|
Adult
ADHD: 50 Tips on Management
by Edward M. Hallowell, M.D. and John J. Ratey, M.D. 1992
The treatment of adult ADHD begins with hope. Most people who discover
they have ADHD, whether they be children or adults, have suffered
a great deal of pain. The emotional experience of ADHD is filled
with
embarrassment, humiliation, and self-castigation. By the time the
diagnosis is made, many adults with ADHD have lost confidence
in themselves.
Many have consulted with numerous specialists, only to find no
real help. As a result, many have lost hope.
The most important step at the beginning of treatment
is to instill hope once again. Individuals with ADHD may have forgotten
what
is good about themselves. They may have lost, long ago, any sense
of the possibility
of things working out. They are often locked in a kind of tenacious
holding pattern, bringing all theory, considerable resiliency,
and ingenuity just to keeping their heads above water. It is
a tragic loss,
the giving up on life too soon. But many adults with ADHD have
seen no other way than repeated failures. To hope, for them,
is only to
risk getting knocked down once more.
Usually, by the time the diagnosis of ADHD has been made, a collapse
has happened often enough to leave them wary of hoping again.
The little child would rather stay silent than risk being taunted
once
again.
The adult would rather keep his mouth shut than risk flubbing
things up once more. The treatment, then, must begin with hope.
Treatment
needs to address multiple facets of the individual. Medication
may be employed in conjunction with the behavioral strategies
listed below:
Insight and Education
- Be sure of the diagnosis. Make sure you're working
with a professional who really understands ADHD and has excluded
related or similar
conditions such as anxiety states, agitated depression, hyperthyroidism,
manic-depressive
illness, or obsessive-compulsive disorder.
- Educate yourself. Perhaps the single most powerful treatment
for ADHD is understanding ADHD in the first
place. Read books. Talk
with professionals.
Talk with other adults who have ADHD. You'll
be able to design your own treatment to fit your own version of
ADHD.
- Coaching. It is useful for you to have a coach, for some
person near you to keep after you, but always
with humor. Your coach
can help you
get organized, stay on task, give you encouragement
or remind you to get back to work. Friend, colleague, or
therapist (it is possible,
but risky for your coach to be your spouse),
a coach is
someone
to
stay on you to get things done, exhort you
as coaches do, keep tabs on you, and in general be in your corner.
A coach
can
be tremendously helpful in treating ADHD.
- Encouragement. ADHD adults need lots of encouragement.
This is in part due to their having many self-doubts
that have
accumulated over
the
years. But it goes beyond that. More than the average
person, the ADHD adult withers without encouragement and
positively lights
up like a
Christmas tree when given it. They will often work
for another person in a way they won't work for themselves.
This is not "bad",
it just is. It should be recognized and taken advantage of.
- Realize what H is NOT, i.e., conflict with mother, etc.
- Educate and involve others. Just as it is key for you
to understand ADHD, it equally if not
more important for those
around you
to understand it--family, job, school,
friends. Once they get the
concept they will
be able to understand you much better
and to help you as well.
- Give up guilt over high-stimulus-seeking behavior.
Understand that you are drawn to high stimuli.
Try to choose them
wisely, rather
than brooding over the "bad" ones.
- Listen to feedback from trusted others. Adults
(and children, too) with ADHD are
notoriously poor self-observers.
They
use a lot of
what can appear to be denial.
- Consider joining or starting a support group.
Much of the most useful information
about ADHD has not
yet found
its
way into
books but remains
stored in the minds of the people
who have ADHD. In groups this information can come out. Plus,
groups are really
helpful in
giving the kind of
support that is so badly needed.
- Try to get rid of the negativity that may have
infested your system if you have
lived for years without knowing
what you
had was ADHD.
A good psychotherapist may help in this regard.
- Don't feel chained to conventional careers
or conventional ways of coping.
Give yourself permission
to be
yourself. Give up trying
to
be the person you always thought
you should be--the model student or the organized
executive, for
example--and let yourself be
who you are.
- Remember that what you have is a neuropsychiatric
condition. It is genetically
transmitted. It is caused by biology,
by how your
brain
is wired. It is NOT a disease
of the will, nor a moral failing. It is NOT caused by
a weakness
in
character,
nor by a failure
to mature.
It's cure is not to be found
in the power of the will, nor in punishment, nor in
sacrifice, nor
in pain. ALWAYS
REMEMBER
THIS.
Try as they
might, many people with ADHD
have great trouble accepting the syndrome as
being rooted in biology rather
than weakness of character.
- Try to help others with ADHD. You'll
learn a lot about the condition
in the process,
as well
as
feel good
to boot.
Performance Management
- External structure. Structure is the
hallmark
of the non-pharmacological treatment of
the ADHD
child. It
can be
equally useful with adults. Tedious to set
up, once in place structure works like the walls
of the
bobsled slide, keeping the speedball sled from careening off the
track.
- Make frequent use of:
- lists
- color-coding
- reminders
- notes to self
- rituals
- files
- Color coding. Mentioned above,
color-coding
deserves emphasis. Many people with
ADHD are visually
oriented. Take
advantage of this by making
things memorable
with color: files, memoranda, texts, schedules, etc.
Virtually anything
in the black
and white of type
can be made more
memorable, arresting,
and therefore attention-getting with color.
Use pizzazz. In keeping with
#15, try
to make your environment as
peppy as
you want
it to
be without
letting it
boil over.
- Set up your environment
to
reward rather than deflate.
To understand
what
a deflating environment
is,
all
most adult ADHD'ers need
do
is think back to school. Now
that
you have the
freedom
of
adulthood,
try to set things
up so that you will
not
constantly be
reminded
of
your limitations.
- Acknowledge and
anticipate
the inevitable collapse
of
X% of projects
undertaken, relationships
entered
into, obligations
incurred.
- Embrace challenges.
ADHD people thrive
with many
challenges. As
long as you know
they won't
all pan out,
as long as you
don't get
too perfectionistic and fussy,
you'll get a lot done
and stay out of
trouble.
- Make deadlines.
- Break down
large tasks into small
ones. Attach deadlines
to the small
parts. Then, like
magic, the large task
will get done.
This is one of the simplest
and most powerful
of all
structuring devices.
Often a large task
will feel overwhelming
to the person with ADHD.
The mere thought
of trying to
perform the
task makes
one turn away.
On the other hand, if
the large
task is
broken down
into small parts,
each component may
feel quite
manageable.
- Prioritize.
Avoid procrastination.
When things
get busy,
the adult ADHD
person loses
perspective: paying
an unpaid parking
ticket can
feel as pressing
as putting
out the fire
that just
got started
in the
wastebasket. Prioritize.
Take a
deep breath.
Put first
things first.
Procrastination is
one of the
hallmarks of
adult ADHD.
You have to really
discipline yourself
to watch out
for it and
avoid it.
- Accept
fear of
things going
well. Accept
edginess when
things are
too easy,
when there's
no conflict.
Don't gum
things up
just to
make them
more stimulating.
- Notice
how and
where you
work best:
in a
noisy room,
on the
train, wrapped
in three
blankets, listening
to music,
whatever. Children
and adults
with ADHD
can do
their best
under rather
odd conditions.
Let yourself
work under
whatever conditions
are best
for you.
- Know
that it
is O.K.
to do
two things
at once:
carry on
a conversation
and knit,
or take
a shower
and do
your best
thinking, or
jog and
plan a
business meeting.
Often people
with ADHD
need to
be doing
several things
at once
in order
to get
anything done
at all.
- Do
what you're
good at.
Again, if
it seems
easy, that
is O.K.
There is
no rule
that says
you can
only do
what you're
bad at.
- Leave
time between
engagements to
gather your
thoughts. Transitions
are difficult
for ADHD'ers,
and mini-breaks
can help
ease the
transition.
- Keep
a notepad
in your
car, by
your bed,
and in
your pocketbook
or jacket.
You never
know when
a good
idea will
hit you,
or you'll
want to
remember something
else.
- Read
with a
pen in
hand, not
only for
marginal notes
or underlining,
but for
the inevitable
cascade of "other" thoughts that
will occur to you.
Mood
Management
- Have
structured "blow-out" time. Set aside some time in
every week for just letting go. Whatever you like to do--blasting
yourself with loud music, taking a trip to the race track, having
a feast--pick
some kind of activity from time to time where you can let loose
in a safe way.
- Recharge
your batteries.
Related to
#30, most
adults with
ADHD need,
on a
daily basis,
some time
to waste
without feeling
guilty about
it. One
guilt-free way
to conceptualize
it is
to call
it time
to recharge
your batteries.
Take a
nap, watch
T.V., meditate.
Something calm,
restful, at
ease.
- Choose "good", helpful addictions such as exercise.
Many adults with ADHD have an addictive or compulsive personality
such
that they are always hooked on something. Try to make this something
positive.
- Understand
mood changes
and ways
to manage
these. Know
that your
moods will
change willy-nilly,
independent
of
what's going
on in
the external
world. Don't
waste your
time ferreting
out the
reason why
or looking
for someone
to blame.
Focus rather
on learning
to tolerate
a bad
mood, knowing
that it
will pass,
and learning
strategies
to
make it
pass sooner.
Changing sets,
i.e., getting
involved with
some new
activity (preferably
interactive)
such
as a
conversation
with
a friend
or a
tennis game
or reading
a book
will often
help.
- Recognize
the
following
cycle
which is
very common
among adults
with ADHD:
Something "startles" your psychological
system, a change or transition, a disappointment or even a
success. The precipitant may be quite trivial. This "startle" is
followed by a mini-panic with a sudden loss of perspective,
the world being
set topsy-turvy. You try to deal with this panic by falling
into a mode of obsessing and ruminating over one or another
aspect of
the situation. This can last for hours, days, even months.
- Plan
scenarios
to
deal with
the inevitable
blahs.
Have
a list
of friends
to call.
Have a
few videos
that always
engross
you
and get
your mind
off things.
Have ready
access to
exercise.
Have
a punching
bag or
pillow
handy
if there's
extra angry
energy.
Rehearse
a few
pep talks
you can
give yourself,
like, "You've been here before. These are the
ADHD blues. They will soon pass. You are O.K."
- Expect
depression
after
success.
People
with
ADHD
commonly
complain
of feeling
depressed,
paradoxically,
after
a
big success.
This
is
because
the
high stimulus
of the
chase
or
the
challenge
or the
preparation
is
over.
The
deed is
done.
Win
or lose,
the
adult
with ADHD
misses
the
conflict,
the
high
stimulus,
and feels
depressed.
- Learn
symbols,
slogans,
sayings
as
shorthand
ways
of
labelling
and
quickly
putting
into
perspectives
slip-ups,
mistakes,
or
mood
swings.
When
you
turn
left
instead
of
right
and
take
your
family
on
a
20-minute
detour,
it
is
better
to
be
able
to
say, "There goes my ADHD again," than
to have a 6-hour fight over your unconscious desire to sabotage
the whole trip. These are not excuses. You still have to take
responsibility
for your actions. It is just good to know where your actions
are coming from and where they're not.
Use "time-outs" as
with
children.
When
you
are
upset
or
overstimulated, take a time-out. Go away. Calm down.
- Learn
how
to
advocate
for
yourself.
Adults
with
ADHD
are
so
used
to
being
criticized,
they
are
often
unnecessarily
defensive
in
putting
their
own
case
forward.
Learn
to
get
off
the
defensive.
- Avoid
premature
closure
of
a
project,
a
conflict,
a
deal,
or
a
conversation.
Don't "cut to the chase" too soon, even though you're
itching to.
- Try
to
let
the
successful
moment
last
and
be
remembered,
become
sustaining
over
time.
You'll
have
to
consciously
and
deliberately
train
yourself
to
do
this
because
you'll
just
as
soon
forget.
- Remember
that
ADHD
usually
includes
a
tendency
to
overfocus
or
hyperfocus
at
times.
This
hyperfocusing
can
be
used
constructively
or
destructively.
Be
aware
of
its
destructive
use:
a
tendency
to
obsess
or
ruminate
over
some
imagined
problem
without
being
able
to
let
it
go.
- Exercise
vigorously
and
regularly.
You
should
schedule
this
into
your
life
and
stick
with
it.
Exercise
is
positively
one
of
the
best
treatments
for
ADHD.
It
helps
work
off
excess
energy
and
aggression
in
a
positive
way,
it
allows
for
noise-reduction
within
the
mind,
it
stimulates
the
hormonal
and
neurochemical
system
in
a
most
therapeutic
way,
and
it
soothes
and
calms
the
body.
When
you
add
all
that
to
the
well-known
health
benefits
of
exercise,
you
can
see
how
important
exercise
is.
Make
it
something
fun
so
you
can
stick
with
it
over
the
long
haul,
i.e.,
the
rest
of
your
life.
- Make
a
good
choice
in
a
significant
other.
Obviously
this
is
good
advice
for
anyone.
But
it
is
striking
how
the
adult
with
ADHD
can
thrive
or
flounder
depending
on
the
choice
of
mate.
- Learn
to
joke
with
yourself
and
others
about
your
various
symptoms,
from
forgetfulness,
to
getting
lost
all
the
time,
to
being
tactless
or
impulsive,
whatever.
If
you
can
be
relaxed
about
it
all
to
have
a
sense
of
humor,
others
will
forgive
you
much
more.
- Schedule
activities
with
friends.
Adhere
to
these
schedules
faithfully.
It
is
crucial
for
you
to
|