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Thread: is ADHD invented?

  1. #11
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    Default Re: is ADHD invented?

    Thanks for posting this Steve!

    I find this life story a very important piece of information for so many reasons and I'd like to share a few of them with you.

    Quote Originally Posted by SteveMod View Post
    No one did anything about my ADD though, everyone just used it as an easy answer for my poor performance. My father was told by the school psychologist that someone has to be the janitor (no offense to janitors), when I heard that I just started rebelling and my dad lost all faith in my future and we were distant for the rest of his life.
    Isn't that something. How a school psychologist's ill-thought out words altered the life course two people. His thoughtless words destroyed a relationship and could have destroyed a brilliant life. We can't even blame the past and lack of knowledge because it still happens today. What's important to point out is that out of the three people, Steve's response was the best. The psychologist decided he was a fortune teller and gave a crappy reading. The father believed the words of an "authority" figure because he was conditioned to believe that whatever a doctor says must be true.

    In grade school when they did the IQ tests I would fill in the circles randomly and of course be done 2 1/2 hours before everyone else, the teachers knew it to. After 3 years of that they brought my parents in and told them that I was mildly retarded based on my IQ scores. I thought it was funny then and I laugh about it now, my dad even protested loudly (I was there) and said that there had to be something wrong with the tests because he knew that I wasn't retarded. It was a different time then.
    An extraordinary mind is often misunderstood by the ordinary.

    In the book, "The Brain That Changes Itself", the author Norman Doidge tells a woman named Barbara Arrowsmith Young. Barbara had a brilliant mind but she given the label of "retarded" because she had some serious learning disabilities. Like Steve, despite her learning disabilities - her will was strong - and she went on to graduate from University and became the founder of a school that used a revolutionary method for retraining the brain through various exercises. It's an inspirational story and well worth reading. It reminds us that it is the will that determines success or failure in life not just the brain.

    My parents would have coffee with neighbors or friends occasionally at 10pm or 11pm and I'd be right there with them filling half my cup with sugar and cream and the other half with coffee, and do it several times......and no one cared or thought that might be a problem at 11 years old. My point is that activities like that went on all the time. My diet was made up of 3/4 sugar and 1/8 caffeine everyday. No one said, hey, maybe that's the problem, they just said hey, you're bad, and I believed them, and that's how my whole young life went.
    Diet, chemical and food sensitivities play such a huge role in our ability to function well mentally and emotionally. Sometimes a big difference can be made by just changing one little thing. In the book, A Mind to Crime, the author talks about this one case where this child was labelled as a behavioral problem. As it turns out, the child was allergic to milk and once this was discovered - the behavioral problem was resolved. I've read about cases where one sip of alcohol has caused a violent psychotic episode because the person was highly allergic to alcohol.

    I'm 50 years old now and the success level of my life is definitely a product of those times. As an adult though, I identified those problems and corrected them. I just wish I would have known then what I know now. I've been an over achiever for about 20 years now. I'm a self taught electronics engineer, I built a lab in my home, most days I design and build circuits for hours and hours, I have a micro controller/processor portion of the lab where I write programs and experiment with robotics. A few years before my dad died I demonstrated for him a robot that I built, it took me 2 years to build it, he was impressed, I was glad I was able to show him.
    A strong will uncovers a brilliant mind. I'm so glad that your dad got a chance to see what you knew all along. It's unfortunate that you had to go through such difficult times and I'm hoping that your story reaches someone who can benefit from your experience and follow your example, minus the years of struggle.

    I've been a vegan for 15 years but I identified the relationship of diet and success 25 years ago and I certified as a fitness trainer and nutritionist and I was an Amateur bodybuilder for 10 years. I would say that diet is one reason for ADD/ADHD and probably one of the main reasons. I don't try to help people anymore, I'm a dedicated misanthrope to some extent but there's a lot of kids out there that need real guidance concerning their future success and it's relationship with ADD/ADHD. I hope someone helps them.
    It's not easy telling ones story on a place like a forum - however, unlike other forms of social media - this forum is moderated and we are able to make it a safe place for people to share their stories of trials and success. Doing things like this is such an important and significant contribution to the betterment of society because it opens the forum for conversation, questions and learning.

    M.
    Marisa Broughton, MCHT, MNLP
    Canadian Distributor for Mindplace
    http://www.ayrmetes.com

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  2. Default Re: is ADHD invented?

    it gets interesting, my case is similar, I do not know if I have ADHD, but my symptoms seems a lot of it, but also with other "disease" called "supergifted" when I did the IQ test when I was a kid I said I cheated, the result is the same in the two "syndromes" is social maladjustment, which leads to "chronic emotional illness" because a child can not bear the marginalization of their peers, the result is disastrous, a void that can not be filled with anything (drugs), the only good thing is that these people rarely fall into mediocrity, perhaps due to its constant search for answers.
    a greeting.
    you will need some imagination for understand me, !I don?t speak english!

  3. Default Re: is ADHD invented?

    i am new to brain machines ? just got proteus. Learning is one of the areas I plan to improve/test with this machine and others.

    And I have had some experience with addressing ADD as an ayurveda practitioner over the last 25 years. What I have found is that there are many different things being labeled ADD/ADHD. And so various therapies to help. Here are a few causes of ADD I have found in my clients.
    1. heavy metals in the brain (in one case it was dumped near their home). the girl really bounced off the walls. I gave her ayurvedic herbs that take heavy metals out of the brain, natural ayurveda food plan. Gradually she improved until she was able to return to regular school! Wow if you saw her a few years earlier. They moved to the country for fresh air living.
    2. So-called "troubled teens" in high school who had social and grade issues. They started giving them yoga classes and ... they all improved socially & learning. Here the teachers are on anti-depressants because the unnatural teaching regime imposed on them. So they call it learning disability instead of teaching disability
    3. Research from vedic astrology suggests certain planets related to learning and emotions, when placed in certain relationships cause learning issues. Mantras, herbs, gems, yantras offer remedies.
    4. Horses help a lot of kids too (see the movie on hulu.com Horse Boy. Here the boy also worked with shamans who seemed to fully heal the boy (despite that he had heavy metals in his body).
    5. Using Neurosky reg machine, there is a software tested for improving learning Hocus Focus I think it is called - its on their website, and the headset works with thought stream to test how well the software is working improving learning /all biofeedback testing.
    6. I've seen some kids respond very well to diet (avoiding white sugar, hormones, chemicals, non-organic etc.)
    7. Other kids have a real genius and the education system doesn't know yet how to teach these kids.
    8. kids have psychic/intuitive/mystic gifts that are not nourished and/or squashed
    9. family patterns of quick minds (family brain entrainment) - where studies have found, contrary to the genetic view, even adopted kids wound up with the same diseases the blood family had.
    10. combinations of the above.

    so a lot of causes, and a lot of therapy options in my experience

  4. #14
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    Default Re: is ADHD invented?

    Greetings,

    This is my first day of posting after spending a few reading here and there on the forum.

    My wife and i home-schooled our now-grown kids and it was an adventure to say the least!

    Our 26 year old daughter is a Tech Sgt in the USAF and was always a quick book-learner passing the ASVAB with a score of 96%. I think early on she had the ability to see the big picture and that _school_ was a necessary something so she passed the years pouring herself into reading and studying well after the final _bell_ of any school day.

    Our 24 year old son is a Sr.Airman in the USAF and is a hands-on-learner rather than a reader. And while this learning style was addressed and focused on while we taught him at home, this caused some difficulties once attempting to get into the system as his ASVAB score was sub 60 which meant he was ineligible for entry. Fortunately he had an amazing recruiter that had seen this sort of kid come his way and believed in Matthew's potential as he had seen him in action during outings. So they made an exception and let him in. THEN, when in tech school they made more exceptions...They leaned the grading more toward hands on technique and physical testing of what he had been taught rather than raw test scores. Now i'm not saying that was right/wrong, but there is a very grateful SrAM serving his country as a well liked, competent, and now confident Civil Engineer.

    So what is my point? & Pardon the above setting the stage ...

    Both kids had the identical healthy diet, as my wife and i are both totally into nutrition and mostly vegans, though we still had food in the dairy and wheat categories in the house during the teen years (2004-2008). BUT, what we did notice is that our son would get so focused on other things he would neglect his body and not drink fluids (primarily vita-mix veg drinks or teas or fresh lemon-aid available), and also sometimes miss meals. Even now when we come together on our annual camping adventures we monitor him and his food intake. He is getting better at realizing the relationship between attention-focus and nutritional intake, though loving prompts still go a long way to keeping up a cheerful outlook.

    During ~2004-2005 i found Holosync's Mind Stim CD and we introduced that into the classroom environment. Funny thing is our rocket-scientist daughter thought it was annoying...but our son really got into it and would actually put it on at various times while trying to study. Different strokes and learning styles. I'm grateful we made the sacrifice to home school as i really don't know how the public school system would have provided for our son, nor where he would be now.

    Cheers,
    Thom

  5. #15

    Default Re: is ADHD invented?

    He would have been left to flounder and his life would have been a lot different.

  6. #16
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    Default Re: is ADHD invented?

    This is a subject dear to my heart. I've coached ADD-ish clients for nearly 2 decades and have learned to work and play with
    my own entertaining brain.

    I do not believe that it is a disorder and certainly not a disease.

    I really like Thom Hartmann's metaphor of hunters and farmers.

    "Normal" people in our society would be farmers. Think about the mindset of a farmer.
    They're on time, are comfortable with delayed gratification and routine. They do one
    thing at a time. Slow and steady wins the race. They make and follow rules. They are
    the Great Maintainers.

    Hunters are in the moment, alive and engaged. They multitask, take risks, are endlessly creative,
    and get bored easily. They rebel against authority and routine, and need stimulation. These folks are the
    ones who have created change and innovation thru the ages. Think about all of the change makers
    in history - I haven't been able to come up with a major shift that came at the hands of a farmer!

    The only reason ADD is called a disorder is because it's hard to control hunters. They think their
    own thoughts and have their own way of doing things. They disrupt boring classes for entertainment
    and fight against the status quo when it doesn't work. Teachers have a very tough time with ADDers,
    especially ones who process kinesthetically (need to move to get info into their brains) because it
    is harder to manage them in the classroom - really difficult with large class sizes.

    Innovators, leaders, entrepreneurs, sales people, entertainers, construction workers all benefit from
    a hunter's mind.

    ADDers are wired DIFFERENTLY than farmers and our industrial revolution required people who could
    follow rules and do what they're told - even in mind deadeningly boring jobs. Today's marketplace
    with all of the multitasking we need to do is actually becoming more ADD-friendly!

    Gone are the days when someone could hook up with a corporation and work their way up the ladder,
    retiring at the other end with a gold watch.

    In today's world, we need to be fast on our feet and have a short tail.

    So . . . I see ADD as a gift. And we are the ones who will do the most to change the world we live in.

    It's just a question of learning how to use our creative minds effectively in a society that likes to
    consider us broken!

    Viva la differance!

  7. #17
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    Default Re: is ADHD invented?

    I agree with Steve.

    I think it's pretty awesome how the recruiter was willing to adapt things in a way that were helpful to Matthew. I would have thought that the military was the last place that could happen.

    Just a comment regarding the holosynch cd. People with attention or concentration problems tend to have dominant theta waves and so that CD probably was geared on increasing Beta waves or making them more dominant. For someone who doesn't have attention or concentrating problems, the CD would be annoying because that person's Beta level is already high (high enough) and adding more can create anxiety.

    M.
    Marisa Broughton, MCHT, MNLP
    Canadian Distributor for Mindplace
    http://www.ayrmetes.com

    Hey, if someone makes a good post, don't forget to click http://www.mindplacesupport.com/foru...ations-40b.png at the bottom of their post to add to their reputation!

  8. #18
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    Default Re: is ADHD invented?

    Hi There!

    I do not believe that it is a disorder and certainly not a disease.
    I respectfully disagree. ADD is a disorder and the people who have it do benefit from treatment. I think that the problem comes in where people diagnosed by parents, teachers and doctors who do not specialize in this area. Those are the kids who just need redirection and coaching.

    I really like Thom Hartmann's metaphor of hunters and farmers.
    When I first read this, I liked it too because of the positive outlook and while these characteristics may fit with some people who have ADD, they also fit with those who do not. We can't say that all hunters have ADD no more than we can say all farmers do not.

    The only reason ADD is called a disorder is because it's hard to control hunters. They think their
    own thoughts and have their own way of doing things. They disrupt boring classes for entertainment
    and fight against the status quo when it doesn't work. Teachers have a very tough time with ADDers,
    especially ones who process kinesthetically (need to move to get info into their brains) because it
    is harder to manage them in the classroom - really difficult with large class sizes.
    That may be true of some individuals but those with ADD really do have a problem with concentration and distraction can be a problem. It's very frustrating to want to do something simple like read a book and not be able because your mind keeps jumping around to other things. The hunter has to be patient and actually has to be able to sit still ... a hunter with ADD would probably scare the prey away with all his fidgeting - that or have a hair trigger.

    ADDers are wired DIFFERENTLY than farmers and our industrial revolution required people who could
    follow rules and do what they're told - even in mind deadeningly boring jobs. Today's marketplace
    with all of the multitasking we need to do is actually becoming more ADD-friendly!
    You say "follow rules" and work routine jobs like it's a bad thing. Some people like simple, stress free jobs. It doesn't make them less interesting people or less valuable to society.

    Gone are the days when someone could hook up with a corporation and work their way up the ladder,
    retiring at the other end with a gold watch.

    In today's world, we need to be fast on our feet and have a short tail.
    I'm not sure what this has to do with ADD because you add stress to ADD and you get a meltdown. Not to mention, many untreated people with ADD self-medicate with caffeine and other stimulants.

    So . . . I see ADD as a gift. And we are the ones who will do the most to change the world we live in.
    By thinking of it as a gift is to deny the problem and treatment to those who need it. What's interesting to me is that most of the people who are against the drugs that treat ADD are not those who live with ADD/ADHD. It's a bit of a touchy spot for me because I've walked a mile or two in those shoes and while diet and AVS were helpful and still are, I wouldn't be as functional as I am without the drugs.

    It's just a question of learning how to use our creative minds effectively in a society that likes to
    consider us broken!
    It's not always that simple of a solution. I think we need both - the positive attitude and flexibility of teachers, coaches and employers as well as the acceptance of the reality that brain/behavior disorders exist and the people that have them do benefit from proper diagnosis and treatment.

    It looks like we have the makings of a debate. :-) Thanks for your thoughts on the subject. I may disagree with some of your points but I also like the positive perspective you took and I think what you offer is of value and has its place.

    M.
    Marisa Broughton, MCHT, MNLP
    Canadian Distributor for Mindplace
    http://www.ayrmetes.com

    Hey, if someone makes a good post, don't forget to click http://www.mindplacesupport.com/foru...ations-40b.png at the bottom of their post to add to their reputation!

  9. Default Re: is ADHD invented?

    Quote Originally Posted by writer23 View Post
    This is a subject dear to my heart. I've coached ADD-ish clients for nearly 2 decades and have learned to work and play with
    my own entertaining brain.

    I do not believe that it is a disorder and certainly not a disease.

    I really like Thom Hartmann's metaphor of hunters and farmers.

    "Normal" people in our society would be farmers. Think about the mindset of a farmer.
    They're on time, are comfortable with delayed gratification and routine. They do one
    thing at a time. Slow and steady wins the race. They make and follow rules. They are
    the Great Maintainers.

    Hunters are in the moment, alive and engaged. They multitask, take risks, are endlessly creative,
    and get bored easily. They rebel against authority and routine, and need stimulation. These folks are the
    ones who have created change and innovation thru the ages. Think about all of the change makers
    in history - I haven't been able to come up with a major shift that came at the hands of a farmer!

    The only reason ADD is called a disorder is because it's hard to control hunters. They think their
    own thoughts and have their own way of doing things. They disrupt boring classes for entertainment
    and fight against the status quo when it doesn't work. Teachers have a very tough time with ADDers,
    especially ones who process kinesthetically (need to move to get info into their brains) because it
    is harder to manage them in the classroom - really difficult with large class sizes.

    Innovators, leaders, entrepreneurs, sales people, entertainers, construction workers all benefit from
    a hunter's mind.

    ADDers are wired DIFFERENTLY than farmers and our industrial revolution required people who could
    follow rules and do what they're told - even in mind deadeningly boring jobs. Today's marketplace
    with all of the multitasking we need to do is actually becoming more ADD-friendly!

    Gone are the days when someone could hook up with a corporation and work their way up the ladder,
    retiring at the other end with a gold watch.

    In today's world, we need to be fast on our feet and have a short tail.

    So . . . I see ADD as a gift. And we are the ones who will do the most to change the world we live in.

    It's just a question of learning how to use our creative minds effectively in a society that likes to
    consider us broken!

    Viva la differance!
    Just goes to show you that it takes all kind of individuals to make a world. It would be pretty boring, and I doubt that humans would have evolved as far as we have if we were all wired the same. Who is the judge that determines who is 'normal' and and who has a 'disorder'. Heck, there are some people that think that I am weird (quite a few actually) because I meditate and do AVS. It would be a sad day if our goal was to medicate our kids so they will all be the same.

  10. #20
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    Default Re: is ADHD invented?

    Quote Originally Posted by brewmasher View Post
    Just goes to show you that it takes all kind of individuals to make a world. It would be pretty boring, and I doubt that humans would have evolved as far as we have if we were all wired the same. Who is the judge that determines who is 'normal' and and who has a 'disorder'. Heck, there are some people that think that I am weird (quite a few actually) because I meditate and do AVS. It would be a sad day if our goal was to medicate our kids so they will all be the same.
    Ya but you are not weird because of ADD. Hee hee

    This brings to mind a few things. Where identifying a "disorder" becomes important is if something is interfering with the person's ability to function at their best. Treatment doesn't always mean drugs either. A disorder doesn't mean the person is broken.

    Weird is an individual perception and so is normal. The "norms" in society are a general agreement of conduct or acceptable behavior by the majority of society. It's expected that there will be people on the fringe of those norms. If those fringe people engage in behaviors that are destructive to the society, then those behaviors are called dysfunctional. In the animal world, the individual that doesn't comply with the "pack law" is kicked out of the pack/herd/flock or is killed. Survival of the pack depends on the unity of the group. Survival of society requires the same.

    I'm not saying that having individuality or doing things differently are a bad thing. I'd be a hypocrite. I look a bit like an aging goth (but it's really aging rock goddess), am totally into nerdy things like science and have a raven that lives in my kitchen - to most that's kind of weird and I'd agree and have a good laugh about it. At the same time, my "weirdness" doesn't interfere with the society around me. I pay taxes, give to charity, work and so forth. This kind of deviates from ADD/ADHD but I really wanted to address the point that recognizing disorders and treating them is for medical reasons not societal. When it becomes for societal reasons - that becomes a whole other story.

    M.
    Marisa Broughton, MCHT, MNLP
    Canadian Distributor for Mindplace
    http://www.ayrmetes.com

    Hey, if someone makes a good post, don't forget to click http://www.mindplacesupport.com/foru...ations-40b.png at the bottom of their post to add to their reputation!

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