Coping Skills for
Adults
with ADD, ADHD
online conference transcript
Thom
Hartmann, our guest, is an award winning best-selling author,
lecturer and psychotherapist. The discussion centered around healing from the
many childhood wounds caused by having ADD, like being told you're stupid and
trying to fit in and be accepted by others. Mr. Hartmann addressed the impact
that negative self-talk, poor self-esteem have on the ADD adult and different
psychological tools that can be used to heal ADD, ADHD (Attention
Deficit Disorder, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder).
David is the
HealthyPlace.com
moderator.
The people in green are audience members.
David: Good
Evening. I'm David Roberts. I'm the moderator for tonight's conference. I want
to welcome everyone to HealthyPlace.com. Our topic tonight is "Coping
Skills for Adults with ADD, ADHD." Our guest is psychotherapist,
lecturer and best-selling author, Thom Hartmann. You may recognize some of his
book titles:
Thom Hartmann's Complete Guide To ADD,
ADD: A Different Perception, and
Healing ADD.
Good evening, Thom and welcome to
HealthyPlace.com. We appreciate you being our guest tonight. How did you get
into writing about Attention Deficit Disorder?
Thom
Hartmann: Thanks, David. I got into writing about this through the
confluence of two situations. The first was that 22 years ago, for 5 years, I
was the executive director of a residential treatment facility for severely
abused children, and virtually all of them came in with labels like
"minimal brain damage" and "hyperactive syndrome," which is
how ADD and ADHD
(Attention Deficit Disorder, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) were
labeled back then. So I got curious and got into the research and Ben
Feingold's book Why Your Child Is Hyperactive had just come out and Ted
Kennedy was holding hearings on it all in Washington, D.C. I got to know
Feingold and we did a clinical trial of his diet at our program (New England Salem Children's
Village and Hunter School), and so I wrote that up and in 1980 it was
published in The Journal of Orthomolecular Psychiatry, one of the
earlier references to this all.
But then it got "really real" for me
about 10 years ago when our middle child was 12 and "hit the wall" in
school. So we took Justin to be tested for
learning disabilities and the fellow told him and us that
he had a "brain disease" called
ADD. So that's when I
really dug into it, and out of that experience I wrote a book to/for Justin,
which became Attention Deficit Disorder: A Different Perception, in
which I was trying to give him back some small part of his
self-esteem, which that doc had totally ripped away from
him.
David: We do
many conferences here
at HealthyPlace.com and the guests usually talk about the
importance of
medications and therapy. One of the things that struck me in your book,
Healing ADD, was this sentence: "The challenge
for most ADHD people isn't changing a person from one brain type to another (an
impossibility), but, rather, to heal from the many, many woundings that ADHD
people experience growing up." What kind of woundings are you
referring to?
Thom
Hartmann: The woundings of: not fitting in, of being told
you're stupid when you know you're not, of not being able to perform
things that others do easily. For children, the prime
imperative in
school is to "fit in" and "be accepted." So it's
incredibly wounding for a child when they can't perform, and then, to make it
even worse, we slap a label on them that has words in it like
"disordered" and "deficient." Tell me, how many children do
you know who would ever want to be deficient or disordered? My guess is none.
Those are the primary woundings. Then kids try to recover or react to that by
blustering their way through things, becoming the class clown or just
intellectually dropping out, and then they're called "oppositional"
and end up with other labels, and sometimes they
commit suicide (the teen suicide rate has tripled in the
past 30 years in the USA) and sometimes they seek out friends who will give
them back some self-esteem but those are the "bad kids" and this
whole spiral sets in that can be so destructive.
David: But,
as adults, there are many who
are "glad" to find out that there is a label that they can
associate with their "difficulties." We get emails all the time from
people who say they've been "walking about all these years wondering what
was wrong."
Thom
Hartmann: Yes - I had a similar response. But as an adult, I'm able
to process things differently than children do. Adults know by the time
they get at least into their 20s with Attention Deficit Disorder that they're
"different" somehow, and many have concluded that their
"difference" is that they're bad or morally deficient or cursed or
something even worse. And for many, it's a sort of secret. So finding out that
there's some rational explanation for it all makes up, in many ways, for the
"disordered" and "deficient" label.
Also, adults live in a different world
day-to-day from children. Imagine how different you may feel about the
"relief of getting the diagnosis and knowing it's ADD, ADHD" if that meant
that a couple of times a day your employer would call a meeting and in front of
everybody bring you up to the front of the conference room to give you your
medication. That's the experience of children. Adults can keep it
private.
David: So,
as adults, what you are saying is it's important to consider your
childhood wounds caused by having ADD, so you can deal
effectively with your adult life.
Thom
Hartmann: Yes. Every ADD
adult I've met carries wounds and pains and misunderstandings from their
childhood, and often there's a LOT of negative self-talk around these, and so
as adults one of the important things to do about that is to heal it, head on.
That's what my book "Healing ADD" is all about. Of course, you can't
"heal" ADD - the original title was "Healing from the Pain of
Growing Up a Hunter in a Farmer's World," but the publisher said that was
too long so I had to write a foreword telling the readers that I wasn't
suggesting people could or even needed to be healed from ADD. Good grief. What
are some of the other self-destructive patterns resulting from ADD and maybe
you could briefly describe what an individual should consider in working
towards "healing" them?
The single biggest issue that I almost always
see in adults (and teenagers) is poor self-esteem. They had a rough time
for years and years, and then to top it off somebody came along and tried to
tell them that they have a deficient brain. There are all the social mistakes
they've made, the academic problems, and very often, because they come from
ADD/ADHD parents, problematic family situations. So the first step is to
give them back their self-esteem.
This is done through a process called
"reframing," which means seeing something in a new way,
bringing a new understanding to it, and finding in it something positive and
useful. In this instance, that's the "hunter in a farmer's
world" metaphor, which I find personally very healing. There's not
anything "wrong" with you, you are just wired differently than what
we today choose to call "normal," but at another time and in other
circumstances you would be "normal" or even "above normal."
And anybody who's ever done a "hunter" job like sales or air traffic
control or being in the Army's special forces or being an entrepreneur knows
*exactly* what I mean.
David: Let's
get to a few audience questions, Thom, then we'll continue with our
conversation.
drcale: From
my childhood, I got to feel that I could not trust anything. So often, I got
hit upside the head by unexpected censure, so now my Pavlovian response is to
assume I probably have it wrong when I have been very enthusiastic, etc. How do
you deal with that?
Thom
Hartmann: There are several strategies you can use that are called
"pattern interrupts" that will change that type of automatic
response. You'll find them in my book "Healing ADD." (I don't mean this as a sales pitch -
it's just that it would take way too long to try to teach them in a
chat.)
There also is a concept of timeline
repair that you may find useful. This involves first off figuring out where
you keep your past and future. If I ask you right now what you'll be doing next
week, notice where your eyes go to find the answer. Most likely it'll be
somewhere out in front of you, probably up and to your right. And if I ask what
you did last month, check out where you store those
pictures/stories/experiences, too. They *should* be behind you and off to one
side, down a bit. If they're out front, you may have the experience of being
"haunted by your past." In our culture, we have an old expression
that goes, "Put that behind you." The reason for this expression is
that, literally, behind us is the best place for past memories. So there's a
process that involves taking the past junk and moving it behind you, one by
one. And if there are particularly painful or hot memories that you'd like to
"defuse," you can also turn them from color into black and white,
change their size, take out the sound or replace it with circus music, etc.,
etc. Lotsa things you can do to repair and recalibrate and thus re-experience
and heal your past.
David:
Here's drcale's comment, then the next question:
drcale: They
are in front of me, up and left, and I feel like I relive them over and
over.
Thom
Hartmann: Drcale, try the timeline work tonight. You'll probably
find it very useful. You *can* put the past behind you!
Forgetful
me! How do I get my husband to accept the fact that my daughter and
I both are ADD and although she is going through testing new week, I know from
all the research that I have done, she is ADD. How do I get him to be okay with
the time and efforts I put into educating myself so that I ,we, can manage our
Attention Deficit Disorder? He is just the opposite, he is
OCD (Obsessive-Compulsive
Disorder).
Thom
Hartmann: I'd suggest (and, not knowing him or you, this is a long
shot) that the first step may be to make the concept of you and your daughter
having ADD something that he can easily understand and that has some appeal or
interest to him. If you frame it or position it or try to get him to see it as
a disease, you may get the very common reaction of denial or avoidance or even
embarrassment. But if you can put it in a comprehensible and less pathological
model (I frankly prefer the hunter/farmer model <g>), he may find it
palatable. Also, if he's OCD, notice the language he uses to refute or refuse your
self-observation and figure out some way to agree with *those words* while, at
the same time, making your point in a different way. Hope that helps. You may
want to give him a real easy to read book on the topic as well. My first book,
ADD: A Different Perception, is quite accessible and pretty
short, and it reframes ADD in a pretty acceptable fashion (IMHO).
David: You
have written many books on ADD, spoken to many people who have ADD, ADHD. Do
you think that many of the ADD issues can be resolved through self-help, or is
outside help (a therapist) necessary or more helpful?
Thom
Hartmann: It depends entirely upon the person and upon the
therapist. There are some (probably many) people who are sufficiently
self-aware that they can do most of the repair work on themselves. On the other
hand, having a competent professional to help really can ease the path. The big
problem is that there are also, as in any profession from plumbers to surgeons,
some folks out there who are simply incompetent or who don't understand ADD.
They can end up doing more damage than good: I have seen a startling number of
adults and children who've been more wounded by their therapy than by their
lives. So look for professional help but also remember that you're a consumer
of mental health care services and you can audition or choose the person to
work with you just like you'd choose your hairdresser or dentist. If somebody
hurts you, find somebody else. Shop around. And when you find somebody who can
produce rapid, successful change in you, the way you want it, stick with him or
her.
cellogirl:
This is my first time in a chat room ever. I have never experienced
all the trauma of ADD
that Thom is talking about. I have been very successful in all areas of my
life. I guess I had just enough OCD to keep me in line, doing what I was
supposed to. After a few years on
Prozac, my
obsessions have eased up and now at 50. I find myself
becoming more ADD and finding it hard to do what I'm supposed to do. I know I
need to grade papers, but I don't want to. I know I should make lesson plans,
but cellogirl isn't doing them. Any suggestions?
Thom
Hartmann: Interesting. A few years ago, a friend of mine, a
psychiatrist in Atlanta, made the offhand comment to me that, for a person with
ADHD, a little bit of OCD is probably a good thing. This sounds to me more like
a matter of finding the balance between the two, and that maybe our person here
has tipped a little too far away from the "seat of control" that
OCD-like things can bring. Of course, this is just a wild guess, as I don't
know this person and am not her doc.
kimdyqzn: I
have a son with ADHD (possibly both
boys have it) and I was recently
diagnosed with ADHD
as well. I see a lot of educational products for helping children learn to
"retrain" their brain and learn to pay more attention. Do you
know of any computer software products like these for ADDults?
Thom
Hartmann Not personally, but I now they're out there. There's a
conference on this topic in a few weeks in Miami (I think you can find the info
at www.futurehealth.org) and you may find their website
useful.
My take on biofeedback and the related
techniques is that they're just high-tech ways of teaching us to bring our
attention back to something, over and over. The "old" biofeedback
device was the rosary, for example. So it's nothing new, but the technology is
new, and seems to work quite well for some people, and because it uses
computers the feedback is so much faster than the old techniques that people
learn to attend to things faster. So I'd suggest you explore that site and
maybe www.eegspectrum.com site, which is probably the best on
biofeedback, and make up your own mind.
*Phatty*: I
was known as ADHD when I was younger. Now at 17, I have mellowed out, but
noticed I have lots of
anxiety and I
constantly shake my legs and can't stop with out really trying. Could this
because I am ADHD or from the medicine (effexor)?
Thom
Hartmann Common causes of anxiety reactions include caffeine drinks,
stressful life changes (going to high school?) the family changes associated
with growing up, and, of course, all medications have some side-effects.
David:
Phatty, you may all want to check out the
medications
area of our website for the side-effects of Effexor and certainly, I'd let
your doctor know what's going on.
suzeyque: I
was diagnosed with ADHD this year at 40. I tried college, but quit after 4
months. I honestly can't handle "sitting" and paying attention all
day! I've tried three different kinds of medication (ritalin, welbutrin,
ionamine) but still couldn't pay attention! So again, I feel like a
failure. Any
suggestions for getting through college if I ever attempt it again? (my
marks were great, had instructor who humiliated me and I gave up)
Thom
Hartmann: Yes. Find a different college. I've seen an incredible
number of "failure" kids do brilliantly when they get into different
environments. There are very community-oriented colleges like Warren-Wilson in
Asheville, NC, and there are online programs from most all the colleges and
universities, and there are community colleges, and even same-gender colleges.
The key seems to be either a high-stimulation, novelty-rich environment or
small classrooms, or both. Shop around. Interview your prospective professors
the term before you're considering attending and only take classes from those
who are not boring. Get to know them in advance and build a relationship so you
feel committed to the class. Sit in the front of the room where you're not
easily distracted by the other students. Decide to have fun while learning, and
for the terrible, boring, required classes, find the times or a community
college where you can take them in smaller classes or from interesting profs.
There's a bunch of this sort of stuff in
ADD Success Stories, by the way. <g>
David: One
of the things that strikes me, and it's really not surprising, but it seems
many adults with ADD also suffer from
depression.
Thom
Hartmann: Yes, and it's often a healthy response. When things aren't
going well, it's entirely appropriate for us to have a negative reaction to
things. We call this, in one of its may forms,
depression.
If a person hit a wall in life and *didn't* get depressed or upset, then that
would be a real problem. The damage happens when people think that the
depression itself is the "problem" and take antidepressives but stay
in "not working" life situations. Of course, there are some people
who have an actual disorder of depression, and for them the
antidepressant drugs are life-savers (literally), so it's
very, very important to see somebody who's competent and capable of sorting
out: "Is this circumstance-caused depression that should be treated by
changing their life's circumstances, or is this a biochemical problem that
needs meds and nutritional changes?" It can be a tough call, because
when we have circumstance-caused depression there *is* a change in neurology
that happens...albeit temporary. So it takes somebody who knows what they're
doing, and who understands how frustrating ADD can be, to differentiate between
the two and make appropriate recommendations.
David: We
are looking for journalers in the HealthyPlace.com ADD/ADHD Community to keep
online diaries of their experiences. If you are interested in doing that,
click here. Mr. Hartmann's website is
here.
luckyfr: I
have been diagnosed with ADD and depression instead of hyperactivity. Is this
common?
Thom
Hartmann:Yes. When I see this in people, it's most often people
who've been very "beaten down" by life's experiences. I wrote about
this at some length in "Healing ADD." People who primarily experience the
world and life through their feelings (as opposed to those who are primarily
visual or auditory) seem to have this sort of problem more frequently, too. My
advice to such folks is to find somebody who's competent with one of the
solution-based therapies, such as NLP, Core Transformation, or
EMDR, and give that a try.
And also to carefully examine their life's circumstances and situations for
opportunities for change that may be interesting and exciting.
monoamine:
You mentioned children
diagnosed ADD or ADHD often coming from broken homes in your earlier
practice or studies. Given the co-morbidities of ADD/ADHD, viz.,
Alcohol
Abuse/Personality Disorders (among others), isn't it possible
that a physiological effect is communicated through the progeny? In other
words, isn't it possible that domestic trouble is merely another manifest of a
valid physiological condition?
Thom
Hartmann: Yes, I think it is. There's both nature and nurture, and
reactive, impulsive children usually have reactive, impulsive parents (for
example), or at least one parent like that, and so the kids get both the genes
and bear the brunt of the behaviors, which they also learn, and then inflict on
their own kids. That's why it's so important to intervene and break that
spiral.
David: If I
remember correctly, you also wrote a book called something like "ADD Success Stories," where people with ADD shared
their strategies for coping with it. Am I right about that?
Thom
Hartmann: Yes,
ADD Success Stories is a book that I wrote because of all
the mail I got after the publication of
ADD: A Different Perception. Lots of people shared with me
the strategies and techniques they'd used to be successful in home, work, and
school situations, either in spite of their ADD or even using it as a tool, and
so I took about 100 of the best of those stories, plus a bunch of my own, and
compiled that into the book
ADD Success Stories.
David: Could
you share with us two or three of those strategies that proved
successful?
Thom
Hartmann: Well, the school answers I gave earlier are all in that
book. The idea of figuring out what sort of neurology/person you are and then
determining the best career for you based on that. Finding a partner who
compliments you but isn't identical to you. (Hunters often do well
when they marry farmers, for example, although that's by no means a hard
and fast rule.) Learning how to learn. Geez - it's been about 6 years since I
wrote the book and I haven't read it since then, so I'd have to go grab one and
read the table of contents. <grin>
blacksheep:
I'm 35 years old. I have lived with Attention Deficit Disorer all of my life
and one thing that I have found is that sometimes I can't understand why things
happen to me.
Thom Hartmann:
If that was the entire question, I can empathize. I'm still trying
to figure out why some things happen to me. <g> Seriously, though, this
one of those things where I've found that
spiritual
practice, the idea of living one day at a time, of surrendering my will to
Gods or the universe or higher power or whatever you call it, and learning
to go with the flow, is the best coping mechanism. Keep repeating,
"Everything works out in the end." And find that place in
yourself where you know that's true.
cluelessnMN:
Hyperfocusing. Good Thing? Too much of a Good Thing?
Thom
Hartman: Yes! Yes!!! <g> The trick is learning to notice when
you've switched it on and then deciding if it's useful in that circumstance,
and then choosing to hang out in that mode or turn it off. That's a process of
learning self-awareness that's very useful and that most people,
surprisingly, have never really explored. Start noticing how you notice things,
noticing your reactions and responses to things, and noticing the internal
switches and levers that switch you on and off. From there to taking control of
it all is actually a surprisingly short path.
twinmom: For
those of us parents who are ADD and have trouble with follow thru and have ADHD
kids, what one thing would you suggest that we focus on to improve quality of
life for our kids?
Thom
Hartmann:Forgiveness. It's so easy to think that we all have
to have Beaver Cleaver lives and homes and all, and it's important to learn how
to just be who you are and how you are and allow the same for your kids. Of
course, we're always trying to improve things, but when it becomes a grind or
painful, then the work is often more destructive than the results are
beneficial.
David:
Actually, Thom, what I've found in life that we all think our neighbors are
living perfect lives, until one day it comes spilling out on the front lawn,
and we find out they are no different than us. :) Here's the next
question.
Thom
Hartmann: Yep!
addcash: Hi.
I'm 42 with an ADD son who is 3 1/2 and showing signs (eyes out of focus, angry
outbursts, etc.) and want to start an ADD community center in Toronto, Canada.
Any suggestions, Mr. Hartmann?
Thom Hartmann:
I'm not sure. CHADD and other ADD groups seem to be on the decline,
member-attendance-wise, and I think that's because people no longer need to go
to meetings to get info, and most people don't need the level of help that, for
example, alcoholics do with AA. There are so many
books and all out
there, magazine articles, the info is all over the place. On the other
hand, if you can put together a community center or program of some sort that's
truly useful for people and meets local needs (maybe not even calling it ADHD?)
then you may be a real angel. But be sure you have a business plan and an exit
strategy in place in advance for when it becomes boring to you.
<g>
luckyfr: I
have had Attention Deficit Disorder since I was 4. I have learned to do all
things in small bits! Is this a good way?
Thom
Hartmann: Yes! One of my favorite pieces of advice from
ADD Success Stories is: "Break big jobs into small
pieces."
David: I
know it's getting late. Thank you, Mr. Hartmann, for being our guest tonight
and for sharing this information with us. And to those in the audience, thank
you for coming and participating. I hope you found it helpful. We have a very
large and active community here at
HealthyPlace.com. You
will always find people in the
chat rooms and
interacting with various sites. I invite everyone to stay and chat in any of
the other rooms on the site. Also, if you found our site beneficial, I hope
you'll pass our URL around to your friends, mail list buddies, and others.
http://www.healthyplace.com. Thanks again, for coming
Thom.
Thom
Hartmann: Thank you, David, and thanks to everybody who showed
up!
David: Good
night, everyone. And I hope you have a good and peaceful weekend.
Disclaimer: We are not
recommending or endorsing any of the suggestions of our guest. In fact, we
strongly encourage you to talk over any therapies, remedies or suggestions with
your doctor BEFORE you implement them or make any changes in your
treatment.
We hold topical mental health chat
conferences every week. The schedule, and transcripts from previous chats,
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