I see people post online a lot about taking "holidays" from their ADHD medications because they like just being able to "be" without the medication, or because they feel more relaxed when they're not on it, and I'd love to hear other people's thoughts on this. I just responded to a post on Jane's blog over at ADDitude actually about this very issue and it's got me thinking about this.
See, my normal state of being is actually very anxious. I feel bombarded by all kinds of details, sounds, sights, I literally can't "not notice" them and then ADHD means I have difficulty prioritizing them. As I say to my therapist, I just put them all at the TOP of the list and that's a real problem! Imagine the countless paths to disaster when your brain works that way, lol. I'm harder than I need to be on myself for the sake of humor, but you really can't have everything always at the top of the list, it just isn't possible...so you can see that I don't really have a problem with starting things, just being able to manage them all (or say no to them in the first place).
For me, learning to be a healthy ADHDer means that I am learning to me MORE laid back, MORE calm, and less over-committed, which I am making great strides at. It also means I am using new organizational tools, and trying new ways of working and motivating myself. It also means...that I am using medication to help me to be able to make different kinds of choices.
When I take my ADHD medication...I feel more calm. It's like a breeze blows across my brain and I am suddenly in a slightly better mood. I have the same high energy I always have, but I feel able to focus it a little more and in one or two directions rather than everywhere at once. I PREFER how I feel being ON the medication to how I feel OFF. I do not feel addicted, I just feel that if given a choice I prefer to take the medication. There are days when I don't "need" to and I tried that this week and it was fine...I just felt like my normal self, less focused. But I like my relaxed self better, lol. So I think going forward, I'm going to take it most days, I'm a busy person and I could use that boost most days anyway as a result.
It makes me think about the reasons that we all seek diagnosis. I wonder...do more Adult ADHDers seek treatment because they're bothering other people, or bothering themselves? Because they feel impaired in relation to other people, or because they are frustrated with their own performance. I'm an oddball for sure, a little eccentric...but my diagnosis was purely the result of my own initiation. Yeah, there were things about me that puzzled others, and I "fit" better in some settings than others at this point in my life (though part of that is a certain "not giving a shit" acquired through age and part of it is being exhausted from covering up my ADHD)...and my lack of achievement relative to my seeming ability was a little shocking quite frankly. But I asked for help because I had reached my limit and couldn't cope anymore on my own, without intervention of some kind, and for me that means therapy (which I also LOVE) and medication (which I really like now that we seem to have found a decent combo for me).
And so I wonder...does the fact that I sought out treatment purely on my own request make it less likely that I am going to see the medication as something I need to take a vacation from? Or is it people' chemistry? I mean, Jane's description of herself off of meds, and mine could not be more different. I go-go-go 800 MPH no matter what so the difference between me on and off meds is that difference between me going hyperspeed calm or hyperspeed anxious...it's all the same speed, I just feel better on the drugs. She says she does not necessarily.
So...body chemistry? medication differences? reasons for seeking treatment? Or...and this is another thing I bat around from time to time...maybe they're going to discover in a few years that all of us ADHDers actually "have" different issues that haven't yet been clearly defined? And if that happens, maybe it will make more sense why some people dig the chemical intervention, and others don't?
Just curious about what other people think about this.
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