ravensmitten
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 418
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
I was put on all sorts since early childhood (was suicidal starting at 10, 11 or so), but ADHD/AuDHD was something for little boys, not anxious little girls who were scared of their own shadows. It never went further than a variety of antidepressants, which just made it worse. Mom tried to get me help, she was my champion through the years, but the people I was assigned to just kept botching it, diagnostically speaking. Over 13 therapists, shrinks, what have you... (Lots of turnover due to their starting their own practaces a few months in away from the dutch version of NHS care, almost on cue; not me quitting therapies until the last one in 2005.) None of them picked up on it. Now I'm finally being heard, just before my 45th birthday! Anyway.... I've tried an elimination diet for my rheumatism, so a lot of things have already been nixed, on top of diabetic restrictions... I don't think it's made a difference, but I can look into what it could do for ADHD, as the focus back then was on my joints, not my brain. Inconclusive or not, it's still worth checking out, I think. Especially since I'm a little worried nothing'll be tolerable with side effects. I know there's lots to try, but... I had a rough week on a smidge of medication, so... Yeah. Eek. So a diet for ADHD might be something to research, juuuust in case.![]()
I'm sorry to hear of your difficulties, and not being heard so long. Thank you for your story, It's quite apt at the moment and something on my mind.
I've been umming and ahhinhg about having my daughter assessed, on one hand thinking I wouldn't want to put her through a lot of the prodding and poking I was put through, BUT on the other, I think I have to realise maybe things have changed, shes not me, and I'm not my parents (Not that I think I'd manage the whole thing any better than my parents did, after all they only did the best with the tools they had at the time.) I can put aside my own ego, feelings and experiences and personal reservations, in making that decision if it would be doing her a disservice by not having her assessed.
But maybe to manage it in a way that would be far more helpful to her than harmful, and not making it more difficult for her in future, or having to struggle to be heard for years because of my own personal hang ups.
I am not for one minute commenting on yours or anyone else's situation here, but thinking of it more I think I needed to hear your perspective.
Yes, def. without touching on the gender thing cause I don't want to generalise, while still recognising that as a big problem - if you didn't fit the stereotype that wouldn't be picked up on as such, and you'd be left to struggle despite all the underlying functions being the same while causing different manifestations and behaviours or them even being hidden, or masked by ways of outwardly coping while silently struggling.
Wrapping myself up in words here as its a difficult thing to speak about with any surety of anyone else's experiences.
My daughter has a few times had the school report of daydreaming (although that's very vague), and can be a bit chatty, and the last parents evening was a once she's on task she does really well but maybe it's a focus thing there if she doesn't want to do the task, and this rang home, we all have tasks we don't want to do but I find I have no problems focusing on the ones I really want to do, or the stuff I want to learn. she's certainly not "disruptive" or running about like a maniac like I was, but that doesn't mean that finding it hard to focus on some thing isn't there, for me that manifested in me climbing the walls. For her that might manifest differently.
There was this need for a nice ordered box to put us in and treat us blanketly, I don't actually know if blanketly is a word, but I'm going with it anyway. I think we are all a little more complex than this.
Long unfocused self indulgent ramble incoming...
Maybe things have changed now, as back then I *did* fit the stereotype so it was picked up on. I was labelled an "anarchist" at school for questioning authority at the age of 5. I think that tells me enough about the person who made that remark and the system they belonged to. Buut, looking inwards, maybe there is a bit of truth in that, of course the statement is extreme hyperbole, but sod your flipping system if a kid can't question it without it falling apart when you have no legitimate answer to those questions - and then you have no recourse but to ostracise them for being sceptical of the things they are told to accept. no, it was just shut up and do as we tell you while we treat you like another brick in the wall, don't dare to think yourself any different, not that I expected to be treated any differently or have any special treatment at all. We are all individuals, and I understand the resources thing, and I am also sceptical of utopias and idealism, yet the child processing factory created so many hostile situations that we get taught to ignore, put our heads down, get on with it and accept our lot, and not to stand up for things we believe that are right
I went on hunger strike once in an assembly, some bother happened at a local shop where a lot of us got food at lunchtime, which led to the process being cancelled and it was all school dinners or packed lunches from then on. I felt we were all being punished for the behaviour of a few, yet treated the same. I tried to unionise, got a good show of hands, until the headteacher said I'd be punished and everyone else who followed me in that would follow the in my punishment. It wasn't long before all of those hands went down when they learned the lesson that they couldn't have a principle without losing out on something themselves. I didn't eat a school dinner for 3 years.
God, I've even internalised that because I feel like a narcissistic entitled twerp here reading this back. Maybe I was a bit and I was just just difficult, annoying and disruptive and that was hard for anyone to manage in a setting that seemed to have a conflict of be yourself but prized uniformity.
I do realise that this might have been highly disruptive for other people in the class to get on and I cant imagine what its like being in charge of loads of kids, keeping them safe trying to get them all engaged enough to learn something, I'd like to think I could treat them individually and make the whole thing inclusive instead of that disrupting others, whereas other 'lessons' were taught. I did weigh up the idea of retraining to become a teacher at one point of my life and weave some stuff in there subverting the system, but I am so un-academic and it would probably be some form of retribution punishment that would put me in my place about how hard it must have been to deal with my behaviour when I was in class, and I probably wouldn't have wanted to manage that myself, so I'm a total hypocrite, and I'm biased.
Obviously this happens in more than one setting at school, and that's the thing, if it was just at school, then we could say that was the cause but for me it was outside of school too, so over the years I had to come to terms with being human with all my flaws and managing my own behaviours even if some environments encourage certain ones more than others.
lol can you tell?
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