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Chatting at CHADD With Some Amazing People

By Rick Green We are back home after a week in San Francisco. 4 days were spent at the CHADD conference speaking with some legendary figures and conducting 19, count them, 19 interviews. We hired a great local crew and taped some powerful stuff. At some points, our hotel suite was almost like the waiting room of a doctor’s office, only it was full of doctors, waiting to be interviewed. We spoke with ADHD coaches, educators, pediatricians, clinicians, and research scientists. I had a personal breakthrough too! None of my questions ran on for 2 or 3 minutes.  In the past they often did. Somehow I managed to keep the questions brief. Thankfully. Because the answers were amazing. I had 17 pages of questions, with 27 separate topics. And I don’t think I referred to them more than a half-dozen times. With one person, I asked a question and 34 minutes later I said, “Wow, thank you.” There wasn’t one person who couldn’t have gone on for hours, and not one I wasn’t wishing we could chat with all day. Usually I asked each person what they wanted to talk about most, what was the most burning issue they wanted to address. Which topics or concerns or new research was going to make the biggest difference for the most people? And then we were off to the races. Other interviews were focused on a big topic. Legendary researcher Dr. Lily Hechtman spoke for almost 45 minutes about one of the most pivotal studies on ADHD. She was brilliant. I was dazzled. Many others, especially the coaches, shared their personal stories of their own ADHD, sometimes funny, then sad. The confusion of not knowing,  “What’s wrong with me?” Suffering gives way to despair, then a diagnosis brings hope. It also brings anger and regret. But everyone moved forward, and they shared their triumphs and ongoing setbacks. The word that stuck with me was ‘ongoing’. Mastering one’s ADHD is ongoing. Never-ending. It’s something everyone is dealing with on a daily basis often hourly.  It is complex, it presents itself in so many different ways, and each person’s situation is unique. So it impacts and subtly undermines our best efforts in every area of life. Our book, ADD Stole My Car Keys was designed to capture and bring to life all the ways this ‘disorder’ can cause ‘disorder’. And the ways we can adapt to it, even before we know it’s there. I wrote short comedy skits. Not half hour sitcoms or, God forbid, full length screenplays. But the thing I was most present to during the interviews was how far people had come in mastering their ADHD. Progress is possible. Dramatic progress. But I’m not sure most of us appreciate how far we have come. Is that an issue of poor working memory? Or our perfectionism only let’s us see what we haven’t done, or what is wrong? Or is it simply an example of how quickly all humans adjust to the new normal. (Your iPhone 4 is a miraculous gadget, until the iPhone 5 comes out, then all you see is what your ‘old’ phone doesn’t do.) But in listening to people’s stories you can hear how things improve. Gradually. Some strategies work. Some didn’t. New habits built. Other ones failed to stick. It was like that line that your Grade 9 English teacher drew to illustrate the dramatic arc of the story, rising and falling action, building to a climax, and trailing off as everyone lives happily ever after. (Or sprawls dead, shot full of bullets, if it’s a Quentin Tarantino story.) The storyline begins with the inciting incident. In the ADHD story, it’s getting the diagnosis. And the action rises and falls. Two steps forward, one step back. If you’re lucky. Perseverance, pluck, and a bit of luck start to pay off. But unlike the rising and falling action in a novel, there is no climax. No single point of no return. No resolution. It’s ongoing. Which means it’s never to late to create the life story we want.
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10 Comments

  1. Wgreen November 21, 2012 at 6:34 am

    Well done, Rick. Good job. So… now that it’s over, what one new revelation left the greatest impression?? Any earth-shattering news?

  2. Rick November 22, 2012 at 5:12 pm

    Good question. (Hey, are we related? Green? Hmm.)
    The biggest revelation for me personally was hearing how ADHD overlaps Aspergers, with Dr. Edward Aull and seeing aspects of high-functioning Aspergers in myself. (And seeing why it works for me sometimes. And not others.) I know I keep saying you need a proper diagnosis, but it was more about recognizing things I do, many of which work for me, some which don’t.
    In terms of ideas, my impression is somewhat related, in that a lot of the people we interviewed talked about how ADHD rarely comes by itself, and there’s an overlap with OCD, ODD, Tourette Syndrome, Depression and Anxiety (Huge) and more.
    My general impression of the weekend is captured in what Ruth Hughes, tje head of CHADD, told Ava, that it felt like a very relaxed, fun, lively event. No stress. No … defensiveness? Lots of ideas and opinions. People were really curious and interested in finding out what’s going on. Especially the people doing the research. I would like to think that what we’ve done has helped take away some of the dread and loathing that most people have about the possibility that they fall into this spectrum, or that aspects of ADD and ADHD apply to them.
    The ancient Greeks had a saying, “Know thyself.” It feels to me like the whole field is becoming more of that. People want to know. “Yeah, I have a tendency to do that. Or think that way.” Or whatever. Is it partly shows like Monk or The Big Bang Theory where we recognize aspects of ourself? What do you think? Is there less stigma? Less ignorance?
    What else? I was charmed and entertained by the range of personalities. On camera and off.
    And I was amazed at the range of products. Some seemed very promising. Some stirred up my skepticism. (You can see by all the ADHD ads on our website, there are a lot of people with ideas and products on how to ‘solve this.’)
    And the amount of research and what is it showing, is always fascinating. Of course every study has it’s limits so it’s a matter of building up a lot of research, but wow, the human brain is astounding. The more I learn about the science, the more I’m in awe of human beings and how complex our brains are. Does that sound silly? I hope not.

  3. Wgreen November 23, 2012 at 6:35 pm

    Are we related?
    Well, my ADD was passed down through the Green branch of the family. So maybe somewhere in the mists of time somebody cast a spell on the Great Green Patriarch …?

  4. Rick November 28, 2012 at 6:40 pm

    Could be. Things were kind of loose back in prehistoric times.
    And also during the 60’s.

  5. Geryn December 1, 2012 at 9:41 pm

    I just saw your ADD and Mastering it on PBS during a fundraising drive and tho I know the disclaimer said it was not meant to diagnos ADD but as I watched my eyes widened and I felt a combination of fear and surprize, terror and elation. I want to say thank you for bringing this to my attention! So much of the material presented really hit home and defined so many things for me. I don’t know right now what I will do about this, I have to digest this awhile. But, whatever..THANK YOU!!

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