No judgement? Do you use strategies or meds or both? I’m curious.

For me both. But without my meds I’m pretty useless.

  • Lucien@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Medication, alarms, chore lists with reminders, project boards (jira @ work, notion @ home).

    My wife and I keep EVERYTHING in notion. Our entire lives, pretty much any plan or thing we need to remember to do or communicate goes in that app.

    I use other stuff on top of it, but notion has allowed us to split the mental load of managing our household much better than before. I have terrible memory, but I can no longer use it as an excuse. I’ve gone from “oops I forgot” to “oops I didn’t set a reminder, what do I need to do to prevent this in the future?”

    It wouldn’t be exaggerating to say that the combination of process and home project management through it has saved my marriage. Oh, and I guess therapy helps. Find a good therapist if you can afford one.

    • PhillyCodeHound@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Also my Remarkable 2 Tablet has been a god send.

      Man this thread isn’t one bit written by a person with ADHD. Is it? LOL

  • Drew Got No Clue@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I wish I could use lists. If I decide something, then–according to my brain–it’s not a rule I strictly have to follow. Help lol 🫠

  • shankrabbit@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Seems like most of us are “list people”.

    How do you all prevent the list from growing too large and just becoming another overwhelming thing?

    • wispydust@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I got a list that I purposefully set up to grow. It’s not a to-do list… It’s a “might do” list. When things get messy in my to-do list, I move those items to the might-do list.

      Having 100 undone items on that list isn’t a shameful thing, it means I said “no” to all those items (either actively or passively) and I try to celebrate that.

    • Seraph089@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Multiple lists. Short-term, medium-term, long-term, “maybe eventually”. If one of them starts to feel like too much, I can kick some things down to the next one.

      They’re also kinda based on how much focus will be needed to complete things, not just how important or time-sensitive things are. The medium/long lists are mostly stuff for “good brain days”.

    • PhillyCodeHound@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Good question. I tend to try and keep the most important on one list and then try really hard to put the less important somewhere else. LOL

  • Cool Beance@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I took up sim racing to help improve my focus. Every day I do 2 - 3 hours worth of laps, and I make it my goal to do consistent laps. Not necessary fast but just consistent. If I can stay within 0.5 - 1 second for x laps in a row, I count it as a win and I try to break that record the next day or at the very least meet the same number.

    Helps with my memory retention too as poor memory is sometimes another side effect of ADHD from what I’m told

    • DealbreakrJones@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I lurk here because I’m scared of being diagnosed and what comes after, but I identify with this. I sim race too.

      I feel so good after a long stint. Doing lap after lap is almost meditative. I struggle with focus in the middle/end of it but something about the repetitive-but-slightly-dynamic nature of it really eeks the focus out of me. I feel accomplished after completing a race.

      • Cool Beance@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Right? When I’m in a 30-minute race trying not to invalidate a single lap it just feels like this is the only thing going on in the world right now and it’s unlike how I am in real life. When I’m cooking food, my head is just everywhere – is the pan hot, is this ingredient ready, should I clean this while that’s cooking – but in a car on a track (virtually at least), my head has a single linear flow and my body follows.

        I struggle in the middle/end of stints too, and typically when this happens I “reset” by silently muttering my next braking points, especially during a long straight. Hope that helps you to some extent and thanks for commenting despite being a lurker. Helps with not feeling alone

  • Teflo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’m absolutely horrific with organisation, but I found a few ways of managing things. I never really managed to grasp notifications, eventually they just became an auto-ignore for my brain. What worked more for me was having hints of what I need to do in places that I would naturally look throughout my day.

    For instance, with my iPhone, I use dynamic island to keep my current task in a persistent way. It’s not forceful and it doesn’t interrupt what I’m currently doing. I’ve also got a large widget on my home screen which shows me some things like weather, date, reminders and calendar events. I see it a few times and eventually I usually manage to enact on it. I unlock my iPhone more than 100+ times per day, so that’s 100 potential opportunities to see it and enact on it.

    As for filling it with tasks, I usually do that just before I’m about to go to bed. Once I plug my phone in, I have shortcuts give me a notification that reminds me to fill out the tasks for tomorrow. This isn’t bulletproof of course, but it helps to try and make it habit somewhat.

    Despite the deficiencies, we’re still brains of habit, so trying to make that habitual does help. It does help that it’s a task that doesn’t change.

  • Thinker33@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I use Habitica and Forest. I try to gamify everything. Also rewarding myself for staying on track with 10 to 30 minutes of video games. I find I like audiobooks and podcasts to be in the background when I’m studying. I also use the Calm app a lot when I’m working. I like the city and coffee shop soundscapes. I’ve listed to This American Life Cars 129 about 50 times while doing my literature review. I am working full time, my wife and I have a new baby and I am also getting my doctorate. Another key strategy is waking up early like 5 AM to do a self-care routine to start the day. I meditate and exercise as part of my Habitica habits. It helps me get focused and feel ready for the day. I never took any medication growing up although the doctor recommended it. My parents made me meditate every day for 30 minutes when I got home from school and on weekends. I was basically grounded until I did that. It helped a lot for me. Those are some of my strategies.

  • ComfortablyDumb@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Meds and lists gang checking in.

    Started Trintellix a couple months ago and has been working pretty well with no noted side effects, which is nice.

    • Drew Got No Clue@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      To clarify, are you using vortioxetine (Brintellix) for what exactly? Because it’s not an ADHD medication.

      Edit: I’m also asking because I’m taking it as well, and I was curious about your experience.

      • ComfortablyDumb@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Depression is what I was prescribed to it for. It is working well to manage that, which makes it easier for me to better tackle the ADHD.

  • Nilesse@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I use both but I’m terrible at taking meds regularly (ha, the irony!).
    For losing track of time during meetings/focus sessions, I use a Time Timer to visually see time passing by/showing how much time is left.
    For reminders, I use Due on iOS (+ Apple Watch) as it continues to send reminders until you do the thing and check it off.
    For to-do lists, I use both paper planning with a bullet journal-esque notation as well as a whiteboard for “temporary” planning, like creating a prioritization matrix, as it allows me to shift things around more easily.

  • Aganim@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ve tried medication, but unfortunately everything I tried had the side effect of pushing up my heartbeat to unhealthy levels, or causing anxiety issues. So currently unmedicated, although I miss the focus and motivation to get things done they gave me, the side-effects weren’t worth it.

    I try using todo-lists. But having been diagnosed at 36 it’s so hard to break bad habits, especially during work, so I still often have days where I just jump between tasks. I’ve learned to accept that will happen and try to pay more attention to my to-do list again. Not getting frustrated helps a lot.

    I’ve also taken up piano lessons, having to focus on playing a piece of music has improved my concentration quite a bit.