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Petition to ADHD housing (sound proof) USA

Petition to ADHD housing (sound proof) USA2015-11-04T19:07:08+00:00

The Forums Forums Ask The Community Petition to ADHD housing (sound proof) USA

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  • #127556

    Shadow Nexus
    Member
    Post count: 181

    Hello all. Every every other disabled group gets accommodations, ramps, etc. We don’t. Sound proofing is considered a modification not an accommodation. This is a draft of a petition to create ADHD housing/community, base/sound proof high walls for one. I need feedback to lean it down and make it better. Try to be brief in comments, get to the point. Don’t comment about cost of this, just getting the ideas straight. This petition will go on moveon.org petitions website. I’ll post the link here for people to sign. Once, it gets the required number of signatures. It will be visible on their websites. If we can get enough people to sign, we can make a real difference.

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    Most people say Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder think it’s not real or fail to understand the magnitude of it. “You grow out of it.” or “Try harder” they say. Would you say that to someone in wheelchair or blind? You wouldn’t know someone had seizures unless they had one right in front of you. If you have depression or bi-polar disorder, no one will know unless you tell them. ADHD one of many hidden disabilities. Things that most people take for granted we can’t do.

    For most, sounds fade into the background with one foreground, being able to listen to one voice in a crowded room. When someone with ADHD hears this, they think, “You can do that?” Being ADHD, I have a completely different experience. You heard every person in the room talking at once. You can focus on that one voice for a few seconds at time and that takes a massive effort. It’s doesn’t take long before your exhausted and your dizzy from sensory overload. You must leave the area. Imagine hearing every sound in an area all the time. Very rarely can you shut out noise and only for a short time.

    Heavy base music makes you physically sick, hands shaking and nauseous. If it’s too loud, you leave the area or hold out for short time then leave. My tolerance loud music doesn’t increase, it goes down over time. What an ADHD person considers loud music, is nothing like “normal” people, much lower level. We are sound sensitive. Buildings that have “quiet hours” are uninhabitable outside quiet hours. We need a community that must be 24/7 quiet, no loud music or heavy bass ever.

    Being able to out sound into the background is an ability is hardwired in non-ADHD and genetically missing in ADHD. For me, there is no such thing as background noise, only foreground. I don’t get used to noise. I can only tolerate it for so long. I need regular hours of dead silence. My two housing experiences were noise hells. Uninhabitable outside “quiet hours”, quiet hours is still noisy. Relentless thumping of people moving around. Section 8 government housing is a joke. It’s nearly impossible to find decent non-microscopic safe housing, let alone quiet housing.

    I must draw a line in the sand. Not one more time. For me and many other ADHD persons, it is required for the government build enforced 24/7 quiet affordable living environment and/or community. At the minimum, units that are physically separated, single level, and built from the ground up to be sound proof, . The community is designed for noise sensitive or ADHD people. The community surrounded by base and sound proof high walls with a sound-lock (keeps from having noise come in every time gate opens). Community charter reads, “You can read any time day or night, inside or outside, and never worry about loud music, heavy base, and other loud noise.” The community enforces it with doubling fines and/or eviction for violation of local noise pollution laws.

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    #127579

    scott
    Participant
    Post count: 7

    The U.S. Government Printing Office has a publication called “Quieting” by an acoustical physicist and researcher named Raymond Berendt.  It is full of advice on how to modify your environment to make it sound proof.  It’s actually not that expensive.  An extra layer of drywall glued with a non-hardening glue, no screws or nails as they conduct sound; a ceiling of drywall hung on flexible hat channel with no other connections to the building– crown molding and flexible caulk can finish the room.  There are sleeves that can be placed in duct work to baffle the sound and dampen it– there are also HVAC registers that have aerodynamic fins that don’t have a shoooshing sound.  Put a sweep on the bottom of you door so that no sound can come under the door.  Hang a quilted blanket on the inside of your door.  Storm windows can have a dampening effect, especially if they are mounted on rubber.  You don’t have to do it to your whole house or apartment, just try it on one room.

    The principle is isolate the environment from vibration coming through the structure by placing something flexible between you.  You could probably come close to making it as soundproof as a recording studio.   I’ve used some of these techniques, they work.

     

     

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    #127584

    wiredonjava
    Participant
    Post count: 60

    Hmmm, interesting, Scott

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    #127586

    Shadow Nexus
    Member
    Post count: 181

    Update 11/11/2015

    ———————————————————————————————

    Most people say Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder think it’s not real or fail to understand the magnitude of it. “You grow out of it.” or “Try harder” they say. Would you say that to someone in wheelchair or blind? You wouldn’t know someone had seizures unless they had one right in front of you. If you have depression or bi-polar disorder, no one will know unless you tell them. ADHD one of many hidden disabilities. Things that most people take for granted we can’t do.

     
    For most, sounds fade into the background with one foreground, being able to listen to one voice in a crowded room. When someone with ADHD hears this, they think, “You can do that?” Being ADHD, I have a completely different experience. You heard every person in the room talking at once. You can focus on that one voice for a few seconds at time and that takes a massive effort. It’s doesn’t take long before your exhausted and your dizzy from sensory overload. You must leave the area. Imagine hearing every sound in an area all the time. Very rarely can you shut out noise and only for a short time. Use noise canceling headphones, they are worthless and totally ineffective. Even if they were, you would need to wear them all the time which is impractical.

     

    Heavy base music makes you physically sick, hands shaking and nauseous. If it’s too loud, you leave the area or hold out for short time then leave. My tolerance loud music doesn’t increase, it goes down over time. What an ADHD person considers loud music, is nothing like “normal” people, much lower level. We are sound sensitive. Buildings that have “quiet hours” are uninhabitable outside quiet hours. This is not PC to say, but i’m going to say it anyway. Children scream, thump around, and overall are massive sound problem. This will be a childfree community, no one under the age of 21 allowed. We need a community that must be 24/7 quiet, no loud music or heavy bass ever.

     
    Being able to out sound into the background is an ability is hardwired in non-ADHD and genetically missing in ADHD. For me, there is no such thing as background noise, only foreground. I don’t get used to noise. I can only tolerate it for so long. I need regular periods of dead silence. My two housing experiences were noise hells. Uninhabitable outside “quiet hours”, quiet hours is still noisy. Relentless thumping of people moving around. Section 8 government housing is a joke. It’s nearly impossible to find decent non-microscopic safe housing, let alone quiet housing.

     
    I must draw a line in the sand. Not one more time. For me and many other ADHD persons, it is required for a government build enforced 24/7 quiet affordable living environment and/or community. At the minimum, units that are physically separated, single level, and built from the ground up to be sound proof, . The community is designed for noise sensitive or ADHD people. The community surrounded by base and sound proof high walls with a sound-lock (keeps from having noise come in every time gate opens). Community charter reads, “You can read any time day or night, inside or outside, and never worry about loud music, heavy base, and other loud noise.” The community enforces it with doubling fines and/or eviction for violation of local noise pollution laws.

    ———————————————————————————————

    The rest is more of a rant, but I could use it as way to get people’s attention to the lack of ADHD housing. Since, no one commented on the essay. I’ll assume it’s good. Please comment on what of the rest here I can use. The petition is long already. I know.

     

    NCR was a noise hell(Fall 1998 to Spring 2001, plus 2 months sleeping on couch). I must complained to the “RA’s” (fake managers), get free rent in exchange for ignore peoples noise complaints, I must have complained 100+ times. One person was maybe was evicted in 3 years. I had to spend increasing amounts of time away from it over time. From just afternoons during the week, to all day and night all week long at the college, watching TV and doing homework only there. About Fall 2000, I found someone who I paid to sleep on their couch while still paying rent on the place that most of the time uninhabitable, living their full time for two months after graduation until I ran out of money and had to move back in with mother in Sept 2001. Mind you, in constant state of hunger all that time. Tried to find a pro-bono lawyer (Free), lot of “We don’t take those kind of cases.” We won’t help the little guy against a sleazy corporation. I wasn’t aware of “forced arbitration clauses.” So, I likely signed one.

    I couldn’t get any work. Gave up searching and applied for disability and got it on the first try. I got my first payment and block payment around July 2007. Moved out into another noise hell around Sept 2008. THE SAME %@#& HAPPENED AGAIN! After going through 5&1/2 years of noise hell and mostly uninhabitable, I went from 7 full days down to 10 mins per day to pick up clothes only. I had enough and moved out on July 29, 2014. Did I mention in constant state of hunger again because of the high rent.
    Office says to me, “Your entitled to the quiet enjoyment of the apartment.” I made relentless calls about blasting stereos and finally many calls to the police. Saying, “It’s not our problem.” This time I didn’t bother with lawyer. What’s the point? Same problem. A sleazy corporation got away with it AGAIN!

     

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    #127591

    Shadow Nexus
    Member
    Post count: 181

    The principle is isolate the environment from vibration coming through the structure by placing something flexible between you.  You could probably come close to making it as soundproof as a recording studio.   I’ve used some of these techniques, they work.

    That doesn’t work if your renting. Already stated, sound proofing is a modification, and not an accommodation. So, no apartment or house owner is required to do it. Your S.O.L.

     

     

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    #127660

    Shadow Nexus
    Member
    Post count: 181

    What? One person comments?    A whole community that supports ADHD. That supports those with sound sensitivity. 24/7 quiet living, never worry about %%%#### who blast loud music from houses, apartments, or cars. NO MORE TOXIC HEAVY BASS! Buildings that are built from the ground up to be sound proof. That are designed to deal light pollution as well. Quiet enough outside so you can read with no problems all year round.

    This your chance to contribute to the petition and help make it better. Don’t pass this by! 🙂

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    #127669

    mustachekitteh
    Member
    Post count: 6

    I honestly couldn’t read all of that.My focus level is really bad today.Though it would be nice if people would sound proof places better where a lot of other people live too.Though that might make wifi harder to set up.Since the sound proofing might mess that up.

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    #127676

    Shadow Nexus
    Member
    Post count: 181

    Sound proofing won’t affect WI-FI. Second, using public WI-FI makes it all too easy for hackers to get your name and password. If your home router is using older encryption, your just asking to get hacked. Even on good encryption, sooner or later they will break it. For matter, using no password is just stupid. Your better off using direct cable connections. Watch ‘CSI-Cyber’.

    Back to the topic, I like to get more help than the person who told me to post it.

     

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    #127767

    pinkdex
    Member
    Post count: 23

    Do you really think it’s a good idea to require other people to pay our housing bills? I don’t think any amount of “greater good” can justify my participation in legislation that makes others my slave by paying for my living situation.

    There are many people without ADD who feel similarly about noise; simply find a housing community with a noise ordinance. Old people, young people, and everyone in between hate noise. But for those who hate it most, these communities do exist and they are not difficult to find. I recommend trying city-data.com and posting on the forums, or looking to see how often people are receiving citations for noise ordinances.

    In general if you want to avoid these obnoxious noises your options are to live in the country, or find a quiet neighborhood in your city, or a neighborhood/town with a strictly enforced noise ordinance. You can always soundproof your own living space, but that would be far less economically feasible as simply moving away from the source of the noise.

    The other benefit of moving to a quiet area is you don’t need to be inside your soundproofed dwelling to avoid the noise, as it’s also quiet outside.

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