Somewhere It All Fell Apart
My mind wanted things. I craved a life where I was in control, where my priorities were always in order, where I got things done on time, and where I made a success of myself. Yet no matter how much I thought I wanted certain things, I never did them.
I had a very small comfort zone and I lived within it. Something was wrong; if only I could calm my mind and not be thinking of five thousand things at once, each thought crowding out the one before it, everything would be fine.
The Answer
Then came the book. I’d gotten it to learn more about my daughter’s ADHD diagnosis, but after reading the first half on childhood ADHD, I read the second half about adults.
There was a checklist of about 30 things, and it said if you check yes to 15 or more you may need to talk to your physician. I checked all the boxes except two.
I read the book hungrily, devouring accounts of people who sounded an awful lot like me. Their stories were so very familiar: the guilt, the shame, the not living up to potential, the excitement of trying new things only to get bored quickly. They were me.
The Diagnosis
I went to my doctor and told him my fears, doubts and hopes. We went over the checklist. He gave me more papers. We talked.
ADHD was my answer; it was explanation for so many things in my life. I cried with relief but I was still afraid. What if knowing made no difference? What if I was all the negative things I thought about myself?
Moving Forward
Honestly, not a lot happened outwardly after my diagnosis. The change was internal. Before, I didn’t know the things I did and felt were symptoms of ADHD. Knowing set me free.
Knowledge that not only was there a reason for the way I was, but that there were others like me, made me feel like I was part of something bigger than myself.
In my mind, everything started to fall into place — I felt lighter. Now I understood why I zoned out, had difficulty prioritizing tasks, why I struggled with things like being on time or estimating the amount of time it took to do things. There was a reason for the constant noise in my head, the swirling thoughts, and the endless inner chatter. It had a name: ADHD.
The Difference
Now I feel more comfortable in my own skin — I am more confident. I know there are tools to help me tame the chaos and I learn all I can.
ADHD can be overwhelming, but things are easier to deal with when you can give them a name and put them in their place. I learned the flip side to the “messy” parts of ADHD is all the great creativity, abstract thinking and innovation. I’ve learned to love those traits more, while learning ways to overcome the ones that give me grief.
I’ve learned to accept myself — quirks, flaws and all. That has been the greatest gift of diagnosis.