The Bright Side of Attention Deficit Disorders: I Have ADHD and I Love It

attention deficit disorder

The day I was diagnosed with a “learning disorder” was one of the best days of my life. I was 30, and I was just discovering that I had one of the more common Attention Deficit Disorders – Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (it comes with or without the “H”). For years, I had struggled with various parts of life that seemed to come so easy for other people. After I lost my wallet five times in six months, I knew that something wasn’t right – and that something had to be done.

After three psychiatrists and countless books on ADHD, I now understand that my brain works very differently than most other people’s. It requires a great deal of stimulation to function well. If I don’t provide myself with healthy forms of stimulation, I will seek it out somewhere, somehow – at the bottom of a bottle, in an emotional well of stress and anger, or by driving 90 on the freeway. Understanding the unique way that my brain works was a crucial step towards being able to use ADHD to my advantage.

Today, I would not trade in my “disordered” brain for anything. People – especially parents of children with Attention Deficit Disorder – tend to focus on the drawbacks of this type of brain, which are well known. Those with ADHD often regulate their attention, focus, and behavior in ways that are very different than what’s expected by classrooms teachers and social norms.

But you can learn to harness the strengths of having Attention Deficit Disorder, and compensate for the weaknesses – and be more powerful than ever. Here’s why I love having ADHD:

There are so many more benefits to having an ADD brain: resilience, persistence, compassion, big-picture thinking, spontaneity… the list goes on.

Attention Deficit Disorder is not a negative – it’s a positive. Your brain is different, and that’s a reason to celebrate! So celebrate your ADD with me.

[Further reading here.]

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