Real ADHD Footage | Dr Syl's Psychiatric Analysis

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 390

  • @zwsh89
    @zwsh89 2 роки тому +287

    It’s worth pointing out that for many of us ADHD brained folks, the inattentiveness and disorganization can manifest as hyper focus too, which can be just as debilitating as being distracted. I’m an audio engineer and I love what I do, but I can sit down at the computer at 2pm and not realize I’ve been mixing for 12 hours until my 2am bedtime alarm goes off. It means I can have massive bursts of productivity when I can sink into a task, but it also means I didn’t do anything else for 12 hours. That’s where the social, sleep, nutritional, anxiety, depression, and guilt all slide in. It’s not that I can’t focus… it’s that I can’t break focus from something I enjoy when I’ve got less fun sh*t to do!

    • @dxxl-
      @dxxl- Рік тому +16

      Omg 😳 I didn't know that was actually a thing until I just read this. People get so mad at me, I miss appointments, I'm late to father's day/mamas day/nephews birthday etc... I'll look at my phone time and it'll say noon or so 🕛 and then say I'm jumping in the shower soon because it's an ocd thing I have to shower before I do ANYTHING or I don't feel good... Then what feels like maybe an hour later I'm reminded that everyone's going to bed soon... I'm like what? My very patient father of my kids-"Yes it's 9 pm I kept telling you and you don't listen"
      And it makes me want to break down into tears because I just lost another day with my family. It's gotten worse since I gave birth so I can't say for sure if it's related to the damage pregnancy did to my organs, or if very soon after a precancerous primary source ended up spreading to my liver and now brain (it's been a rough 2 years post partum/but worse the past year).
      I started feeling sick in 2016 but they told me I was a woman, a woman with anxiety, and a woman that needed to lose 20 lbs so I lost 45 instead- still felt shitty, but looked great so I stopped going to the doctor. That's when I should've kept going I guess to be taken seriously 😒
      But ya so I guess for me it could be what I've always had just worsened over time or liver disease from my obgyn not watching me carefully enough or something as serious as C, my whole body is deteriorating up to the point my eyes bleed, my bones hurt, my stomach is distended where I still look full term and had horrible rib pain until I stopped eating fully. Sometimes my appetite comes back for something silly like rice and cheesecake 😭
      But regardless, (sorry long random reply) if I wasn't dealing with all this other shit I wouldn't have felt so awful about something we can't control all this time.. I even have to set an alarm for when I shower otherwise i stay in for an hour.
      God 😢
      Do you have a hard time opening mail? 📬 Letting it stack up wherever? Ruining your life lol

    • @zwsh89
      @zwsh89 Рік тому +4

      @@dxxl- sorry I missed this message way back when! And sorry you’re going through so much, I can only imagine!! I totally understand what you’re describing, and yeah, showers take way too long to the point that I’d rather skip a shower than risk losing time. And I don’t have an issue with paper mail, but I currently have over 600 unread text messages and thousands of unaddressed emails. So much so that just opening my email app triggers a huge anxiety wave, and stops me from actually looking at what I missed. So then I miss important info from work, events I’d want to go to, or request from the people in my life who then assume I’m ignoring them, rather than just overwhelmed. So rest easy, you are certainly not alone! My multiple therapists have all confirmed that this is 100% consistent with a non-hyperactive adhd diagnosis

    • @zwsh89
      @zwsh89 Рік тому +2

      @@dxxl- I’m also notoriously late to things and forget about obligations I’ve made all the time. Tracking time in general, being able to predict how long something will take, and working backwards from an end point to break down all the steps in between, and then planning how long they will all take and when to do them (executive functioning) is super hard for me, and other friends of mine with a similar diagnosis. There’s a real tendency to get lost in the moment for folks like us, and that can mean that we have an easier time “living in the now” than others, but it tends to come at the cost of being able to plan, having foresight about the short term future, and overall reliability. To others, our yourself (I definately make different choices than the people around me because I know I can’t trust my self to come through on certain things, even though it’s all for myself). When I’m experiencing depression, I describe it as tunnel vision. I get caught up in “what’s the important thing I need to do right now?” and the rest of the world fades away. A lot doesn’t happen when I’m stuck in tunnel vision mode, and I bet you know exactly what I’m talking about, where a more neurotypical reader of this comment might be like “what the hek does this guy mean by ‘tunnel vision?’”

    • @cadbq
      @cadbq Рік тому

      when he was going over the video with the math vs star wars i was thinking the same sort of thing. i present more inattentive typically with some fidgetiness but if i have a hyperfixation and there's something like math to do for said hyperfixation, it's hyperfocus time baby you are not getting me out of that math problem for the next hour if hyperfocus brain had its way. i get this with drawing and sometimes writing, sometimes while trying to learn how to do something new. it all depends on what interest my brain has decided to flit to and be like 'yes. that's the one. that's the one today. nothing else exists.' there are some things that can break my focus but it's not something done easily if it's not a specific sound or something. it's a mess LOL. i have like 12 alarms and reminders for everything and sometimes i'll still miss my meds notification if i'm really really into something so i'll be late taking them by like an hour and a half.
      adhd is ride man. you either can't focus or you can only focus on one thing for forever and a day. nothing else. bodily functions? gimme a minute i just wanna finish this one part. 1 hr later you are somewhat dehydrated and desperately need a drink xD

    • @zwsh89
      @zwsh89 Рік тому +1

      @@cadbq preaching to the choir! Just now I was practicing some drums and said to myself “one more song, it’s getting late and I don’t want to bother my neighbors. Six songs later, I caught myself. Bodily functions? Hydration? Nutrition? These are just annoyances that threaten my productivity. The worst is when I’m in hyperfocus mode and really getting into my groove on something, and I have all these delicate thoughts I’m balancing, and then someone interrupts me and all those thoughts go right out the window. Once focus is broken, it can be hard to get back into it, so I often will tell family to just leave me alone while I’m working until I come out, but sometimes I’m needed right away, and I find myself getting overwhelmed by the fear of forgetting where I left off, and sometimes snap at my family when they don’t deserve it. Like, I have no ill will towards that family member, but my frustration with my own process and inability to hold a thought if I don’t deal with it NOW gets taken out on them. Anyone else struggle with that?

  • @Umichansan
    @Umichansan 2 роки тому +351

    Hey I though this was a good video but I did want to point out that the girl was showing a lot of symptoms that might get lost, such as the constant eye movement that a lot of girls and women who have ADHD present, she also seemed to be channeling her fidgeting into her fingers during the interview. The last major thing I wanted to touch on as an adult with ADHD is that I did do very well on tests but that my struggle was always homework and remembering to do it and turn it in so even if your child with ADHD seems to be doing well on testing you should be making sure they aren't dropping homework into the dark depths of their backpack where they will only remember it the day it's supposed to be turned in or not at all.

    • @GarikDuvall
      @GarikDuvall 2 роки тому +27

      Fellow adult-ADHD'er here and I was same way with tests. I usually faired pretty well on them, but I struggled when it came to writing papers or just remembering to do homework.

    • @CD-qr7ec
      @CD-qr7ec Рік тому +19

      Agree, I did well on tests but homeworks and coursework were a whole different story. I was a straight a student in the UK system, in which grades were fully awarded based on exam results. But when I briefly worked with children in America and learned that they could lose marks for tardiness or not handing in homeworks, it occurred to me that in that system I'd likely have never even made it through high school. I'd probably have failed or dropped out.

    • @Tanya-vl5ub
      @Tanya-vl5ub Рік тому +11

      I've just come across you whilst browsing around various topics on UA-cam - my favourite hobby. I'm finding it difficult to watch this particular video though as the music is overwhelming and I can't concentrate. I'm wondering if this is an ADHD symptom? I am actually in the process of waiting on my assessment as an adult.

    • @electricyarn
      @electricyarn Рік тому +4

      As a teenager who was diagnosed with adhd in the past couple of years, my mom (who is very adhd) originally explained to me that I might have it too by pointing out how I was looking around the room and couldn't make eye contact with her during the conversation. Which isn't to say that no eye contact is explicitly an adhd thing, but for me, it was one of the more obvious signs. It was also the first thing I noticed about the girl in the video.

    • @Zembatka
      @Zembatka Рік тому +3

      As an adult with ADHD I struggle to remember to check my ADHD kid's backpack. As a result he never has homework done and I always feel guilty😂

  • @Vercanya
    @Vercanya Рік тому +98

    That poor girl was showing so many signs of inattentive ADHD. I hope the diagnosis helped her to be happier and more confident in herself.

  • @keeshy
    @keeshy Рік тому +170

    "I get A's but not A+'s" hit me right in the gifted inattentive ADHD kid. Ouch! Also the "her ADHD must be well managed because she isn't fidgeting." There's a reason inattentive type ADHD is so under-diagnosed. I was surprised you didn't mention that in reference to the little girl.

    • @marwafahiz8826
      @marwafahiz8826 Рік тому +26

      Underrated comment!! I feel like Dr Syl should look more into this! -female with ADHD

    • @FirelighttheKing
      @FirelighttheKing Рік тому +31

      The not fidgeting in her case actually looks more adhd to my eyes - she’s as stiff as a board, and her eyes are flicking around a lot - she seems restless, like she’s preventing herself from fidgeting. She looks uncomfortable too. (But that may be projection, because she reminds me a lot of myself when I was little).

    • @Wingsofchange2024
      @Wingsofchange2024 9 місяців тому +3

      Why do you think it's so under-diagnosed? Thanks.

    • @AnotherBrainArt
      @AnotherBrainArt 7 місяців тому +5

      @@Wingsofchange2024because it is. It’s not disruptive to the outsider or the class. It’s disruptive to the person dealing with it. There’s most of a generation of girls completely overlooked when I was a kid. I was literally in a one on one learning disability class with a specialized teacher. I made really good test grades, turned nothing in, forgot so much stuff in instructors. She said i learned differently and nothing was wrong. Math and social studies were why I ended up in the LD class. People tend to be diagnosed based on the trouble they cause to others and girls/afab learn through social structure that we have to mask or people please like mad.

  • @cassiewilloughby7105
    @cassiewilloughby7105 Рік тому +141

    The way she holds the arms of the chair and sits so stiffly and almost stone like, is something that feels to me like masking.
    I think this little girl has been repeatedly scolded for wriggling,or fidgeting in her chair and possibly for not making eye contact, so she has become hyper aware of her need to remain still and the tenseness and the fingers gripping into the arm of the chair really shows her inner dialogue is shouting at her on repeat - sit up straight, don't fidget, look at me when you speak......
    Her eyes are very active too and I feel like it mirrors her active mind.
    I think in a classroom situation this young lady probably becomes very emotional and even quite tired after having to focus so hard at just sitting still let alone take in the actual conversations or lessons and provide adequate responses like she is doing so here.
    ADHD is a lot of effort to mask, 'normal' seems like a gift

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Рік тому +6

      I wouldn’t be surprised if those Jesus parents are trying to turn her into one of those slavishly obedient christian wives.

    • @katraylor
      @katraylor Рік тому +8

      I felt so bad for her. Poor sweet darling baby. :(

    • @Rachel_D03
      @Rachel_D03 11 місяців тому +2

      ​@kellydalstok8900 Im glad her parents loved her and got her diagnosed by a doctor. Clearly they're teaching her right too as she loves the God that made her! What a cutie.

    • @aethanix1819
      @aethanix1819 7 місяців тому +4

      Maby her high intelligens helps her to mask quit well.

    • @claireschweizer4765
      @claireschweizer4765 7 місяців тому

      Thank you

  • @MadeOfMilk
    @MadeOfMilk 2 роки тому +123

    that little girl broke my heart. It was watching a home video of me.

    • @sarahgirard1405
      @sarahgirard1405 Рік тому +14

      I bet she gets yelled at a lot and that leads to feelings of worthlessness. Good experiences are few and far between.

    • @MadeOfMilk
      @MadeOfMilk Рік тому

      Yes, i bet she was. I was as well and it has taken years of therapy to get past it.@@sarahgirard1405

    • @colinstu
      @colinstu 7 місяців тому +3

      omg me too, crying right now. Wish I had this diagnosed then.

    • @AnotherBrainArt
      @AnotherBrainArt 7 місяців тому +2

      @@colinstuI cried the first time and this time seeing her too. Like watching myself.

    • @thatonethisone5904
      @thatonethisone5904 5 місяців тому +2

      Me too, she even looks similar to me as a kid. I couldn’t listen, take in information very well, and bounce around like a manic ball…nobody wanted to be near me …

  • @ashleycook300
    @ashleycook300 Рік тому +219

    ADHD and Autism also tend to manifest differently with girls and young women. ♥Our Hyperactivity tends to menifest internally more often. We struggle with racing thoughts, poor self image, stress, ect. We also struggle more with things like restless leg syndrom and such as well.

    • @lolly5657
      @lolly5657 Рік тому +6

      Oh no I didn't see this comment and pretty much repeated what you said 🤦🏼‍♀️ I'm sorry.

    • @michaelavanduesen
      @michaelavanduesen Рік тому

      so true! Some of my struggles. 😅

    • @chosensomeonelse
      @chosensomeonelse Рік тому +4

      came here to write the same, females have pretty different and more tricky presentation and there's still nearly not enough researches on that

  • @katiakominski432
    @katiakominski432 Рік тому +47

    I think it's important to point out that she was actually showing a lot of signs of her ADHD especially stereotypical of girls. I think a big point of that video was to show how easy it can be to mix up a diagnosis because the boy is sitting comfortably and moving in his seat and answering more loudly whereas the girl can easily be overlooked.

  • @breehayes3
    @breehayes3 Рік тому +85

    In the video with the 2 kids, a huge symptom I spotted right away (as someone with ADHD who also struggles with this) is the lack of eye contact the young girl had. She couldnt maintain it with the woman asking her questions, she was consistently looking elsewhere.

    • @lisasmith4296
      @lisasmith4296 Рік тому +4

      I’d say Asperger’s

    • @thalassophile_artist
      @thalassophile_artist Рік тому +10

      also ADHD manifests different in boys and girls. With girls it is often overlooked since our society treats girls different than boys so hyperactive part is harder to spot in girls

    • @fraufuchs9555
      @fraufuchs9555 9 місяців тому +1

      That's something I've always struggled with. Either I always look away or I remind myself I should be looking at people's eyes, so I stare at them the entire time.

  • @Fishtastic0303
    @Fishtastic0303 Рік тому +37

    Oof the little girl is hitting me in the heart. That was me. I do want to mention that even if theyre not getting made fun of, ADHD can be isolating and a hit to self esteem all on its own. You see what others are capable of and feel dumb, lazy, weird, different, etc.

  • @SimoneEppler
    @SimoneEppler Рік тому +141

    Yeah, her seemingly not having ADHD from your point of view is exactly why I wasn't diagnosed as a child and only at the 40, after 20 years of being in different kinds of therapies with not much success (and being un severe burnout twice). I nearly didn't get diagnosed because I "did great at school" and having successfully finished my uni degree , which is such an outdated factor to consider. I had the same self-esteem issues like her and was a perfectionist since I was a small child. My mother often struggled and wondered where I got that from. (Spoiler, it wss my dad, he was the undiagnosed ADHDer, he died young, but he showed all the symptoms, in retrospect).
    Unfortunately, many doctors have still not recognized that adhd shows up differently in AFAB people because of their socialization. We learnt to hide our symptoms ar a very early age which means that we internalize a lot of stuff. Hyperactivity often shows up at racing minds, sleeping issues, anxiety, impulsivity in buying decisions and relationships. We are often diagnosed with personality disorders, anxiety and depression first, because that's what happens after years of shame for not being good enough. (Happened in my case as well)
    There are many experts, for example Russell Barkley that have confirmed this.
    Just because our symptoms are not as visible and our grades are good doesn't mean we don't experience and suffer from them intensely.
    It's about time to listen to the experiences of millions of people that have the more inattentive/ internalized representation and inculde them in the diagnostic criteria. And believe them, when they say they can't function, even if it looks like they have it all together. Befause often we don't. We just push ourselves to be "normal and functioning" every day until we burn out. It's playing life on hard mode.
    I hope that, you, as a young psychiatrist can take this message into the medical community. We need you. It cab literally save lives. Thank you.

    • @cadbq
      @cadbq Рік тому +2

      let me preface this by saing if any of this comes off as aggressive or condescending or mocking or whatever else negative it might seem, it's not intended to. i'm not trying to start an argument, just a discussion. i wanna make that clear because i know tone gets lost in text and also the internet can be a very stinky place sometimes because there are people who DO do that shit.
      as a dfab with ADHD diagnosed in their 20s, i both feel this and also have to say that while it's not perfect, strides are definitely being made, but it's not something the whole world is super privy to. my guess is because there's a weird??? stigma??? with getting help for the brain as much as the body. he does recognize early on that she is showing some symptoms while the boy really isn't. but it is harder to diagnose dfabs because it doesn't present itself as readily as it does for dmabs. and it's not uncommon for it to be misdiagnosed because the brain is an excessively individual thing and there are a lot of other mental health concerns that can present similarly as one another. we can't just do a scan of the brain and narrow it down to like 2 issues, y'know? it can narrow it down a little, maybe, and then comorbidity is a whole thing--it can be hard to get the diagnosis.

    • @emmanarotzky6565
      @emmanarotzky6565 Рік тому +1

      I thought it was just that ADHD can present differently in girls, nothing to do with how you were assigned at birth.

    • @cadbq
      @cadbq Рік тому +10

      @@emmanarotzky6565 the hard truth is that for transmen, because they had the hormones and the bits and bobs of women, it's common that they present with symptoms more often associated with cis women's presentations. not that cis men can't present that way, but it is often a reminder that they weren't designated the gender that matches them.

    • @SimoneEppler
      @SimoneEppler Рік тому +4

      @@cadbq nothing condescending about your comment. I really appreciate your perspective, and I agree. 🤗❤️

    • @jjgems5909
      @jjgems5909 Рік тому +10

      Also getting “As” as a child means nothing. I was a “gifted” student up until 4th grade. I was in a GATE program which was some gifted kids program in the 90s. Eventually I became a C average student. I barely graduated high school with C and B. I think I only got one A in Spanish but that’s because I’m a native speaker. I got into university but barely graduated with mostly Cs and Bs lol. I feel like so much can change from a child to adulthood. Even if you get good grades as a child that doesn’t mean it will always be that way. For the longest time I felt so dumb. Really dumb. But I guess when I consider the positives, that I even made it to university and I graduated at all. That’s an accomplishment right

  • @arabellalivesey9056
    @arabellalivesey9056 2 роки тому +89

    Thank you so much for making a video on ADHD. It's incredibly sad to witness the little girl so uncomfortable in herself, which to me almost seems like is the beginnings of Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria. Already at such a young age she appears to be hypercritical of herself and assumes people dislike her or find her to be a burden.
    Something I always wonder is if RSD is just a natural symptom of our condition or if we tend to develop it given the treatment we receive from those around us, frequently being chastised for things we either do not understand or literally cannot help. I remember reading a study that said by the time a child with ADHD is 12 they will on average have received over 20,000 more negative comments about themselves than their neurotypical peers, making it quite easy to understand why so many of us struggle with our self worth.

    • @High_Gain_Pity_Party
      @High_Gain_Pity_Party 2 роки тому +15

      Probably because of the combination of the negative comments, comparing yourself to others where you fail, on top of the emotional dysregulation making it harder to cope with.

    • @cadbq
      @cadbq Рік тому +3

      not to mention girls have weirdass standards to live up to, so says society. not to mention, and i find this odd, in my personal experience (idk how true it is on a grand scale) but little girls with adhd are more likely to kinda get pushed into the cracks like her whereas little boys with adhd are accepted more often, depending on the type and the severity. usually class clowns or something of that ilk.
      that's an interesting thought tbh. my guess is the rsd is a mix of both. it's there naturally but the amount of negativity exacerbates it drastically. mine is primarily inattentive type (and i bounce my legs a lot while i'm doing things), so i didn't often get a whole lot of comments but i'm p sure i exhibit a level of rsd

    • @lolly5657
      @lolly5657 Рік тому +3

      Pretty much what everyone said here already Emotional Dysregulation, told so many times you were doing it wrong. Dressed wrong, hair is wrong don't do it that way stop talking, why aren't you talking, is something wrong with you, forgetting your phone or something important for school. Using the excuses of "I don't know" or "I forgot" , which just get you more in trouble. From a young age. It sticks and it builds... Sorry that was pretty fresh. I just finished a book on ADHD and Autism and the chapters on childhood, education and relationships really cut deep. Feeling a bit fragile 😅

    • @cadbq
      @cadbq Рік тому +1

      @@lolly5657 you're valid af. really finding out the heart of things feels like getting punched in the mouth, sometimes even if you already knew it

    • @lolly5657
      @lolly5657 Рік тому +1

      @@cadbq read AuDHD and me: growing up Distracted. It's one wait what slap after another

  • @kilianalexander2736
    @kilianalexander2736 Рік тому +22

    It might look like it's going well for her but that might not be the case, AFAB children are pressured more from a young age to mask their symptoms so it often doesn't present the same way as it does for AMAB children. Part of why they're more likely to be diagnosed at a later age

  • @jmfs3497
    @jmfs3497 Рік тому +30

    I identify more with the little girl than the boy. It is like she doesn't seek external validation, and spends most of her time internally focused. I feel like she thinks she's in trouble and on the spot and always jumping through hoops for other people. I want her to know she is probably very cool, very smart, and very mindful of others, but she exists in a world of people who don't think as much. She's sensitive and I hope she grew into her own skin powerfully and happily.

  • @angelolivares8754
    @angelolivares8754 Рік тому +20

    The number of children with similar conditions as the little girl and the number of parents that think ADHD, depression, anxiety and many other disorders are just excuses from "the lazy people of the woke generation" is what makes me think this world is completely doom

  • @rch2303
    @rch2303 2 роки тому +152

    Adult with ADHD here: At first I thought the loud music was intentional to show what it's like to not be able to tune out background noise and focus on the important stuff. My brain interprets every sound as important and necessary to attend to. And yes, it's distracting. I can tell when my meds wear off because suddenly I can hear the filter of our aquarium and it's SO LOUD, whereas during my Vyvanse hours I almost completely tune it out. All that to say, although the loud music was a mistake, it could also function as an empathy exercise for non-ADHD people if you add a screen caption to that effect.

    • @kellil3845
      @kellil3845 Рік тому +16

      The music was so distracting for me too! It was so loud I ended up having to fast forward some.
      Vyvanse is great, it makes me a functional human for like 10 hrs

    • @mnKISSgirl
      @mnKISSgirl Рік тому +10

      Ikr? The music is KILLING me!

    • @Bethsabee_Sheba_Newrose
      @Bethsabee_Sheba_Newrose Рік тому +9

      The music is painful too 😢 (hyper vigilance from c-ptsd + misophonia)
      9:18 Thank dog the music stopped!

    • @myriamcisse
      @myriamcisse Рік тому +20

      OMG these comments are killing me and also reassuring. I stopped the video to know if it was coming from there or an other tab (true ADHD activity there). And I was thinking "Why is it so loud???! I can bearly hear him talk. Is the screencaption mentionning that as an ADHD symptom?". And here I am in the comments section with other ADHDer "complaining"/sharing the struggle. Thank y'all for sharing BTW.

    • @-shenanigans.
      @-shenanigans. Рік тому +7

      @@Bethsabee_Sheba_Newrose Thanks for this comment, I thought I was going to have to bail on this video. Came to the comments to mention the music, but knew in my heart it had already been said. ❤

  • @Suminka9
    @Suminka9 Рік тому +6

    I really liked the video at first, but what you said, in the end, made me really mad. She seems to be doing well? She´s getting bullied, has low self-esteem, and doesn´t have friends, BUT she is doing well at school and isn´t really fidgety. Like THAT is what matters. Who cares? Her voice was cracking when she was speaking. Like she was gonna cry any second. Her experience at school is terrible, but she has good grades so it´s all right. I hate this. This is why I and many others were diagnosed so late. Because we did well in school and nobody cared that we felt terrible. Since when are the child´s grades more important than the child?
    This mentality of not caring about the person is also visible in non-ADHDiers talking about it. Or the DSM-5 itself. It tells you how the person's behavior affects everybody around, but now how it affects the person themselves. How devastating it really is. That is why people can´t sympathize. Cause medical professionals focus more on the symptoms that are inconvenient or annoying to OTHERS, but not on the ones that would ACTUALLY improve the affected person's life.

  • @boparks3204
    @boparks3204 Рік тому +14

    I read that girls exhibit ADHD much differently than boys and so are rarely diagnosed until they are much older. They are a lot more reserved and controlled because of societal conditioning.

  • @misspink9676
    @misspink9676 2 роки тому +32

    That poor little girl. That was heartbreaking.

  • @shieh.4743
    @shieh.4743 Рік тому +25

    My son has ADHD and this one made me cry. He never gets invited to things and we live in a small town, so that sucks. He is a super kid though. And I am sure he'll grow up to be an amazing adult. He's funny and smart.

    • @Sameer-rj3kc
      @Sameer-rj3kc 9 місяців тому

      He will grow up to be amazing for sure ❤

    • @ahb3296
      @ahb3296 7 місяців тому

      Perhaps look into Special Okympics activities where he can have opportunities to socialize through sports. If you have a parks and recreation program for individuals with special needs, it may be helpful. Blessings to you and your son.

  • @searchanddiscover
    @searchanddiscover Рік тому +21

    i only got diagnosed recently bc adhd manifests differently for girls/women. would have made my mom's life so much easier had they thought to test me as a kid. i could relate to that little girl so much though she was much better with describing it but i had similar experiences as her. i would love to see an updated video discussing those differences because i feel like it was greatly overlooked in this video.

  • @TheMrfluffi
    @TheMrfluffi 2 роки тому +35

    I think that's what broke my heart the most about this. I was recently diagnosed at 39 and that was very much me at that age, it was not well managed and diagnosed though, it was an extreme guilt complex because of the struggle to not do it that was why controlled. May not be the same for her, I hope its not, but emotional intelligence made it worse for me too, I learned to cope with it, to hide it well but internally knew something was off and beat myself up every day for not doing what others could and saw myself always as a burden.

    • @lolly5657
      @lolly5657 Рік тому +2

      I was the exact same. At 33 I'm working really hard to try scrape away the mask and the guilt I hold on to. Finding the ADHD community has been a lifeline. I had never connected with people like that before. And people telling me their stories which mirror my own. It's absolutely incredible.

    • @cadbq
      @cadbq Рік тому +2

      being aware of your emotions and the logic (or lackthereof) behind them can be such a double edged sword. on one hand, you know how to manage it when you must. on the other hand, that not only makes it easy to bottle things, but you also end up feeling shitty about things. like... when i know there's no real good reason for me to be as wildly upset about something as i am in the moment, i get even more upset with myself on top of it because like... i'm aware that i'm being extra and this is uncalled for. or if i'm crying over like... idk a dropped gummy bear i just think "i am absolutely distraught and there is no reason. it's just a single gummy bear." it's so easy to beat yourself up with being emotionally aware of yourself

    • @lolly5657
      @lolly5657 Рік тому +2

      @@cadbq this is is too true too. Or emotions have become too much I can dissociate. But when it happens during a serious discussion with husband and he thinks I fell asleep during the chat but I am there but separate. Is awful 😞 and he thinks I don't care and I try to explain after but I don't want to make excuses.

    • @cadbq
      @cadbq Рік тому

      @@lolly5657 i always say that illnesses aren't an excuse, but they can be an explanation. it doesn't necessarily excuse whatever negative thing has happened but it helps the other person understand where you're at and that you aren't doing it on purpose to be shitty. dissociation is wild. my boyfriend once described it as walking around like you have a vr headset on. small dissociation is normal--driving to work and can't remember getting from point a to point b but you sure made it? a form of dissociation that's very normal. but mental illness can super exacerbate it or make it more frequent than it should be.
      as someone within your peers (i just turned 30--it's super weird), i'll say now. it's ok to explain it. it's ok to say you were dissociating. you can apologize that it happened and explain you hadn't meant to come off that way. and you can always try to work out whatever was being talked about. it also might help him understand and recognize it better in the future, assuming he doesn't realize you're dissociating. during a dissociative spell, it can also be helpful to state that you're dissociating so if it sounds like you don't care, that's not the case. my boyfriend and i both have dissociative spells for various reasons but we've worked out enough that i know it's not that he doesn't care.
      half sorry for text wall, but not enough not to leave it as a text wall LOL

  • @colonelb
    @colonelb 2 роки тому +95

    Programmer w/ ADHD here, and one of the things that I think doesn't get talked about enough is that there are quite a few benefits/upsides to ADHD, it's not all bad. The fellow ADHD programmers I've known are often the BEST programmers in a group. ADHD is a pain in many ways, but ADHDers are often more curious, exploratory, creative, intelligent, entrepreneurial, etc., it's not all bad!

    • @lordofudead
      @lordofudead 2 роки тому +5

      I think programming can be a great environment for ADHD. You get alot of feedback engaging in that kind of work. Every incremental step you make while you code either works or does not creating a good feedback loop to stay engaged in the task.

    • @VS-re1sr
      @VS-re1sr 2 роки тому +11

      Civil engineer here, and same. I swear my ADD is why I can think of unique solutions and fairly accurately brainstorm the possible outcomes. That said, without drugs I am a dysfunctional mess who cannot take care of her own basic needs.

    • @charliefleet7235
      @charliefleet7235 Рік тому +6

      Completely agree. I got diagnosed quite late in life so have kinda figured out how to work with my add without meds. It definitely makes me more curious and explorative because I find specific interests, whether they are long lasting or just my random interest for any given week, or often quite intense so I literally find everything I possibly can about it. I’ve learnt a lot of stuff from all of it

    • @cadbq
      @cadbq Рік тому +1

      i wouldn't necessarily say more intelligent but i would say there are the benefits. when we fixate on something, we really fixate on it. like i get that. we will go down the deepest pits to get every single scrap of information possible. i'd say it's something akin to a special interest with autism (both ADHD and autism have a lot where they present super similarly). and while hyperfocus can drown out the rest of the world to a negative effect, it can also be positive, if you can figure out how to manage it. hyperfocusing on a task just... yeah you might forget to go pee for an hour but you have gotten SO MUCH done.

    • @pigeondance687
      @pigeondance687 11 місяців тому +1

      we also work really well under pressure. because it's basically all we do. if there's a deadline soon and a big workload where other people would crack under pressure, you can count on someone with adhd to deliver. we can go on for days without much rest if needed.

  • @AC-ju4el
    @AC-ju4el Рік тому +3

    is anyone else concerned that the family of the little girl is abusive and causing some of the issues she is having? How does she know she is giving her mom attitude? I can guarantee it is because her mom told her she is giving her attitude. The only thing she could come up with to like about herself is that she likes Jesus? WTF are her parents teaching her? And she said she can be bad sometimes. That is someone feeding her some BS about her being a bad kid. I'd be looking into emotional and verbal abuse if I was her caretaker.

  • @CD-qr7ec
    @CD-qr7ec Рік тому +15

    I'm formally diagnosed adhd and asd level one. I would say beware of thinking someone is doing well or 'mild' because they can succeed academically or can sit still in a chair. Esp girls. I was a straight a/a* student and was conscientious and polite.
    However, in primary school I was always getting into trouble for being disorganized, late, not having done homework, etc. I'd be stood in front of the class and yelled at and shamed. It was assumed I was capable and just wasn't thinking hard enough, or was lazy or thoughtless. No one understood I was trying my hardest and actually needed some support and guidance around these tasks. I'd also be yelled at and sent out of class diff times when I thought I was being engaged and a good eager student but I had interrupted or overenthusiastically spoken out of turn.
    By secondary school I kind of avoided getting in serious trouble because my grades were so good and I was polite and not disruptive, I avoided annoying people by becoming really quiet, but I was still constantly told off for things like not doing homework, being late, being lazy. On one occasion I was stood at the front of my form class and yelled at by a sub teacher who was standing in that week, in front of everyone, told I'd never succeed in the adult world or be employable, because I was late each day. I was often bullied and had major self esteem issues. At home I struggled with my room, clothes and hygiene. I was constantly overwhelmed and paddling like mad beneath the surface to cope, constantly exhausted and trying so hard to meet expectations. I tried to commit suicide at around 16 by overdose. But hey, I was a good student and a prefect and didn't give people bother, so not so bad right?
    Even as an adult, I got two first class honours degrees and impressed employers in jobs, so all sounds fine, right? Except its not. The longest job I ever held before burning out was 2 years and that was a part time job. Only managed full time for one year, then I was so burnt out I couldn't function or get out of bed. Household chores and finance management and dealing with appointments etc is a constant struggle to keep head above water and I continue to need support with all those. My self esteem is shot because I often feel like a failure as a human being because the 'easy' things are so hard. When in hyperfocus, I'll forget to eat, drink, rest, for entire days. I only manage to work a few hours a week atm, which is an improvement as I was out of work for many years. I have no idea how to access meds as I was diagnosed by a psychologist and referred back to gp, neither of who can prescribe meds and I don't think the gp sees it as anything serious or needing treatment because I'm an adult now and from the outside it looks like I'm doing OK, and sure I managed this far.
    Anyway, I guess my point is that we can't decide how severe a person's situation is based off of how disruptive they are, or how visible it is, to people around them, or because they succeed in some areas. It can be having a much deeper impact than what you see on the surface.

    • @emmanarotzky6565
      @emmanarotzky6565 Рік тому +2

      Your primary school teachers were crazy. Even neurotypical kids in that age group don’t do those things by themselves. When a kid goes to school on time or remembers to do their homework and bring it to class, it’s because of their parents. I got to school whenever my mom managed to drive me there, and I did my homework and turned it in because my mom looked at my planner with me, made sure I did the homework, and then made sure it was in my backpack before school the next day. It would be so inappropriate to blame a kid for their parents being disorganized, just as (I now realize as an adult) it was inappropriate for my teachers to praise me for my mom’s work in making sure I had everything ready on time. I didn’t even pay attention in class, I just got good grades because I happened to have an organized mom. But that’s still better than giving someone bad grades or full on yelling at them in class for not being born to organized parents!

    • @emmanarotzky6565
      @emmanarotzky6565 Рік тому +2

      And the lateness thing… until you’re old enough to drive, being late to school is on your parents. If your parents are good at timing things you’ll get to school on time, and if not, you won’t. None of that is because of you.

    • @CD-qr7ec
      @CD-qr7ec Рік тому

      @@emmanarotzky6565 my parents tried every way they could to help me organized and without that I'd have got into much more bother. They were always organized, on time themselves and really really really tried many things to help me. This is not on them. You don't sound like someone who has parented a child with adhd and dyspraxia. Whose child might need 10 mins to get dressed one day but the next will need an hour to find socks that doesn't send them into melt down. Who you might provide with perfect sleep hygiene and night routines but they still won't fall asleep til 3am and then can't get uup in the morning no matter how early and often you try to wake them. Many, many other examples. Your comments seem to deny the disabilities and differences that exist AND join in parent blaming and shaming at the same time. My parents were wonderful, engaged and organized. They were old school with old school values. My brother, who didn't always get as good grades as me as I performed better in exams, was every teachers favourite and was made head boy.
      Some children have genuine difficulties with these tasks even though they and their parents try hard. In fact in many cases they and their parents will be trying and working 10 times harder than others. Just cos it's an invisible disability doesn't mean it's not real. We're doing all this stuff like we're playing the game in hard mode. And our parents are too, all the while being judged for it.

    • @CD-qr7ec
      @CD-qr7ec Рік тому

      @@emmanarotzky6565 in primary school a lot of the things teachers yelled at me for were organization tasks that happened in school, responsibilities students were given, and things my other classmates did manage to do that I habitually did not. I'd have the messy desk. I'd keep forgetting to take my lunch box home til things were growing in it. I'd forget to take home or give parent notes. I'd still be engrossed in a task while the others had followed instructions and tidied up before break. I kept leaving stray items of clothing in the changing room when getting ready for PE, and list goes on. I'd be late in class after lunch. These were all things that technically took place within school hours, under teacher supervision. These were often things I got yelled at and pulled in front of the class for. Our parents weren't there to help us. The other children managed but I didn't.

  • @yogabbagabba2202
    @yogabbagabba2202 2 роки тому +13

    Watching that little girl is heart breaking

  • @biancacolmenares620
    @biancacolmenares620 Рік тому +46

    I’m amazed by your read on her, do you still feel this way about it? This is why we were under-diagnosed. 😢 I don’t think she could have been crying out for help more. “Doing well” by other standards is not enough and not all of us are figetey. I think the “emotions” were just things that sure was told about herself. I know I’m projecting but how do we fix this diagnosis gap?

    • @katraylor
      @katraylor Рік тому +2

      It made me super mad...

    • @AnotherBrainArt
      @AnotherBrainArt 7 місяців тому +3

      We stop basing diagnosis only on how it impacts the people around us and look at the struggle the child is having. I have a self esteem the size of at tiny cricket and everything squishes it all the time due to my school life. My mom was sad I didn’t make friends well, and I was moody. I’m very much my mother’s daughter. So she was amazing with me

  • @MrLookitspam
    @MrLookitspam Рік тому +13

    I was diagnosed in my 50’s. I take adderal every day. My life would have been vastly different if I’d had this little pill when I was a child.

  • @SomeRandomMario
    @SomeRandomMario 2 роки тому +13

    Me: I can tell this is going to be an extremely informative video that will probably answer some of the questions I had about myself.
    Also Me: *fast forwards 50% of the video*

  • @subplot
    @subplot 2 роки тому +26

    I just wanted to second Umichansan's comment. Your videos are always lovely, and you break things down in way that's both digestible and engaging; it'd be great to see you revisit the topic of ADHD with more knowledge & insight on how differently it can present in cis girls/women and trans folk who were assigned-female-at-birth, or otherwise raised & socialised as girls. Though it's not information included in the DSM (yet!), there's been a growing awareness about it over the last decade -- something that's been helping a lot of people receive adult diagnoses.

    • @hashtagmate
      @hashtagmate Рік тому +6

      YES i second this! It hurts to see new young psychiatrist make the same mistakes (overlooking women/girls) as the old generation of psychiatrist. So much suffering was caused by misinformation

  • @allisonbrown9873
    @allisonbrown9873 Рік тому +11

    As an adult woman who was diagnosed with ADHD at 42, watching this was sooooo triggering. My brother was diagnosed as a child so his behavior was more understood. Because I presented differently as a girl, mine was missed and I was blamed by my parents for the moodiness, constantly losing things, and not being able to focus at school. I had poor grades and learned that doing the homework could raise my grade because at test time my mind would go completely blank. The sense of loneliness she described and low self-esteem issues have been present my entire life. Now as a psychotherapist I can understand these issues on a deeper educational level, and at least I can help my clients to hopefully avoid feeling how I always have.

  • @theragingsky
    @theragingsky 2 роки тому +17

    Appreciate bringing more awareness to Adults with ADHD. I was diagnosed at 10 years old and taken off of medication in college because it was an "adolescent disorder". It set me back about five years on getting an education. I'm back to being managed through therapy and medications and it has absolutely changed by marriage and my career for the better.

  • @lolly5657
    @lolly5657 Рік тому +7

    Also just input. You said she was managing well. She is a girl with ADHD we are so good at hiding. My teacher only noticed my selective mutism and was concerned with that. Although i was never tested back then. Girls tend to be quiet, daydreamers find it incredibly hard to concentrate, its painful sometimes. And emotional Dysregulation... Although that's not part of the assessment process.
    In addition, girls can do well in school, I've heard so many stories from people not getting diagnosed due to them being too smart, doing to well in school, having a master's. The thing is with attention if you really like something you will really like it and work at it. May be hard to pull you away.

  • @naomid5806
    @naomid5806 2 роки тому +31

    Awesome video. Glad to see one on ADHD. I was diagnosed only last year at the age of 26. Women are so under diagnosed as so many people don't know about it presenting differently in males and females. I loved that you went through footage, explained ADHD and went really deep into the topic. Really informative and interesting video 😊 looking forward to seeing more!

  • @pedroewert143
    @pedroewert143 Рік тому +4

    here the interpretation is more=hyperactivity = activity as movement - but activity can aswell mean contracting(active muscles but no movement) or stretching.
    at 12:30 you can see her pinching her index with the nail of her thumb - dont overlook these thing. would be good to see the legs too. i do a lot of pretzeling of my toes/rubbing my toes in my shoe/pressure to the sole/clenching of the toes or crossing legs then putting pressure. Sometimes when i sit i rest most of my weight just one big toe or do toe stretches.
    Last week some chatty repairman was here and i couldnt eject so i was leaning on the wall with one arm (lookes casual from the outside) but i put alot of pressure on a small area of the hand/forearm/elbow and the back muscles are active (instead of casual leaning where you just touch a bit) just to survive the chat.

    • @nancepens9634
      @nancepens9634 Рік тому +1

      "Just to survive the chat" - never read anything like this before when reading about adhd symptoms but I experience and struggle with the exact same thing.

  • @Bendylife
    @Bendylife Рік тому +4

    I think its so important to explain that ADHD is not the inability to focus, but the inability to regulate that focus. When I was young and being assessed by psychologists they would ask if u had trouble focusing and my mind would go to how I could read so much that I would stay up all night not being able to put the book down, or how I could draw for hours and forget to eat or get up to go to the bathroom. So I would answer that, yes, I could focus. mean while I couldn't focus on school work or chores.

  • @flexaris
    @flexaris 2 роки тому +8

    Haven't finished the video yet but wanted to give some feedback before I forget. The music around 3.30-4.00 is around the same level as your voice and can be a little distracting.
    Is that a new intro with the cartoon animation? I really like it.

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  2 роки тому +2

      Ahh sorry about that! I got some new speakers and the audio isn’t well calibrated. Will use my headphones next time!! You’re not the only one to point it out Simon. Thanks for the feedback!

    • @lydz9301
      @lydz9301 2 роки тому

      Agreed, the music got alittle too loud and distracting

  • @biancacolmenares620
    @biancacolmenares620 Рік тому +9

    Omg diagnosed with ADHD at 33 and this is breaking my heart. My chest is so tight. The pain and the memories of overthinking even then. I wish no one ever had to feel this way!

    • @searchanddiscover
      @searchanddiscover Рік тому +3

      same here! got diagnosed same age recently. i was surprised that he didn't know about how adhd manifests for girls vs. boys.

  • @piccionisanchez
    @piccionisanchez Рік тому +3

    By the way yes adhd people lose their phones

  • @kchardison9480
    @kchardison9480 2 роки тому +10

    Another very informative vid, though the music was a tad loud in the beginning. Thanks for posting!

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  2 роки тому +2

      Thanks for the comment KC. Sorry about that! I got some new speakers and the audio isn’t well calibrated. Will use my headphones next time!!

  • @amytru
    @amytru Рік тому +2

    You’re missing glaring symptoms from that little girl which is very apparent from your conclusion that she doesn’t “appear” to have adhd. Just because she’s not displaying overtly hyperactive behaviour does not mean she doesn’t have it and this commonly held opinion (based on outdated stereotypes) from doctors is the reason why so many neurodiverse girls fall under the radar, or get misdiagnosed with mental illnesses later in life (particularly personality disorders and bipolar).
    Girls with ADHD tend to internalise their feelings and learn to mask their symptoms and mimic social cues they observe in others. Her stiff body and darting eyes convey extreme discomfort and anxiety. Masking takes a huge amount of effort despite it being a subconscious process so it feels very stressful, especially for such a young girl who won’t understand her feelings.

  • @CidsaDragoon
    @CidsaDragoon Рік тому +7

    As someone approaching 40 who wasn't diagnosed until recently, I have to say that I'm glad awareness is going up and this is being caught sooner for people. Realizing that I've spent half my life struggling extremely hard because nobody recognized what the problem was led me to experience serious regret and grief imagining what could have been.

  • @Hoodie_Bait
    @Hoodie_Bait Рік тому +2

    (I have ADHD). I remember in forth grade i had to sit by myself next to the board because i always lost my glasses so i couldn't see good and i would just talk to the people around me on and on

  • @helena7991
    @helena7991 Рік тому +2

    Just a criticism for you're review on the little girl,she very much obviously has inattentive type adhd which does not show as hyperactivity or climing trees or the usual stereotypes that is associated with adhd,there is still sexism is psychiatry. females present differently to men and have better masking and social skills thus is why many are left undiagnosed,hyper sensitivity and hyper empathy can be a symptom in woman thus explaining her emotional intelligence, I was diagnosed at 28 as a woman and presented just like that little girl

  • @x-mess
    @x-mess 10 місяців тому +2

    Music is soooooo distracting/disruptive… what a relief when it finished… 😢

  • @hudsonhighlands8610
    @hudsonhighlands8610 Рік тому +3

    It frustrates me when the examples given show so much overt hyperactivity. Or more extreme examples. I understand this is and intro/overview but be aware that many children with ADHD may manifest like the first child during a conversation and still be struggling with serious ADHD in their lives.
    It’s important to ask the right questions.
    Also ****not everyone with ADHD manifest hyperactive or fidgety, in both children and adults what you may notice is inattention without any obvious signs of hyperactivity.
    The DSM used to classify the disorder as ADD and have an inattentive subtype. What I thought was great about that is that for diagnostic purposes children an adults that aren’t bouncing off the walls were less likely to be missed. Anyhow important to keep in mind that there are people who manifest as inattentive but as was mentioned their attention may be great during certain activities.
    A big thing to consider is not just inattention but difficulty starting activities, completing activities, or shifting to another activity. Troubles with organization & planning. They have trouble planning things they like too. And will lose things they love. The executive function is a problem even if it’s something they like/love.
    Attention will be better with something they like/love.

    • @hudsonhighlands8610
      @hudsonhighlands8610 Рік тому

      Sorry DSM used to have ADHD and ADD which was classified as an inattentive sub-type. I hear people get grumpy now for people even saying ADD and not ADHD. But my feeling is for diagnostic purposes it’s good to emphasize that you can have a quiet child sitting still who has ADHD. So I felt that there was a benefit to having these categories so they don’t get missed.

  • @philgrimsey3637
    @philgrimsey3637 2 роки тому +4

    Ahahha.. the psychiatrist would need a psychiatrist after evaluating me 😂😂😂😂

  • @gemstonejasper17
    @gemstonejasper17 Рік тому +5

    I honestly related to the little girl a lot. I was just diagnosed about a month ago and started my first try at meds 3 days ago. When asked questions, she gave very non-committal answers. She would say things like "I don't know," or "sometimes." I've always been so terrified of making the "wrong" decision, so I often take forever to decide or dont decide at all. I don't know if thats related to ADHD or not, but I related to her so much lol

    • @marwafahiz8826
      @marwafahiz8826 Рік тому +1

      Struggling to make decisions big and small is definitely part of it - and then impulsive decisions may come about in other settings

  • @charliefleet7235
    @charliefleet7235 Рік тому +5

    I’m 23 and I got diagnosed a couple years ago, my mum always said I had it but I wasn’t too bothered about a diagnosis (just a personal thing) but eventually wanted to find out if I had it, or was just actually ignorant and lazy 😂😂 I struggle a lot with the attention deficit side of things. As I’ve gotten older the hyperactivity hasn’t completely gone, but it’s definitely lessened to an extent. Mostly in the sense that sometimes I recognise that I can’t fidget for example, so I can kinda keep it at bay but it almost makes me angry 😂😂 I really struggle with recognising that things are issues too, it’s almost like I forget to care very often or can’t quite see why things are such a big deal. But the main thing is really struggling to either start or finish things. The only time this isn’t an issue is if it’s like a film or series of a video game, something I’m interested or my left field intense interest for that given week. For example last month I got really really really into cooking, I bought new knives and pots and pans and shit, now I couldn’t be less interested. It’s a real struggle that I don’t think a lot of people recognise and I’ve been criticised a lot over the years for the way I think and behave, but tbh whilst sometimes I frustrate even myself, I’m happy with the way I am, there’s been a few consistent interests I’ve had in my life and my complete disinterest in pretty much anything else has kinda allowed me to get into a tunnel vision mode and I’ve achieved some really cool goals in areas I’m interested in. I do encourage anyone who THINKS they may have it to get tested, it helps a lot understanding why you do the things you do and I’ve seen a few people I know who have now been diagnosed, criticise themselves endlessly because they don’t understand why. Any way waffled a bit but thanks for the video 😊

  • @GarikDuvall
    @GarikDuvall 2 роки тому +7

    Thanks for this vid Dr Syl! I am now 40 and still deal with ADHD. Was diagnosed as a kid and was medicated but then eventually "grew out of it". Spoiler: I really didn't. I just lost the hyperactive side, but struggled with learning, impulse control, forgetfulness, etc. I am finally going back to a Dr for a new examination, treatment and RX to help me get back some more control and hopefully lessen the symptoms. This is still a wildly underestimated and misunderstood condition, which is often brunt of jokes, or we are told "you just need to focus/apply yourself" etc. So, the more awareness with common sense breakdowns like you did are great and much needed! Also... that lil girl is so adorable and I just want to hug her and tell her how awesome and smart she is!!!

  • @calicosatter9519
    @calicosatter9519 Рік тому +1

    watching the little girl was almost to much, i stg she was me, girls with adhd are often diagnosed late and show different symptoms to boys, self esteem issues start YOUNG for girls, depending on your support system around you, they can either care and try to understand and get you help and learn how to help you, OR can blame YOU for your symptoms you cant help from adhd and be called "lazy" "ungrateful" "vain" "bossy" "rude" by not just kids but ADULTS..... plz don't ignore your childs needs it could kill them when thier older and alone, literally.

  • @madisoncook2170
    @madisoncook2170 11 місяців тому +1

    The background music is super distracting, and I have ADHD!

  • @xinceras-6542
    @xinceras-6542 4 місяці тому +1

    Maybe instead of trying to drug every child who doesn't pay enough attention to you, you should try being more interesting instead.

  • @EvdsChannel
    @EvdsChannel Рік тому +1

    This video is too hurtful not to comment. It is this view that result in the suicide and/or other problems that little girls like the one in the video have later in life. The video highlights how little many doctors that is not specialized in a specific area knows about that area. The little girl was literally showing all the signs of ADHD that many girls have. Especially if the child is intelligent. It is uninformed views like this that stop smarter kids with ADHD from getting the help they need as children. Many girls with ADHD are not diagnosed as children, especially if the girl is smart enough to do well in school. Girls also often internalize the hyperactivity and are perceived as dreamers and/or just weird by other kids and teachers. These undiagnosed girls mostly grow up to be extremely insecure and constantly afraid that people will find out that they are just not good enough. (This is just a short version of one of many issues that people with undiagnosed ADHD suffer from as adults) The worst is when menopause start and emotional dis-regulation mess up all your carefully methods of coping with ADHD. If you think you or your child have ADHD, find a specialist.

  • @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991
    @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991 Рік тому +1

    Ok, as requested, feedback: I do appreciate the information you're providing. Please eliminate as much music as possible when you're talking; it *does not help at all* in my opinion. If there is music in a video you are reacting to, of course you can't control that; please talk about that video after it has played and is paused or stopped. Presenting music and talking at the same time is not helpful; I am not watching your videos for entertainment, I am watching for helpful information. I have just discovered your channel, and I'm hopeful that more recent videos than this one are improved regarding being more easily able to hear what you are saying, _sans_ music while talking.
    Thank you.

  • @lolly5657
    @lolly5657 Рік тому +1

    Funny how you said don't lose their phone. I was a kid who always lost my phone 😂. Once it was in the compartment of the car door. Forgot I put it there and had to get a new phone. Months later found it.... Also makes me thing that maybe my phone was not stolen during my school trip to Germany 🤦🏼‍♀️ and just put it down. Google nest is the best for when phone was lost around the house.

  • @Delkb89
    @Delkb89 10 місяців тому +1

    Hi!! I love your videos- especially this one since I was diagnosed with adult adhd. That said, please consider tuning down the music as it’s hard to drown that out over your speech. Thank you!

  • @kiwik2951
    @kiwik2951 Рік тому +1

    This video is not watchable due to the distracting and loud music. ADD/ASD adult female here 👋🏻😂

  • @kibby5774
    @kibby5774 Рік тому +1

    I have ADHD and the music was a bit loud and made it hard to concentrate,kinda funny but I really want to hear your information. Thanks love your channel 👍🏻

  • @larissabsa
    @larissabsa Рік тому +2

    Hey doc, background music is too loud. The content is amazing!

  • @topaz.a.h.1179
    @topaz.a.h.1179 Рік тому +1

    Adult with ADHD and I still have urges to climb things when it's not appropriate I just don't do it cause ill be embarrassing. Hope I'm not the only one

  • @mentalitydesignvideo
    @mentalitydesignvideo Рік тому +1

    how come in the 100 or so kids that were in my grade there wasn't a single\ one that displayed these symptoms? There were dumb kids, bored kids (me), antisocial hoodlums, but no "having seizers watching anime" kids, no noticeably autistic kids and no one with an expressed ADHD symptoms.?

  • @jol2805
    @jol2805 Рік тому +1

    Were these children in the same room at the same time? If so, i wonder whether the little girl would answer a little differently if she was the first to answer and not the much more brave boy. I think he's additionally getting a boost of ego when he's saying how great he is at everything and the girl is not... :(

  • @YourRyeBread
    @YourRyeBread Рік тому +1

    ??? ADHD is permanent. It's a neurological condition, not a condition of environment and medical events like asthma

  • @jsbaldo5556
    @jsbaldo5556 Рік тому +1

    Lol I can say two words and if you get it you get it
    "Missing Assignments"

  • @jrelevates1574
    @jrelevates1574 Рік тому +1

    3:00 ADHD means we skip ahead to fond the nuts and bolts and bail when loud background music comes on...

  • @AreUmygrandson
    @AreUmygrandson Рік тому +2

    I spent the vast majority of my school days in “in school suspension”. Got diagnosed in 3rd grade. Was never treated till my mid twenties

  • @reem46490
    @reem46490 2 роки тому +3

    Hi. I'm subscribed and enjoy your vids. I'd like to offer some feedback regarding the ambient music in this vid. I like the tunes, but the volume is a bit high for me. I'm catching myself going between your words and the tunes. Is this one of the tests for ADHD?😂

    • @DrSyl
      @DrSyl  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks for the feedback. When i did the levels I used my crappy 20 dollar computer speakers instead of my headphones which are much better for that kind of thing. Won't happen again! Thank you so much for the sub and the comment Rees

  • @ritaflorence2997
    @ritaflorence2997 2 роки тому +6

    Thank you for another great video! I loved the introduction of the critieras in the beginning but i lacked information on how adhd presents differently in males and females. The girl in the video for example showed more of the symptoms related to females with adhd and these symptoms are often overlooked as symptoms of anxiety and depression instead of the more internal hyper activity that usually presents in girls/females.

  • @sunnyspring5105
    @sunnyspring5105 Рік тому +3

    Both children are lovely. "my little sister is so cute..." the little girl is a honey & very wise.
    I hope as her peers grow to her emotional level they will invite her to parties.
    2 very clever children.

  • @juned1719
    @juned1719 Рік тому +1

    I’m a new subscriber so sorry if you’ve already covered this but do you have a video on adult ADD and how it’s presented, diagnosed & treated?

  • @Revelryproject
    @Revelryproject 2 роки тому +5

    I think the most frustrating thing with ADHD is the lack of knowledge all around even though there is so much new information we have learned the last couple of decades. Combine this with the lack of people that actually do assessments and you get a system with multiple year long waiting periods where it becomes almost impossible to even get diagnosed.
    It feels very strange when there are ~5 places in your area that are supposed experts that do the diagnosis and every single one of them has completely inaccurate on their web sites. I believe I have been trying for four years now without ever even getting on any wait list.
    So unfortunately for lot of us self diagnosing becomes some kind of a necessity. It will not get us the proper treatment, though.

    • @Revelryproject
      @Revelryproject 2 роки тому +1

      Oh and I'm living in Germany, where the public health system isn't even bad. So I can't even imagine how it works in other places of the world... O.O

    • @SimoneEppler
      @SimoneEppler Рік тому

      It's the same shit in Switzerland. "But you were good in school and have a good life". Well yes thank you, there are many successful adhders out there. 🙈😆

    • @katraylor
      @katraylor Рік тому

      Yeah, like... I have had issues with inattention, lack of time control, explosive emotional outbursts, extreme anxiety, executive paralysis, etc., etc., etc., for my entire life. I was reprimanded by authority figures for losing my temper in elementary school, middle school, high school, university, and at work in my thirties. I turned in every major university assignment at or over the wire after hours and hours and hours and hours sat scrolling through fanfiction in the computer lab, waiting for the situation to get urgent enough that I could make myself start working on the actual assignment. I had NO friends in elementary school, about two in middle school, two or three in high school, and gradually more and more after that as I got better at masking and finding like-minded souls. I was never invited to parties. I was never cool. I had weird facial tics that made people think there was something seriously wrong with me. I talked too much, interrupted teachers, put off major homework assignments till the night before and minor ones till two minutes before they were due. I have spent whole three-day weekends doing sweet fuck-all but scrolling websites and reading fanfic, gorging on junk food and not talking to a single soul. I didn't even START to get a grip on any of this until the supervisor who chewed me out in my thirties told me I "needed to get a grip on my anxiety or whatever" and I actually started looking into mental disorders. And then, a few years later, I read how ADHD manifested differently in many women, saw that I had almost all the symptoms of the inattentive type, started looking into management strategies, and found my whole world changing.
      My sister is diagnosed and medicated. She and my dad had the same symptoms I do, but much worse: executive paralysis, picking up and dropping tons of hobbies, inability to keep a house clean, explosive tempers. My brothers have some of the symptoms, too, but my sister and I got them the worst. I could go for a formal diagnosis, and would love to do it somedaym but it would be expensive and time-consuming and complicated, and the only actual benefit (since I'm not seeking medication) would be validation. But since I don't have that piece of paper, I can't really talk about the challenges I experience (and am overcoming) without people like this guy being like, "NO ONE can diagnose themselves. Unless a trained psychiatrist tells you you have it, and you have a signed piece of paper telling you you have it, you don't have it." Like... if I get a sore throat and a headache and start coughing and sneezing, and my symptoms persist for 7-10 days, I don't TECHNICALLY have a cold, right? No physician diagnosed it, so there's no way to know for sure. But the symptoms are there. Sure, it could be allergies, or COVID, or something totally different, but given the symptoms and the circumstances it's not unreasonable to assume it's a cold.
      Sorry for writing a book. I have a feeling OP wouldn't take this particularly seriously, but I wanted to get it out anyway. :P

  • @skywriting33
    @skywriting33 Рік тому +2

    As a parent of a child with ADHD that tested as gifted but could not read or write in grade 2. His behaviour management isolated him. His work not looking like other kids work made him so embarrassed. He was NEVER invited to birthday parties. It crushed me. ADHD has such a huge stigma and teachers just label them bad kids. Well, my son is gifted, he loves caring for kids who are younger or need special help, he loves volunteering. But ADHD and the unexpected behaviours and impulse control challenges can lead kids to really dark places. They are desperate for friends but the ‘good kids’ avoid him. The ‘bad kids’ accept him because they push boundaries, too. And he’s so wound up and excited by the prospect of friends he does silly things to be liked and part of the group. Adolescents with ADHD have an extra tricky time. Thank you for showing the real diagnostic criteria because everyone and their brother thinks the have ADHD through self diagnosis and it diminishes what these kids go through.

  • @SoBeBun
    @SoBeBun Рік тому +2

    It was my boss (a bank manager) that suggested to me about 10 years ago, "Have you ever considered getting tested for ADHD?"
    It completely changed my life in such a positive way. I thank him for going out on a limb and sharing his honesty. My quality of life has soared, since doing so.
    Testing was a grueling and heart-wrenching process. But it did change my life no doubt. I went on to achieve performance awards at work, the first of which was "Most improved". LOL
    But I'd never wanted to be stuck behind a desk. So I am no longer in banking. Suddenly, the world opened up with so many possibilities!
    I felt empowered to explore what I actually wanted to do. I felt validated! I wasn't this broken, misbehaved, or stupid person.
    I now had the courage, forethought and determination to go after MY dreams, instead of listening to what I should be doing.
    Today, I fully embrace my quirky self, I feel proud that I have surpassed the expectations of some of my teachers in school. Einstein and Richard Branson, are known to have ADHD, so I'm capable of success too!
    That's not to say it's all good. I have trouble fitting in, but never allowed myself to be bullied. On the contrary, one of the benefits of being distracted is recognizing what is going on around you. If it's not good (as in someone else being mistreated), I simply cannot help but respond to stop it. I've been this way since I was a child. I often ended up in the school office for fighting, but it was only if I noticed a bully picking on someone else, when they didn't think anyone was watching, but I saw it! I can't excuse violence, but I could never tolerate bullying either. I'm grown now, and like to think there are better ways to explain things.😊
    As for ADHD, I have learned to look at the positives of my diagnosis, because dwelling on the negative does little in life to fix them. I hope one day, it will be seen as I see, it's as much of a gift, as it is a deficit ❤

  • @malueholm6183
    @malueholm6183 Рік тому +14

    ADHD’er and autistic from Greenland here. First of all thank you for your videos. I come from from a giant family, ALL with ADHD and/or autism (my children as well). Our observation and experiences tells us the main problem is not having ADHD. It’s the perception of how people are supposed to be, the social structures are suitable for neurotypical people, there’s not enough tolerance to the fact that we inevitably are all different and can contribute with a vast variety of different skills and ways of thinking and acting. My favorite people are neurospicy individuals that can offer different perspectives of life.

    • @hashtagmate
      @hashtagmate Рік тому

      Yes! I'm also AuDHD and we are not the problem, there is nothing wrong with us. The problem is the lack of accommodations

    • @katraylor
      @katraylor Рік тому

      My girlfriend and family members are the only people in the world I don't rigidly mask with, and it's just night and day how different it is to be myself. The vast majority of people I know professionally think I'm a rock-hard uppity-tight bitch with no sense of humor, because if I relax enough to joke with people I always start talking a little too fast and smiling a little too wide and see their faces change and watch them step back... so I stay very reserved when I'm interacting with people socially, so as to be ABLE to interact with people socially. Everyone who knows me at home knows that I'm silly and giggly and weird and cuddly and sing weird songs to the cats and chase the dog around the house and scream and yell and stamp my feet and kick things when I'm frustrated, and at work it's like, "There goes McGonagall..." A big part of why women are underdiagnosed, probably...

  • @samuelmcgovern
    @samuelmcgovern Рік тому +2

    Thank you for making this video. I was recently diagnosed as an adult. I agree about the loud music - I found it distracting and was glad it stopped. Would love to see more content on ADHD, particularly the mental health issues that often come along with it.

  • @Zoeebella
    @Zoeebella Рік тому

    That child is just like I was at that age. I'm getting an evaluation next week at age 45 :) I was evaluated at 5 yrs old, but they couldn't figure out what I had in 1983 ;)

  • @soilgrasswaterair
    @soilgrasswaterair Рік тому +1

    You mentoined that a child being diagnosed meant that the healthcare staff spoke to the parents, but what if this happens in adulthood and it’s a person with no social network or family...how do they get diagnosed if conversations with people close to the individual who is getting evaluated, is given such a huge impact on how the person is?

    • @kenzij
      @kenzij Рік тому

      Most adult diagnoses for things like adhd require consistent sessions with a single psychiatrist so they can determine if it's "a real and persistent problem". They're still going to ask you a bunch of questions about your childhood, but they mostly seem to base things off of what they have observed themselves over a period of time.

  • @jem3848
    @jem3848 Рік тому +1

    That little girl broke my goddamn heart

  • @lynnetteramsay9387
    @lynnetteramsay9387 Рік тому +1

    Why is the music so loud?

  • @QueenHalo
    @QueenHalo Рік тому

    The only thing is, no child wants to watch a math video regardless of what they have lol

  • @TashPointOh96
    @TashPointOh96 Рік тому +1

    I really enjoyed this video and the demonstration of the signs in kids. It was interesting that you said she didn't seem to show too many symptoms, I inferred from you that it could indicate good symptom managing. I was very much like this little girl around adults and I've always been emotionally intelligent- I realize now that I was kind of an expert at blending in. My brothers ADHD was caught because of his behaviour issues, but mine slipped by until I was 29 years old getting treatment for C-PTSD. That is SOOOO late, but now knowing and applying therapy techniques my life has greatly improved. I hope this little girl experiences a wonderful life and doesn't let her diagnosis define or limit her. 🥰

  • @RatsPicklesandMusic
    @RatsPicklesandMusic Рік тому +1

    I was diagnosed with hyperactive ADHD at the age of 30. 😅

    • @RatsPicklesandMusic
      @RatsPicklesandMusic Рік тому +3

      The little girl reminds me of me... ESPECIALLY the parts about Jesus, being "bad", and giving "attitude" to my mom... And little kids only know that phrasing cause it was said to them that's what they were doing... 😞 Emotional regulation was (and still can be) extremely difficult for me!!!

  • @millenniumtree
    @millenniumtree 23 дні тому

    I was diagnosed with ADHD and motor tics in my late 20s. I'm now 44.
    I remember in grade school, I would walk around the very outside perimeter of the classroom, fully realizing that it was an unusual thing to do, but unable to stop myself doing it - it was just very satisfying.
    Homework didn't just feel difficult, it felt IMPOSSIBLE.
    I would frequently be awake until 2AM, just gripping my pencil and sitting in front of a blank page until the time remaining before class reduced to the point where I could JUST get enough done to turn in an assignment... So at around 2-3AM, I would suddenly have a breakthrough, start writing, and wouldn't stop for 2 hours, crash, sleep for 2-3 hours, get up and turn the assignment in, getting a decent grade. It was bizarre. One nightz I made a 14" tall castle out of clay, with detailed bricks, grass texture, 2 towers with detailed roofs and windows, because my project was late and the LAST day given by my teacher was that day.
    My teacher didn't even believe I had done it, and thought my mom did everything, yes, she helped a tiny bit, but all the obsessive details and absurd size were my own (other students houses were less than half that size). My mom was also a high school art teacher, so I was WELL familiar with how to work with clay, paint, drawing, etc.
    Impossible to do small boring things, then the hyperfocus hits and I massively over-do it.

  • @Hirnknaker
    @Hirnknaker 2 роки тому +1

    I have ADHD, that mean, whyle i listen to your video, i wright the commed, answer some wahts up, an eat a appel. And blame me at the same time not read my preparation for my 2 month ansthesia intership.....
    (For finals a use concerta, but not in my dayli life.)
    Bes wishes from swiss guy, electrician, who is a firefighte and now i the last year of med scool
    And a great video. thank you for the time to explain that stupid and great, at the same time, disorder.

  • @dislocational
    @dislocational 2 роки тому +1

    music on the background is very distracting ;)

  • @mightyminx6653
    @mightyminx6653 8 місяців тому

    Even when you get diagnoised by a legit DR, you get questioned .. Its kind of embarrasing...

  • @justinwebb3117
    @justinwebb3117 2 місяці тому

    I couldn't hear what you were saying over the music, I found that hugely distracting. ADHD autist here. Love your videos, but the volume on the bumpety bump shouldn't be so loud please! 🙏😂

  • @sollasemusic8322
    @sollasemusic8322 4 місяці тому

    Wow. I was that girl (though I am a guy and would've been more likely to be diagnosed as a child, I still present primarily inattentive so it was missed). It does warm my heart that psychology has progressed to the point where it can recognize her struggles. When I was her age, there was no concept that poor attention or inconsistent actions could be explained by anything other than an intentional choice to not care and be "bad". Currently two years into be diagnosed at 28 and still trying to figure it out.
    Some really interesting things I noticed:
    1. She couldn't answer the question about how long it takes her to do homework. People with ADHD are very prone to distortions in our perception of time. Tasks we don't like can seem exaggeratedly long. My doctor once suggested I time tasks I find insurmountably tedious like emptying the dishwasher. I was certain it would be 10-20 minutes. It was 5 minutes.
    2. She sees getting all A's as neutral or uncertain, or potentially that it doesn't matter. Some have hypothesized that ADHD can in part be caused by less dopamine activity, meaning we don't get intrinsic feelings of rewards or accomplishments. When I was a kid, I also got mostly A's because I could focus during high stress things like tests, but my primary emotion upon getting an A was relief that I wouldn't get in trouble. I did then, and still do feel, uncomfortable being praised because I don't have an emotional feeling that I've accomplished things, even if it's objectively true.
    3. The thing she likes about herself is that she is religious and her religion is important. I'm not making a comment about religion here specifically, but I think it's interesting that she defined her positive qualities based on her adherence to an external structure. Sometimes we feel a sense of internal inconsistency and have trouble functioning if we don't have a strong external structure in our lives that can help us make decisions and provide us the sense of the continuity that we lack internally. The young boy found positive qualities in himself (his good drawing skills), but the girl's self-assessed most positive quality was that she was apart of an external positive thing. Anecdotally speaking, I'm very active in my union and ADHD seems very over-represented among the most involved members.

  • @shawn576
    @shawn576 2 місяці тому

    11:13 the way she talks is a bit of a dead giveaway. It might be normal for a kid her age to talk like that, but it's like 99% ADHD if you meet an older person who talks like that. They talk very fast, sometimes monotone because the focus is on talking as fast as possible, and the subject is diverted immediately. For example, asking a coworker why they are late. "Well I woke up 5 minutes late and then the shower didn't work and I burned my toast so I stopped at McDonalds and the line was long and then there was a guy jaywalking but I still made the green light and then a police siren scared me and I pulled over then made a 4 rights because I wasn't in the correct lane". It's like one continuous blur of ideas that are somewhat linked together.
    Not all ADHD people talk like that, but all people who talk like that have ADHD.

  • @bumbilion
    @bumbilion 5 місяців тому

    I have actual quite severe adhd. I get extremely frustrated these days when ppl throw around the term, about how they may have it, but yet they are doing well socially, academically, at work. It’s an executive dysfunction. I have it and I didn’t get my diagnosis until adulthood but there was always something wrong, ppl noticed I was different, I had organisational problems, brain fog.. but I didn’t know the brain fog was an issue until I got meds for the first time which was some anxiety, am SSRI. I get asking for help from uni psychologists cuz I was having trouble keeping up at uni… they just kept telling me to take deep breaths. Then misdiagnosed with a mood disorder, many many yrs later after having cared for many many ppl with bipolar there was absolutely no way I had that or related to those ppl. I had told the Drs for yrs I have always spoke fast, then one day a go said I think u have adhd, eventually I got recommended psychometric testing to get disability support services when I applied for post grad. I did undergrad over 5 yrs, I withdrew from subjects cuz I had time management issues, but getting post grad was encouraged by work, I ended up not completing post grad but finally ending up with an adhd specialist and on stimulants helped me.Getting a good psychiatrist who understood neurodiversity but also corroborated my school report cards and with my mum, it validated I’m adhd. My primary school report cards was the dsm 3 for 90’s add criteria, it even mentioned I make careless mistakes, constant talking and disrupting, that I needed to organise my thoughts so I could speak more clearly… I had signs of a verbal dysfluency but nobody helped me at school, they gave me A’s for effort then b’s and c’s. How a kid be trying so hard but failing 🤦‍♀️ I was was failed on by the school system

  • @dielizzy-ts2rv
    @dielizzy-ts2rv 6 місяців тому

    Aren't there different criteria for girls than boys in ADHD? What about the dreaming, restless mind vs restless body, high creativity? Or are that myths? I would appreciate it very much if you dive into that topic more ^^ - greetings, Lizz

  • @katespellxx9529
    @katespellxx9529 Місяць тому

    I want to watch this clip but the background music is doing my head in. Aghh
    Mentioning cos I'm a pain in the arse. Am loving your content but ouch, hopefully it fades out.

  • @Draugul
    @Draugul 5 місяців тому

    I am diagnosed with ADD at the age of 40. Before that I got the label, chronical depression. I am missing the H. Not because it is not there, but because it is so intense, that my brain can't handle it. I was always the sweet silent boy. Nobody ever knew what was happening in my head. Even I didn't understand. All I knew was that I could not concentrate on anything, unless there were no triggers around me. After the diagnoses, I often get the comment, that I must be lucky, not to have the Hyper part. They don't understand that it's the hardest part of having ADD. That the Hyper is so bad, that all thoughts fire at the same time, just making noise. So it's not coming out. The Hyper is only in my head. So no symptom others can see on the outside. I feel for that girl. I was the same. To a degree that the bullying, became physical abuse. Something my brain could not compute on top of all other problems, and resulted in PTSD. I hope the girl, did find out at some point, that she is not alone. And for all struggling at this moment. I am now 55 years old. I am still here. ADHD may be hard. But it is also a superpower. We always will find a way to make things better. If we just understand what is happening in our head. Stay strong! 🤗

  • @friesxnxcoke
    @friesxnxcoke Рік тому

    ADHD symptoms feel so much worse when you have things like Sleep Apnea, Thyroid problems and untreated truama.

  • @andi56837ykvk
    @andi56837ykvk 4 місяці тому

    So when my stepmom noticed that I had issues with speech, concentration, sitting still for a long time. She found with some structure, routine and occupational therapy the obvious behaviours sorted themselves out. But I was still very impulsive and impatient, and I struggled to make friends with my peers through out school. I found that I could learn well within a structured and calm classroom environment, but no matter how hard I tried, studying at home or do any homework was a nightmare for me. So the grades would average out.
    I know being a girl means I would not have been considered for ADHD as a kid and my parents had no clue what it was.
    My behaviour was just considered to be different and sometimes unfavourable, but generally who I was. I would constantly lose things and I was super clumsy. I would even leave my chronic meds at home before going on holiday.
    I do have an underactive thyroid but the tests generally always come out as being within range. So it’s not likely to be
    Every time I’ve tried to study, no matter how interested I am in the topic, it’s like running up a hill. It requires so much energy, I struggle to understand what I’m expected to do/say, and I often end up having reread the same text over and over again. Sometimes I move forward in course material to the practical stuff, struggle a little and then go back to the theory, do some practical and then go to the theory, til I’ve finished the course.

  • @kalinakowalska184
    @kalinakowalska184 6 місяців тому

    I have ADHD and I learned how to mask and act „still”, but unfortunately the feeling of hyperactivity in your body doesn’t go away, you still feel tension and I feel like it just turns into frustration and anxiety. If you have a child with ADHD don’t force them not to fidget etc. Do a holistic approach, focusing just on how the child appears outside is hurting them in the long run.

  • @neverlandproductions1262
    @neverlandproductions1262 11 місяців тому

    I was diagnosed with ADHD 4 years ago by a psychiatrist ...and I lose my phone ALLLLLL THE TIME! lol

  • @sharonthompson672
    @sharonthompson672 Рік тому

    The background music is too much, otherwise GREAT video 👌👍

  • @ashleyransley3441
    @ashleyransley3441 Рік тому

    It seems it'd be more accurate to change "inattention" to "inflexible" attention.
    (Speaking as an interested observer, mental health clinician, & anecdotally as a person with ADHD).