New here...ADD and critical thinking skills.
Hello all,
Hello all,
Light-hearted humor postings by the people with the ADHD.
I've always thought that music had a wonderful way of pulling emotion out of me and I came across an old favorite song that I hadn't heard since my wife's ADD diagnosis. I listened, but this time the words hit a deeper, much sadder chord in my heart. It says everything I'm feeling about the emotional roller coaster my/our lives have become in the past few years, how I have to say goodbye to the now unrealistic expectations of our relationship, and just how incredibly lonely I've now become. Please. Take a listen and let me know what you think about this song.....it brings me to tears
I would like to get some tips/insights to my post as a newcomer to this situation. I have known my partner for a long number of years, we have been best friends since we were young. We are both now in our 30's and discovered that we have strong feelings for each other. This came as a shock to us as our friendship was always platonic and none of us was expecting this friendship to turn into love EVER.
I take Adderall once a day in the mornings usually 10-15 mg vs the prescribed 30's or I stay up way too long.
I am American. Wife is German. She is not born in America with German descent, but moved from Germany 4 years ago. She speaks good English. I think it is important to point that out as I think there is a disconnect between the cultures and communication in general.
A quick background on my relationship, married last spring after roughly 2 years of dating, we were only together for about 3 months before we jumped the gun and moved in together, then we were engaged 2 months later, all very fast and not what I was used to, but thought I just finally met the one. For months before the wedding, I felt I was making a huge mistake, but I didn't know where to turn and went through with it anyway. Everything changed after the wedding, and I thought I was depressed.
okay first a little backstory. My husband was diagnosed with ADD-i almost 2 years ago while deployed in Iraq. When he is off his medicine and it's a "bad day" he's loud, compulsive= he say's things without thinking them through and buys things on a whim or without fore-thought, he is a sensitive guy even more so without the help of his medicine which is Ridalin and something else but I forget what it is...he's training with is reserve unit right now and took his medicine with him so I can't read the bottle. But he takes the medicine for anxiety, depression, and focus. He was about t
I write this to anyone that may be starting out in their marriage. I am 40 yrs old and have been married for almost 22 yrs. If it wasn't for our 16 yr old daughter, I am sure my wife would be gone by now. I have known that I was ADD since we were married, but only really acknowledged it about 10 yrs ago after seeing the challenges my oldest daughter was facing. I started taking medication and it makes a world of difference with the anger and frustration. However, I have taken a toll on my wife. I moved us around 14 times in the first 11 yrs of marriage.
My 13 year old son was diagnosed with ADD by a psychiatrist, but the doctor doesn't really specialize in children or ADD. His knowledge of medications for kids seemed very limited.
Do I let my son be treated by his pediatrician for his ADD or is there a different type of specialist I should be looking for?
I've been dating my 50 year old, ADD, boyfriend for over a year. At the beginning he completely hyper focused on me with poetry, romantic evenings, compliments, etc. It was heaven.
Well...I know now that he still loves me, even though I don't get the poems anymore or the romantic attention.