Jessica McCabe
How to ADHD
Published on Aug 9, 2016
The way ADHD brains develop can put us out of step with our childhood peers, leaving us feeling awkward, left out and with social anxiety that can follow us into adulthood. Here, I talk about my own experiences with that, and offer simple solutions.
**note -- I want to add that one of the Brains pointed out that peers and the internet aren't always the best source of information, which is true. Cultures vary, biases like racism and sexism exist, and also, well-meaning advice that might work for one person won't necessarily be appropriate for another.
My hope is that we can sift through all the information available to us and check in with ourselves as to whether or not it feels right.
In any case, personally, if I'd known what to expect on a sleepover, how to be a good "host," or what appropriate etiquette is for a first date, I think I would have felt a lot more prepared to deal with the social situations I found myself in.
****LINKS!****
http://bit.ly/2bbAhRp Podcast mentioned in the video —great info about playdates and more!
http://bit.ly/2bc9ckg Help Your Child with ADHD Make Friends
http://bit.ly/2aHW5kX Helping girls with ADHD make friends
http://bit.ly/2b5KiSE Friendship challenges for adults
http://bit.ly/2b3FKew ADHD brains mature a few years late
And this is just for fun — one of the brains pointed out that reddit has an “outside” forum that treats the outside world like it’s actually a game. It’s AMAZING: http://bit.ly/2aX7RdQ
Help me make more videos! http://patreon.com/howtoadhd
"The Show Must Be Go," "Professor Umlaut"
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
“Game Over” sound effect by spazzo_1493, used under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.
“Game coin” by Adam Weeden, used under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.
**note -- I want to add that one of the Brains pointed out that peers and the internet aren't always the best source of information, which is true. Cultures vary, biases like racism and sexism exist, and also, well-meaning advice that might work for one person won't necessarily be appropriate for another.
My hope is that we can sift through all the information available to us and check in with ourselves as to whether or not it feels right.
In any case, personally, if I'd known what to expect on a sleepover, how to be a good "host," or what appropriate etiquette is for a first date, I think I would have felt a lot more prepared to deal with the social situations I found myself in.
****LINKS!****
http://bit.ly/2bbAhRp Podcast mentioned in the video —great info about playdates and more!
http://bit.ly/2bc9ckg Help Your Child with ADHD Make Friends
http://bit.ly/2aHW5kX Helping girls with ADHD make friends
http://bit.ly/2b5KiSE Friendship challenges for adults
http://bit.ly/2b3FKew ADHD brains mature a few years late
And this is just for fun — one of the brains pointed out that reddit has an “outside” forum that treats the outside world like it’s actually a game. It’s AMAZING: http://bit.ly/2aX7RdQ
Help me make more videos! http://patreon.com/howtoadhd
"The Show Must Be Go," "Professor Umlaut"
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
“Game Over” sound effect by spazzo_1493, used under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.
“Game coin” by Adam Weeden, used under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.
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