Archive for March, 2011


Promises, promises

On January the first I made some promises, and I aim to keep them. This was one of those promises. Given the things that have happened in the world so far this year (and it’s only march), I think we’re ready for some fun, eh? so here you go …

Warning: It is not the intention of this post to suggest that people without ADHD are bland, dull or normal. Nor do I wish to suggest that people with ADHD think of those who do not share our special attributes as inferior. Some may find the concept of labelling to be offensive. I would like to assure you that it is only with the intention of having a laugh at myself  and my ADHD that I have published this post … so, viewer discretion is advised.

Wait a minute, this isn’t for you ADHDers, this is for the normans (normal humans) who want to hang with us. So go ahead, call your norman friends to the screen and tell them to read this. View full article »

The Bucket List (easier made than done)

Lots of people have bucket lists, lists of things they’re determined to do before they die. Mine has at least one easily attainable item on it, I intend to take a one to two hour flight in a helicopter along a certain geographical feature of my home area. That ought to get the dopamine pumping View full article »

A Window on my World

The new office.

I’d relegated myself to that basement some 18 years or more ago. Until then my work as a computer technician and programmer was done in a main-floor bedroom in our bungalow. In the early nineties an addition was put on the house and with the added basement space I saw an opportunity to create a space more conducive to my work.

Life in a cell

The old office

The area I walled in was 16 feet by 16 feet. It was raw space and I turned it into the perfect place – for a reclusive hermit withdrawing from society. I didn’t know I was doing that, the withdrawing thing, I thought I was making professional progress.

This so-called professional progress never really turned into fiscal progress. View full article »

I’m swamped!

Okay, I’m not swamped, not any more than I usually am. I’ve just gotten myself into a situation where everything I have to do seems to be important. Well, important to me. I am having trouble choosing which thing needs my attention first. Sound familiar? View full article »

Time Passages

It was late in December
The sky turned to snow
All round the day was going down slow

Al Stewart “Time Passages”

All around the day was going down slow.

I’ve always wanted to experience this. Whenever I’ve imagined a successful life, it always seems that I’m relaxed, at home, enjoying the fruits of my labours as it were.

But at 52 years of age, I think I should have experienced this by now. I think I should have at least had enough success in my life that I could actually tell you how it feels. Sorry. View full article »

Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy

(with apologies to Stephen Leacock)

Someone to watch over me.

While I was walking on Wednesday night, I was shadowed by the moon. Three days from being full, it was bright enough to see the road by without any difficulty.

The nursery rhyme, “Boys and girls come out to play, The moon doth shine as bright as day” was playing in my head. I pondered the age of that rhyme for a while and decided I needed to look it up. I made a mental note of that and walked on (yeah, I know, my mental notes are written on air). View full article »

I want a new phone/computer/tablet/mp3player/e-book/GPS/camera/everything …

Well, actually, here’s what I want. I want a tablet computer that is Bluetooth enabled, about the size of an e-book, is wifi ready and can be used as a cell phone. I want it to “connect” via Bluetooth to the monitor, keyboard, mouse, scanner and printer on my desk, when I put it on my desk. I want it to connect to a Bluetooth headset to facilitate making phone calls and playing mp3’s and podcasts. And if it isn’t too much to ask, I want it to charge itself using sunlight or ambient light. View full article »

What’s your day like?

My days vary greatly. You know, there are days when our symptoms can be managed without much effort and days when the gates of hell seem to have swung open and we have been beset with symptoms that aren’t even mentioned in the DSM.

Help, I have “context sensitivity” and I can’t get up!”

I’m having one of those days. I usually post every Monday, Wednesday and Friday morning. This is Monday’s post. I’m writing it at 11:00 PM Monday night. I’ve missed a post once previously this year and posted it the next day. I was out of town.

What planet is this

Today’s excuse is that I’m in a different place, maybe a different planet, and it doesn’t feel like a good one.

In 2007 I lost my mother to lung cancer. I’ve felt that loss every day since. I wasn’t a momma’s boy, but she and I were friends. We shared a sense of humour and a way of thinking … and some life style characteristics you may recognize. We both started ten projects for every one we finished. We both had piles of things scattered around our homes, piles with only the vaguest sense of consistency to their content. We both loved music and art and especially literature. We both were quick to see through people who were less than honest but both of us loved honest and fun people instantly. We both saw solutions to problems, solutions that were considered “outside the box.” Now these things are mine alone.

Last week, Japan suffered greatly in the wake of a natural disaster of colossal proportions. My mother had friends there. It made me think of how many people’s lives she touched.

As if this wasn’t enough …

Here at home, a friend contacted me. A relative of hers had nearly lost a battle with mental health. Late last week another friend told me that a friend of hers was out of town attending a family member who required surgery. Survival, apparently, was far from guaranteed. My friend, sensitive and caring, was feeling for her compatriot.

The final blow (I hope)

On the weekend, this same friend got word that a member of her own family was not well. It was expected , but that never matters. Expecting bad news is little more than knowing how much you hope the message never comes.

In my own way I’ve been praying for my friend and her family, praying fervently. I’ve been praying that, whatever happens, peace is with them all.

I’m hoping for a little peace myself. Today I took my meds, but I swear they did me no good. I’ve been scattered all day long. It’s like I’ve gone back to a time when a day could slip away from me early in the morning and I’d never get a hold of it again. I have been of no use to myself or anyone else today, and I couldn’t figure out why.

My friend’s weekend vigil has, without my realizing it ’til tonight, taken me back to my mother’s bedside. The last days of her life were a wild ride. The last private conversation she and I had has been playing through my mind, over and over, all day long. She told me that everything would be okay. I said in some ways nothing would ever be okay again, and she said “I know.”

So I spent my day listening to my mother, my mother who has been gone for three and a half years. It has ruined my days productivity, I’ve accomplished nothing. It’s been a day like many days before when ADHD ran my life without my knowing it. But … I spent my day listening to my mother, and I realize – that’s okay.

ADHD Random Thoughts …

You know, I’ve often thought that there was a romantic aspect to making decisions in a heart-beat, an adventurousness to just picking from the available options impulsively. And that’s what we with ADHD often do. When faced with a decision we don’t always engage the frontal lobe, going instead for the appearance of knowing what we want. Maybe I’m wrong, but isn’t life far more interesting this way. View full article »

ADHD is Elephant Blindness!

ADHD is a blindness, like colourblindness but different. Your ADHD is an elephant in the room, and you can’t see it. You’ve got Elephant Blindness. View full article »

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