Posted on 11/23/2011 5:58:30 PM PST by narses
Day 1, Dose 1: I told myself the first thing I needed to do today was take the little freckled seafoam pill as soon as I got to work. I set an alarm for myself. When I got to my desk, I set the pills in front of my computer screen, so that I would remember to take them. This was at 9:50 am.
As near as I can reconstruct, though, I got distracted by the computer screen while reaching for my cup. My email was open, so I checked it. Then I checked my news feeds. Then I checked some other things, probably. At some point, I filled my cup.
At around 10:15, I felt a dampness at the back of my mouth. I had drunk from my cup. Had I taken the pill? I dumped the pills onto a piece of steno paper and counted them out. Sixty. I hadnt.
I am 30 years old and I have just been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. It makes a lot of sense, actually. My whole life, I have been distractible, disorganized and impatient. I brainstorm a million projects and follow through on about 1 percent of them. I procrastinate like a bastard. Its actually 3:41 am right now, the morning this story is due. I havent gone to bed yet.
Why did it take 30 years to diagnose? Im not sure. I did OK in school, considering what a disruptive little shit I was, and how little homework I did, and despite the way my brain would flit between a dozen trains of thought for hours without ever reaching the end of one. I always tested very well. In elementary and middle school, several teachers convinced my parents that I was bored with regular classes. They put me in accelerated ones. I still screwed off.
Day 1, Dose 2: Theres a moment, around 3 pm, when I feel really good dialed in, burning through a bunch of little tasks. But then I spend a full 15 seconds, biting the meat of my finger, borderline-screaming through grit teeth: What am I searching for? It eventually comes to me. I type, Twilight wedding dress gossip, and press Enter.
Day 2, Dose 2: The pills have a slight grain like clumped chalk. They dont dissolve when they hit your tongue, but they give off an alkaline astringency that tastes and feels like lemon zest, with a baking soda finish.
Day 2, Late Night: Had a sudden breakthrough on a project and worked on it from 11:30 to about 1 am. Its nights like this that I love the way my brain works, just churning through ideas. The problem is that I cant shut it off. Its now an hour-and-a-half since I had my last productive idea. Ive read a New Yorker almost cover-to-cover, and Im still hyper-alert. My room is cold and Im in a T-shirt, but my armpits are wet.
The diagnosis came by accident. My family doctor was writing me a prescription for a different drug a narcotic for a bad back that Ive taken on and off for about a year now. You know this, she said, as she wrote the scrip, but Percocet will make you drowsy.
I told her Percocet doesnt make me feel drowsy, it makes me feel focused. She looked up from the pad, Really?
Yeah.
That happens sometimes, she says, with an inquisitive smile on her face, in people with ADD.
When I heard that, I wasnt shocked or mad or defensive. I was mostly relieved. Like there was an explanation.
Day 3, Dose 2: I doubled my dose in the morning. My doctor had suggested we might go this route, so I emailed her, but I didnt hear back immediately, so I just did it. I felt focused and productive all morning and early afternoon but got distracted at 1:30 on my way to my second dose. I didnt remember until 3 pm.
Day 3, Late Night: Another night of massive brainstorms, but more inchoate meditating on Steve Jobs and the state of journalism and the state of the business of journalism and fiction and the business of fiction and on writing in general. Then my mind starts riffing about social networking, word-of-mouth marketing, gamification and other stuff I dont really know much about. I couldnt sleep if I wanted to.
Day 4, 3 am: Wrung free of ideas again. Still not tired. If its the Ritalin, its been in my system for 12 hours. Seems like a long time. But then, I cant remember two back-to-back nights of spontaneous hyper-brain-shit ever happening before.
Day 4, Dose 1: Called my doctor and left a message. Im a little worried about last night. Ive gotten seven hours of sleep in two days but Im not tired. Im starting to feel like a tweaker. My doctors nurse calls back and says to take two pills in the morning and nothing after that.
Day 6, Dose 1: The two Ritalin I took this morning kept me pretty straight all day. I cleaned house, shoveled snow, got groceries, made dinner. By 6 pm, though, I started getting impatient with people, and my mind began to wander. I spent the evening until 1 am playing videogames rather than writing this story.
Day 7: Im sitting here now, focused because I have to be, feeling a little pissed that this hasnt worked better. Its surprising how quickly I went from feeling like I had my own weird brand of normal to feeling like Im broken and need to be fixed. Its surprising, too, how Ive let myself believe that 30 years of behavior would be undone by a little seafoam pill.
Ive started looking into alternative treatments behavioral, dietary but mostly Im trying to come to terms with the fact that, whatever ends up working, it wont happen overnight. Or in seven days. Im typing this at 6:36 am. Week Two is already here.
Just d-amn!
taking too much. got to dose down.
My youngest has one of the worst cases of ADHD ever. I used to think it was a myth -- it's not, although it's grossly overdiagnosed.
This fellow needs to consult a specialist - either a psychopharmacologist or a psychiatrist with a specialty in adult ADD. It's more difficult to manage than the juvenile variety, and Ritalin is no longer by any means the best drug available to deal with it.
May I suggest an alternate title? How about “My GOD, I’m Fascinating!!”
I found out years ago that people who can’t pay attention often have moms or spouses who are compulsive talkers.
They simply learned when young to “tune them out” and it sticks with them for years.
You should hear my mother-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law and wife when they get started! They actually have to yell at each other to get a word in. Thank heavens I have a means to escape!
Speed kills.
I'm just trying to avoid asfixiation from burning dead dinosuars.
It's ok to "My whole life, I have been distractible, disorganized and impatient." We call that being male. If you look down you will find a device...
I quit using mine, Celibacy, Oath, stuff like that.
But roar your mahood. Even if it means opening the doors and letting some air in.
Or as I told my brother... this sea is awash with estrogen. We'll live a ittle testosterone and do stupid stuff. Hold my beer..
I am correct. Too much estrogen.
/johhnny
Speed may kill, but when a doctor put me on it for a couple of weeks for a problem, I sure had a clean house. Clean refrigerator, clean cupboards, floors and carpeting...etc.etc.etc. LOL
What did you say?
>>That happens sometimes, she says, with an inquisitive smile on her face, in people with ADD.
So, this idiot gets a diagnosis of a complex mental condition based on a perceived reaction to a narcotic, and then is prescribed a drug that acts as a stimulant in adults and can’t figure out why he is buzzing at 3 am?
Someone once told me that they thought I might be ADD. I said, “Of course I am. I have testicles!”
Day 295: Suffer massive stroke due to constantly elevated blood pressure thanks to Ritalin.
I sincerely hope this nitwit didn’t just get put on ritalin because of that odd comment about percocet, though the total distractability is a typical ADD problem. This is *not* a typical reaction to ritalin. I started taking late in high school after more than 6 months of evaluation by two of the doctors who did the initial study on ADD/ADHD. For me, being put on the medicine was an immediate “holy s#it, I can actually get things done”, not the half-assed dithering this guy is doing. I took one 10mg in the morning with breakfast, and another at lunch, and was suddenly able to breeze through my classes. If I took the afternoon pill too late, it did mess with my sleep a bit, but not to the extent that this guy is seeing. Either he’s on too large of a dose, needs a different medication (and shouldn’t be waiting the whole 2-week trial to switch), or he doesn’t really have ADD.
ROFL! Exactly right.
He needs Concerta. You only have to remember to take it once a day. Ritalin wears off too fast.
And drugs don’t solve all the problems the ADD person has. He needs systems and structure to organize his life. At least taking Concerta makes creating those systems a possibility. It lets you focus, and all those brilliant, beautiful ideas the ADD patient has finally come to fruition instead of getting tangled up with five billion other ideas.
The body is a battery. You can't draw out more energy than it can produce without some changes your body will subconsciously implement for survival.
And thus Ritalin and Adderal were the new names at a new price, and could be prescribed by a doctor under health insurance coverage. At least the street pusher gave better advise on using your drugs.
Never-ever follow your amphetamine doses with downers such as klonopin or diazepam as is currently done by medical professionals who do so in order for you to sleep at night. It will turn you into a bipolar yo-yo.
LOL 2 weeks once a year and I would no longer be a hoarder. But alas, only had it that one time...
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