Onedia in the Ozarks

Archive for the ‘ADHD’ Category

November 23rd, 2010 by Onedia Hayes Sylvest

The Funny Side

My parents are 90 and 82 and they recently asked me to manage their bill-paying with the on-line service of their bank.  Last night I attempted to log in and was locked out after entering the wrong combination of ID and login more than allowed.  This is a common experience for me since I have logins and passwords multiplying like kudzu so I just wasn’t up to the process last night.  I waited until today to get the account reset and because there were easier things on my task list I waited until late afternoon near the end of business hours.  Before calling the bank and explaining in some way that felt less goofy for locking myself out again I attempted one last password retrieval.  Worth a try to get back in since I was using a different computer than I used last night.  No joy! I had to face the piper in the form of  customer service for the online banking.

I was rapidly frustrated because  I found all sorts of numbers but that one.  I finally called the deposit counselor who usually assists us at the bank. That actually took a couple of attempts because I dialed the FAX number instead of the desk number but I did  reach someone 1 who provided the correct number. I dialed correctly and immediately reached a perky and willing customer support person who unlocked the account for me. She then told me she was setting up a separate online  account just for me.  During my request I had explained that I am on the bank account but the online account is in my father’s name and that I also have my account with the bank.  To this she replied, “You have an account here with us?”

“Yes, with the Give Us Your Money Bank but here where I live in northern Arkansas.

Laughing she said, “You should open an account with us. Pause and lull.

I replied, wondering how many times I might need to explain this to the nice perky woman, “I do have an account of my own at Give Us Your Money Bank.”

You mean We Want Your Money Also Bank ?”

No, I mean. . . No, OH NO!” , flush, red face, lame apology for wasting her time, and a sincere thank you.

Yes, I had gone to MY bank site and attempted to log in with my parent’s bank site information. After explaining my mistake we completed our exchange and ended the call.  I still had one bank account to unlock, a red face and another example of the mistakes this otherwise intelligent woman makes regularly. With a couple of hours distance it is funny to me and I can laugh at it. However, since I am a few days into my ADHD meds I envision a future week free of such daft wastes of  time.

  1. not our friendly deposit counselor

November 20th, 2010 by Onedia Hayes Sylvest

Practicing Selectivity and Productivity

One of the challenges for people with ADHD is that we tend to have too many things going on.  We say “yes” often before we think about it.  We agree to do one more thing or take on one more project, particularly when the project is interesting.  Often, we are the people who initiate the project.  Then we get inundated with all the deadlines and dates and expectations.  We procrastinate and switch back and forth between projects and commitments.  We fail to come through or take forever to do something we promised.  Sometimes we back out or beg off.  Yet, that usually does not stop us from digging that hole and jumping in at the earliest opportunity.

I know, everyone gets stretched at times so what is the big deal?  Think about the people you know.  Is there someone who promises things and then either does not come through at all; requires frequent reminders or queries about status; fails to complete it while getting involved with some new endeavor; or is always late completing tasks or projects?  Do you get annoyed with that person because they take much longer to get things done than others? 

Over-committing is a constant challenge for me.  I always have a list of stuff I need to do, want to do, promised to do, or am doing.  Within the last couple of weeks I agreed to do three things that I just do not have time to do and that are not as high on the importance list as almost any of the other projects or tasks already on my list. One I am trying to decide if I will decline after agreeing, and it is a paid project.  I often procrastinate on tasks so long that I am totally embarrassed yet the embarrassment fails to initiate activity to complete the task. 

I know that some who read this will think, “What a lazy, inconsiderate slacker.”  This is a behavioral issue.  Just do it!  Just exercise some prudence.  Tell that to my mouth as it says, “yes” even while my brain is saying, “whoa, hold on there”.  Even when I start a task I may very likely get diverted because I get an email which pulls me into a new series of activities and I forget to finish the task I began.

I can also ignore projects by getting totally engrossed in one project that either has an immediate due date or because it is interesting.  I can happily work on that task while ignoring five other tasks that are due.  You may think by now that I never complete anything.  That is not the case.  However, I only vaguely understood my tendencies nor did I comprehend the frequency that I set myself up for the frenzied feeling of being overburdened with things needing completion. Until I left the working world for the life of an artist who controlled her own assignments and set her own schedule I could assign blame to the demands of work.  I must say that the past three years or so were puzzling in that respect.

Now, I understand that I am following the distractions and demands of a  highly distractable brain overflowing with ideas and with poor impulse control.  The awareness that these tendencies were not normal has grown over the past couple of years increasing my anxiety and distress.  I began studying the mindfulness teachings of  Thich Nhat Hanh several months ago.  That was the first step for me.  Discovering my ADHD was the second step.  Now I am in the process of selecting tools and techniques to help me be more selective in the projects and tasks I either accept or assign to myself. 

Obviously some of that is learning to say “NO” politely and firmly.  However, before saying “no” or “yes” I must take time to consider:

  • The impact on my time and energy
  • The pros and cons of accepting or declining
  • The realistic time frame that I can complete if accepted
  • The reality that I  am often called away unexpectedly to assist my parents

Bottom line I need to remember to stop Practicing Selectivity and Productivity and to thinking man Practicing Selectivity and Productivity before taking on something new.

Simply controlling how much I put onto my plate is not enough because I still have the distraction and procrastination to deal with.  One thing that helps that is something my husband  and I began doing this year.  We have little coordinating sessions.  Initially we did it about once a week usually on Monday but recently we decided to do it more frequently.  In these sessions, often held during or after our morning news and coffee , we each share our plans for the day or week and ask for any assistance from the other that may be necessary.  We remind each other of appointments and other scheduled items that require one or both of us to be at some place at an appointed time.  Now, we have not yet perfected the art of having these sessions daily but we are improving.  We find that we are more likely to stay on track and less likely to forget things.  Also, just the communication about what our priorities helps us stay synched.

Of course when you must share your ToDo with another person you must first have such a list.  My husband likes paper and pencil for sitting and talking but he has a large white erasable board on an easel in his lab/studio where he keeps his master list. I, the lover of gadgets and widgets, found an excellent tool at a low cost.  It is uOrganized, an easy but thorough ToDo, taks list, get-things-done, organizer and project manager that lets you use as much or little detail as necessary.  You can even put appointments on it, but we use Google Calendar for that because we like sharing our calendars with each other and with our daughter. 

 I also have two (well really four) other tools that I am using more now.  One is electronic and the others are old standards.  I have been using a moleskin style notebook for a few years and like the perfect purse I searched for the perfect notebook.  Large enough to use and small enough to carry in that perfect purse (that stays organized). Cannot be done in one notebook and one notebook is never where I need it.  So, ever the one is good three are great, I have three, a small one on the bedside table, a medium one on my desk and a tiny one for my purse.  Since I do some of  my best thinking, designing,  and writing when I drive to and from my parents’ town I also have a mini recorder that I can use to capture a post, a list, or random ideas or for design ideas. 

Throw in max use of cell phone alarms and browser addons for reminders to keep me on track I am inching my way to filtering what I do and staying on track.  I welcome any handy ideas that you may have.

November 16th, 2010 by Onedia Hayes Sylvest

Dancing Distracted(ly)

Early in our marriage my husband and I decided to take dance lessons (two-step, etc.)  at a local well-know dance hall near where we lived in College Station, TX.  It was pretty much a disaster and we did not complete the entire series.  I could not remember or at least execute the steps either at the necessary speed or with the proper rhythm and consistency.  He had his own difficulties and we disagreed over leading.  I said he needed to be a “strong lead” and he said I needed to stop leading.  Ultimately, dancing has not been a satisfying experience during our marriage and we almost never do.

Well, when you have a marriage with one partner with ADHD the other partner has a lot to deal with.  When you do not know that one partner has ADHD then it can often add stressors to a good marriage.  The non-ADHD partner may be the one wondering why his or her spouse can not remember the simplest things and just tires of being something of a support system.  That spouse may be the one who keeps things organized, remembers appointments, checks doors, stoves, lights, keys and pays the bills.  Chapters of books and entire book exist on the subject. Now, imagine a situation that no books seem to discuss but that does occur. Both partners have ADHD.

That is our situation.  It was Matthew’s diagnosis that caused me to read about ADHD and consult the therapist.  He is considering returning to graduate school but had a previous unsatisfactory experience.  We decided it would be helpful in the decision process to consult our local Witchdoctor and talk about the issues of concern. Within two sessions she realized he is ADD (that is he does not have the hyperactive part ) and tends to hyperfocus on certain tasks and gets mired in the details.  So, life where two marriage partners have ADHD.

In our case it is a plus and minus situation.  We each learned to deal with some of the traits of the other over the years but can be annoyed by other traits.  We also have learned to cut ourselves some slack.  Remember that for 18 years we did not know that we have ADD / ADHD.  We know now and we are talking and learning about our similarities and differences in the way ADHD affects us.  I continue to search for books or articles addressing the topic of a two-ADHD marriage.  Meanwhile, we spend time learning how to help each other and to understand each others behaviors.  It is a work in progress.

Will we try dance lessons again after our meds are stabilized and we can focus a bit better?  Probably not, but we might take a turn on the floor at a new years or anniversary outing. 1

  1. I could not tolerate that title lest someone think I do not know what poor grammar it is.

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