10 Phone Hacks for Autistics ADHDers
Neurodivergent_lou

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10 Phone Hacks for Autistics ADHDers
Neurodivergent_lou

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ADHDers—you're vulnerable to addiction.
And addictions aren't just substances.
You can be addicted to:
people
relationships
emotions
stress
food
control
oversleeping
work
the gym
gaming
self-improvement
This post isn't a scare-post, though.
If you are aware of where you're vulnerable, you can put extra measures in place to keep you safe.
Managing addiction looks like:
giving yourself time limits for certain activities
noticing once an activity becomes draining (not fulfilling)
journaling your day-to-day so you can start to notice patterns
talking with friends about the activities you think might be taking up too much of your mind or time
With support, you can do anything!
I believe in you.
Follow for more if you need a little extra peer support :)
Butterflies (ADHD Aware)
What better way to spread this month’s ADHD awareness/acceptance then to do it with Ella-Rose (since she has some ADHD) :3
The biggest thing I've learned to help manage my ADHD in regards to getting things done is to Follow Those Impulses
(I'm not saying this will work for or is even a good strategy for everyone, but in my own situation it's helped me.)
I'm like allergic to consistency in schedule and cannot enforce one on myself so all it leads to is self-loathing and failure. Trust me, I've been attempting to will-power, shame-fuel my way through it since I was a preteen (I'm currently almost 30.) It does not work for me.
Obviously medication can give me a huge leg up on stuff. But beyond a certain point my brain is simply not wired for long-term sustained consistency.
As in many of my issues, I've found that working with myself gets better results than fighting myself.
When I follow those sudden impulses of interest and motivation, I get things done.
To the outside, I look absolutely haphazard. I'll pause a show I'm watching mid-sentence, stand up, and go empty the dishwasher because my mood/brain/chemicals *ping*ed that it was suddenly do-able and not a huge overwhelming task. Or I'll be putting away laundry and that *ping* will go off and I'll spend three hours re-organizing my closet.
To a neurotypical, this looks like distracted and disorganized behavior.
To me, it's following the way my brain naturally works in order to accomplish tasks.
My ADHD manifests in that I experience very small and unsustainable windows of motivation and interest. So when I feel that window crack open, doing the Thing right then (when the situation enables me to) can mean the Thing actually happens. Even if it's not the thing I'm "supposed" to be doing.
With a neurotypical in that situation, they might be putting away clothes and think: "Oh, I should organize my closet. I have time this weekend, I'll do it then," finish putting away their clothes, and then organize the closet when they had free time that weekend.
I used to try to do things that way too. Because it was how I was taught that "responsible, real people" did it, and had "finish one thing before you start another" drilled into my head. But I'm literally not wired to work that way. And I've been working on undoing that internalized ableism of believing one way of doing things is better and I need to change to adhere to it. I don't and shouldn't be expected to to my own detriment.
For me with the closet example, the weekend would come and I would spend 5 hours screaming at myself to stop working on whatever did have my interest in order to go organize the closet. Sometimes I might ended up doing it. More often, I would not be able get myself to do it even after all that. I would just sit there, yelling at myself, hating myself despite my brain literally not having the chemicals to initiate the activity (let alone follow through) and nothing would get done. Not even the thing I wanted to focus on instead.
The only thing I did accomplish was hating myself for not being able to do "simple" things like other people (read: neurotypicals.)
This is basically how I spent the majority of my schooling; doing simple tasks felt like running in sand. And I internalized all the messages that told me it was my own fault I couldn't run as fast and in as straight a line as those running on pavement.
The past few years, I've been trying to follow impulses more. And its honestly been really helpful.
I get more done even if it isn't a "consistent" amount or I can't always count on having a specific thing done by a certain date.
But the big thing is that I spend less time hating myself for not doing what I "should" be and more time actually doing things when I have the motivation for them. More shit happens, I'm undoing some of that self-loathing.
tl;dr: My advice for fellow adult ADHD-ers is:
Try to learn what your natural rhythms are and, where possible, try leaning into them. Without judgement, try working with your natural tendencies rather than battling them at every moment. See how it feels, see what you accomplish (and not just in the capitalistic "productivity" way--spending 3 hours hyperfocusing on researching the history of wheat germ counts!) See how your brain and body feel.
Your brain is wired different, let yourself operate different.
I think the reason I love the Podcast Distractable is because it's just so accepting of ADHD. Two of the three members have ADHD. The Podcast itself was inspired by Markiplier's tendencies to get distracted by tangents in conversation. This is an environment where tangents and distracted thinking embraced and accepted. The rules are very loose and they focus on having fun conversations. There's never any shame for their speech patterns. When you grow up with ADHD it's common for you to feel outcasted or shame for not having neurotypical speech patterns. Its just very healing to see speech patterns that are accepted. They work with their adhd. In fact because of the community of fans who have adhd it caused Mark's friend Bob to actually seek a diagnosis and treatment for his adhd. Which is amazing. It shouldn't be treated as a resource but it's seriously doing good for the ADHD community.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Having ADHD does not mean what people think it means. It’s so exhausting having to explain that all the time
Bluey really did a great job with introducing a character with ADHD in about 30 seconds.
Red Panda based ADHD moodboard~ :) (ADHD Flag created by @autistic-trans) For @shercomet c: Hope you like this!
Want one? Send an ask~ -mod Jay