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Edward M.Hallowell

  • ppoothas quoted2 years ago
    the same way someone without ADD is just isn’t possible because it is very clear to me I get into panic situations if I don’t have a pretty strict routine built into my life, which involves a good deal of alone time, not necessarily quiet, but alone time.
  • ppoothas quoted2 years ago
    His independence, needing to do things on his own time, on his own schedule, is also typical of ADD, as is his frustration intolerance and his sense of being a fraud. His cognitive failures invalidated all his successes, in his own mind, and his self-esteem plummeted.
  • ppoothas quoted2 years ago
    While they can hold the information in mind, they do not have the patience to sequentially put it out.
  • ppoothas quoted2 years ago
    The therapist must become active and directive in helping the patient reorganize his life.
  • ppoothas quoted2 years ago
    concrete suggestions concerning ways of getting organized, staying focused, making plans, keeping to schedules, prioritizing tasks to be done, and, in general, dealing with the chaos of everyday life.
  • ppoothas quoted2 years ago
    but with the patient, so that the patient can learn to do it for himself.
  • ppoothas quoted2 years ago
    They need direction. They need structure
  • ppoothas quoted2 years ago
    “It’s been so many years living like this, thinking I’m stupid, but knowing I’m not. I brought along this list,” she added, holding up some papers. “I wrote down everything I could so you could read it.”
  • ppoothas quoted2 years ago
    I see something that I mean to do and then I don’t do it. It’s not only trivial things like the cough drop; it’s big things, too.’ That’s why I cried.”
  • ppoothas quoted2 years ago
    Wanting to do something, meaning to do something, but just not doing it: this is the “cough drop sign” and it is common among adults with ADD.
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