Search:

Home | Health | Mental Health


Adult Attention Deficit Disorder

By: Tricia Waters

tummy tuckI suffer from adult attention deficit disorder, and let me tell you - it is not much fun to still be fidgetting and unable to pay attention at the age of 35. I have suffered from attention deficit ever since I was a child, and adult attention deficit disorder isn't really much different from any other kind. Basically, the symptoms are an inability to concentrate or focus, a though process that wildly swings from topic to topic, and also embarassment at being unable to stay on task. There are certain things that are hard to explain to friends and loved ones when it comes to adult attention deficit disorder.

The real tragedy of adult attention deficit disorder is that it really can cripple your life and make success difficult. People who suffer from this condition often get behind in their professional work, miss dates and plans in their personal lives, and all in all have a much harder time of it than their non adult attention deficit disorder friends, relatives, and acquaintences. In this one area - organization, the adult attention deficit disorder brain just doesn't work quite right.

A strange effect of adult attention deficit disorder is that, alongside the distractability, there is often what is known as hyper focus. When an or child with attention deficit disorder becomes very engaged in something such as a hobby or a sport, or even a job if it something that they find very compelling, they will sometimes reach a state where they are totally and completely engaged in what they are doing to the exclusion of all else. They will begin to tune out the world around them, and will be deaf and blind to all outside influences. This is a very positive benefit of adult attention deficit disorder, and can be used to help fight its symptoms.

One of the best ways to deal with adult attention deficit disorder is to set up a very meticulously organized system and then stick to it. Have a day to wash your clothes and always wash them on that day, and have a day to apy your bill and always pay them on that day. Have one specific place where everything goes. It is contradictory to the mindset of the sufferer or adult attention deficit disorder to do these sort of obsessive compulsive sorting activities, but it can be more helpful to them than anything else, as more than most people, they require a high level of organization to succeed. When I was in the process of getting my life organized, I asked a friend who was very organized and didn't suffer from adult attention deficit disorder to help me, and my efforts and his help payed off.

Article Source: http://www.articlemainia.com




Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Mental Health Articles Via RSS!

Google
 
Web www.ArticleMAINia.com

Sitemap
© ArticleMAINia

Powered by Article Dashboard