I also feel a bit let down that the image of someone with ADHD is like some kid that drank a litre of tartrazine laced cola and is cartwheeling around the room, when in fact while some people are like that the arguably most life-ruining symptoms of not being able to concentrate or remember to do things are ignored and not spoken of, then again cartwheeling kids sell newspapers and are easy to laugh at in sitcoms, not being able to concentrate isn't so exciting! If more people knew this maybe I or someone I knew would have worked it out sooner!
Yeah, I've done a lot of reflection and spoken to my parents and brothers, we all agree that I've been like this since I was a kid, I seem to fit in the common mould of being intelligent enough to breeze through school and GCSEs, where coursework started to come in during A-levels I started to struggle and then university was an unmitigated disaster, changing course 2 times, then going part-time and taking 7 years to get a degree. I was always a daydreamer too, I was also always behind in exercise books and had to take them home over the summer to catch up, which didn't work as I'd just sit at the dining room table trying and failing to do anything in the workbook, not paying attention, being obsessed with something for a month or so then dropping and forgetting about it. As an adult I've had more hobbies than I can shake a stick at and I've got half-finished projects everywhere. Lockdown wasn't the start, just the straw that broke the camel's back, I'm older and more self-aware too so finally started to think "what's going wrong here, I can't just be lazy?".Have you always had these now apparent issues or have they come about due to lockdown? because I'm sure if you ask most here that work from home that they will say their concentration is pretty terrible at the moment. Everyone's bored, not much to do really apart from work, and a bit of exercise!
If you feel you have always had these issues then fair enough, but id be careful to differentiate between your typical 'normal' and how your reacting due to lockdown.
Yeah, it sounds like I got really lucky in having a good GP, I did leave out that I actually spoke to a GP in my employer's healthcare scheme, he agreed but because ADHD is a preexisting condition it isn't covered by my private health insurance so he passed his notes to my GP. The GP I spoke to at my NHS surgery is a recently trained locum so I'm guessing didn't have preconceived ideas of what ADHD should be and is more open to looking into this kind of thing rather than being set in his ways from years of doing things the same way...maybe!I agree with this, the ADHD poster child for many including Drs and teachers sadly is that angry hyperactive fidgety kid.
Which is why so many people go under the radar and struggle until **** hits the fan and they get that light bulb moment of this isn’t normal...often in adulthood.
It may even be masked by other conditions such as depression
Can’t believe you’re GP was so straight forward and understanding. Took me several appointments to even get referred to NHS.
I went private due to huge waiting list and found about the mixed option after.
Been trying to get referred to PUK since last year to to get rediagnosed since NHS won’t accept my private diagnosis.
Nothing but hell my Surgery just won’t budge and basically said I need to wait for NHS.
As arse-backwards and stupidly simple as it sounds, you have to choose to stop worrying and caring so much... and then actively turn your mind off.Not sure if it belongs in this thread but how does one deal with anxiety?
I seemingly tend to completely overthink this and always think the worst in situations. I can’t help it either.
even if someone doesn’t message me back for ages after reading it I worry that I’ve said something wrong etc..
It can’t be normal behaviour I’m sure.
As arse-backwards and stupidly simple as it sounds, you have to choose to stop worrying and caring so much... and then actively turn your mind off.
If you don’t force yourself to do this, your overly-cautious mind will force you to endure the emotions associated with the worst outcome of any possible choice (even if those outcomes never actually materialise).
I suffer from over thinking / worrying and it’s effectively a ‘mind glitch’. You have to lock that down, it’s not helpful.
I've gone back on to Sertraline after not taking any meds for 3 years. I recognized things were like they were back then and reluctantly called my Dr to tell him. Hopefully I can repeat as before and just use for 3-6 months then come off it again.
No bad side effects like the first time I took them, just a slight bit of nausea on first day and dry mouth continuing. Only on day two though.
Coming off my antidepressant is bloody hard, feel like crap 24/7. Down to the last 8mg of my antidepressant and I'm not sure I can get it any lower.
Any suggestions?
Escitalopram has worked well for me to. It's the same as citalopram but 2nd gen it's the isolated S side of the stereo isomer . So kind of like a more pure versionI didn't find Sertraline that helpful, GP tried me on Escitalopram and that's worked a lot better for me. We're all different, I take a pretty low dose of it which is enough to keep things steady.
So the following is just my experiences not medical advice.
But having come off SSRI a few times here's some tips. Once your down to very low amount you can start taking every other day. Wait to stabilise could be a few weeks and then go every third day or stop. I found however much I taper there's always a cold turkey zone. For the first couple of weeks I get weird buzzy feeling and brain zaps. After a week or so when those weird sensation are at their highest i take a small micro dose, it massively lessens those sensation and the withdrawal continues on without back tracking. The hard part is month 1 to 3 when I'm physically fine but lacking serotonin and there's insane anger inside. It feels like it's never going to stop but I just remind myself it's not real and eventually rebalance around month 4 to 6
Going to try meditation, good healthy food, and some exercise.walking.