![]() things like dementia and brain injuries (e.g. If someone seems to acquire the symptoms of adhd later in life, they definitely have something else. I always say that it is a super power, but just like a muscle car super power has a price. But for me i found the career and workplaces I am interested in, and at my best I can hyperfocus, and use my racecar mind to jump from tasks on a moments notice and come up with unique and creative solutions to problems. Get multiple resources, find specialists in adult ADD. Then if you still think you qualify as ADD, be firm in your insistence on a diagnosis. Be honest with yourself about your behaviours. I think this generally happens because of the comorbidities with ADD, and most importantly adults have generally mastered covering up their symptoms and found things that engage them in their daily life.īuy some books, learn about yourself. Sometime you have to kinda push for it, which feels weird and makes you feel like a phony looking for drugs. I have read that often they will try to not commit to an ADD diagnosis in adults. Is my kitchen a mess while this is going on? Yes. I'll get interested in a subject and read three books on it in two days, watch a bunch of videos, etc. Some few of which have unexpectedly served me very well. I think this is partly because I have a brain which heavily tends towards lateral thinking, and because most of my experienced mental life has been making order out of seeming chaos, and partial information QUICKLY.Īnother example is "hyperfixations" have endowed me with many skills and reasonably deep wells of knowledge. I love throwing a million possibilities at a problem until I figure out what might work. Perhaps most noticeably to others: I take on the hard confusing messes no one else wants to touch. And you did leave out some of the good stuff haha. For other things I've developed coping mechanisms. I'm not chronically unemployed, manage my time well when I need to, don't lose items, don't have APD, etc, etc. Moderators are not experts in everything so we do not always moderate for accuracy, though there are often one or two people wearing their smarty pants in the comments.Ī lot of those aren't forgone conclusions. Lastly, always check the comments for guides. If you do we may remove some of your posts in the interest of keeping a wide array of topics. Please help keep the sub diverse by not saturating the sub with one topic. Many of you might have whole folders of guides, but they are all on similar topics. If you know the source of your guide, post it in the comments so people can know the true heros! ![]() This includes guides describing the creation of dangerous items/materials and/or guides that are designed with the purpose to harm or hurt others do not fit the culture of this sub and will be removed. Guides depicting harmful, dangerous, or destructive content will be removed. Guides must use either Reddit or Imgur as an image hostĥ. Nonserious/Comedy Guides Will Be Removed (better suited for /r/shittycoolguides)Ĥ. Please only post direct links to images of type. If you have questions message us, if you think a post is not a good one downvote it.ġ. These are the considerations the mod team use when they feel it is appropriate to remove posts. Sometimes infographics can masquerade as how-to guides. If your guide is more of a visual essay than a structured table or list, then chances are that is an infographic. Flow charts and step-by-step guides are considered guides, so are visual references that line up different types of something next to one another other.Īn infographic is more educational in layout and content, finding something specific on an infographic is not as easy because it is designed to inform through more narrative structures. Guides are typically laid out in a grid configuration of some sort or sectioned into multiple tables by a category or step of a process. On top of that not all guides are created equal, many technically qualify as guides, but lack substance. If someone has to visually bop around your guide to find what they are looking for, the guide does not pass the layout test. The layout or structure of a guide must be that so, when someone is trying to find/reference information from the guide, they can do so logically or simply. It takes both content and layout to make something a guide. Guides are reference materials, how-tos, and/or comparison tables. For example, "A cool guide about identifying poison ivy", "A cool guide showing how to clean your house", or "A cool guide for painting your living room". To help keep things nice, searchable, and maintainable, all posts must be prefixed with "A cool guide".
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