Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks PPs who've provided helpful info.
As an aside: I have this vision in my head of how the assessments will go: my husband will be told his disorganization and feeling overwhelmed is ADHD and he can be helped. The same guy will evaluate me and conclude "you're a working mom of several kids, it's normal to feel overwhelmed and disorganized with all you have going on. Carry on, and be sure to provide adequate support to your recently ADHD-diagnosed husband while you continue to try to keep all the balls in the air!"
Yes, I am feeling defeated. Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was kind of the drug companies to raise our awareness.
You know what? You can take your smug condescension and stick it where the sun doesn't shine. Only someone who is ignorant of ADHD would say such a thing. It's a real condition, totally treatable, and these drugs help make lives better. ADHD is linked to depression and anxiety, so treating ADHD helps with those conditions too. (Another reason it seems like ADHD is more common now is sometimes it would be treated as anxiety or depression while ignoring ADHD.) People like PP would rather judge people for getting help and having fuller, more productive and happier lives just because they need help that she was fortunate enough not to need. Not because she's a better person, just lucky not to have developed ADHD and need treatment for it. I hope someday they can come up with a cure for being an asshole too, then PP can benefit as well.
Anonymous wrote:It was kind of the drug companies to raise our awareness.
Anonymous wrote:ADHD with IQ in the 130s, as if it matters, and spouse with ADD with lower IQ but incredible abilities in a number of areas including IT. Just don't ask them to do accounting or write instruction manuals.
Anonymous wrote:Having ADHD is not indicative of someone's intelligence or lack there of. This is a dumb question. Of course you both may have ADHD. Although it would've been challenging to get through middle and high school without anyone noticing you had it. I was diagnosed in 4th grade with it and struggled academically and always have but learned strategies to cope. Struggling with school didn't mean I was dumb. My GPA in high school and college wasn't great but I did manage to go on to get my PhD last year and be pretty successful in my field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Exact same scenario for us.
It's pretty common actually, because there are usually common traits stemming from ADHD, that might cement the bond.
For my husband and I, we are both rather disorganized and slow, albeit with high IQs. Initially it was pleasant to meet someone similar to ourselves, and it was only afterward we realized other people were not like that. The turning point came when we saw our son had extremely low processing speed (worse than us) and could not function in class. Medication turned out to be a life-saver.
Thanks PP, this is more along the lines of what I'm wondering about. Medication for whom, and when/how did you figure it all out? For what it's worth I just scheduled an eval for myself and my husband scheduled his own.
Anonymous wrote:
Exact same scenario for us.
It's pretty common actually, because there are usually common traits stemming from ADHD, that might cement the bond.
For my husband and I, we are both rather disorganized and slow, albeit with high IQs. Initially it was pleasant to meet someone similar to ourselves, and it was only afterward we realized other people were not like that. The turning point came when we saw our son had extremely low processing speed (worse than us) and could not function in class. Medication turned out to be a life-saver.
Anonymous wrote:Having ADHD is not indicative of someone's intelligence or lack there of. This is a dumb question. Of course you both may have ADHD. Although it would've been challenging to get through middle and high school without anyone noticing you had it. I was diagnosed in 4th grade with it and struggled academically and always have but learned strategies to cope. Struggling with school didn't mean I was dumb. My GPA in high school and college wasn't great but I did manage to go on to get my PhD last year and be pretty successful in my field.