Trans-Financial-Man
Arcane
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2018
- Messages
- 1,006
I got misdiagnosed with ADHD when I just had Caeliac. A gluten allergy that can cause fatigue and loss of focus. And I wouldn't be surprised if others had the same issue either. They're not giving you these pills because they actually want to help you.That being said, these cases are in the minority, and when it comes to people that exhibit hyperactivity, impulsiveness, and irrational behavior, I strongly advocate the participation of combat sports. Go do a one hour lifting session followed by a two hour wrestling practice, led by a coach that will make your life a living hell if you act out. You will learn how to be disciplined and control your impulsivity (to a certain extent), and you will have used up all your energy for the day with how rigorous the practice is. There are exceptions to every rule, but I feel like medication should be a final option, versus the go-to.I do believe that ADHD is a legitimate thing and prescription drugs combined with therapy and healthy life choices can help with that. My cousin is 8 years younger than I am and he has shown clear symptoms of ADHD since he was very young. Extremely impulsive and irrational behaviour despite coming from a normal middle class family. He is currently in prison. I did not believe in ADHD before seeing how obvious some cases can be.
The issue is when people get this idea stuck in their head that because their life is not perfect and they have problems, it must be this undiagnosed genetic disorder that they have and they must get the prescription despite what the doctors say. Many of them go see multiple professionals until one of them caves in and writes the prescription. Usually their life-habits are fucking terrible and they are not even trying to fix basic things like sleep, tech addictions, exercise and diet. What makes it more insidious is how these medications seem to work at first before an inevitable burn-out.
Here is a graph that shows how explosive the growth in prescriptions in my country has been during the last 20 years:
ADHD symptoms are syndromic, it could be that a person is showing that group of symptoms for reasons unrelated to ADHD at all. Lack of proper sleep, a shitty family situation, a stressful life or even certain types of headaches (chronic migraines, cluster headaches) can make people behave as if they have ADHD. That doesn't mean they have it and that's why is very worrying that there's been this insane push to diagnose almost every person with ADHD
Inviato dal mio A80S utilizzando Tapatalk
Last edited: