to be able to consciously, actively direct attention, there needs to be some immediate reward. It can’t be some vague reward that might come in the future, like “you won’t have back pain when you’re old (so exercise!)”. That doesn’t work.

    For me (and others, I hear), it’s often the thought that others are depending on me doing The Thing. That’s why I was absolutely insanely good at organising shit in my last job - my coworkers depended on me having prepared all kinds of data. Without this reward, I am completely useless at organising stuff.

    Unless it’s interesting, of course, which is again an immediate reward.

    Does this sound in any way like you?

    Edit: and did you have trouble directing your attention to get through this text? :D

    • Pilon23@feddit.dk
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      1 day ago

      This resonates so well with me… First time I’ve read it as “inability to direct attention” and it makes so much sense. So many long sessions looking up random crap on Wikipedia instead of completing tasks, which ultimately only end up taking like 5-30 min usually… And that’s after pushing it back for days or weeks. I’ve not been diagnosed, but often find descriptions and memes hitting a bit too close to home.