I'm diagnosed ADD, but suspect I have nothing at all sometimes. I chronically question the ADD diagnosis and the validity of the concept itself, even though my ADD/NVLD friend from college assured me that my speech patterns are classically ADD, and my little sister knew a kid at work diagnosed with ADD who talked like me.
I thought that maybe an autistic-spectrum condition would "trump" an ADD diagnosis the way that mental retardation "trumps" learning disabilities - i.e., symptoms of the latter can be included in the former. But, apparently not, even though my Aspie friend reported that the fidgeting of Aspies reminded him of me. This made me think of how both autism-spectrum conditions and ADD can give the appearance of reduced frontal-lobe-associated regulatory activities, and that fidgeting/stimming may be a consequence of that same end achieved by different means.
Here's me, the pseudo-PDDer:
NeantHumain wrote:
Of the nonditzy ADHD,IAers, I suspect some kind of reticent artist or soft-spoken intellectual. These people tend to be more asocial and spend time in their thoughts (introversion). They tend to have fewer friends than the other ADHD types and may lack common sense.
Quote:
I really don't believe ADHD is a unitary concept. It's really just a random hodge-podge of temperamental differences with a few aspects in common (i.e., modulation of attention and activity). These temperamental differences only get labeled as a psychiatric disorder because parents and teachers find the temperamental extremes to be a bit tougher to "manage" than most kids.
Yeah, it does seem to be a hodge-podge. Barkley, I think, suggests that "pure" ADHD/IA with no history of hyperactive or impulsive symptoms (not me, because I have a history of impulsive symptoms) may be a separate beast from those with a history of hyperactive and/or impulsive symptoms; and he suggests that IA's who have partial hyperactive-impulsive symptoms or a history of them should be considered "subclinical combined types." When I read this, I thought this made some sense, because I could resonate with some descriptions of ADDers that did have hyperactive-impulsive symptoms. The subclinical combined type theory, though, would require a sort of continuity of ADD core features across temperaments, where I, the quiet nerd, would have some key aspect of my wiring in common with my hyperactive and sociable cousin. It would probably take precise brain mapping to confirm or deny such theories, which would be rather expensive.
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Right planet, wrong country: possibly PLI as a child, Dxed ADD as a teen, naturalized citizen of neurotypicality as an adult