When I was a kid they told me, “If you care about something and work hard you’ll succeed.” I failed, a lot, and so I figured, “I must be lazy and apathetic.”
Eventually I found my ikigai and success. I thought, “now I care and now I’m working hard, I’m a different person, this is why I’m successful now.”
I always knew I had ADHD, but strangely nobody seemed to acknowledge it outright. My parents just laughed when the neighbor called me space-cadet. I was diagnosed with dysgraphia, which was all my mom wanted to talk about.
Recently I’ve been reading about ADHD and I came to a realization. I was never lazy or apathetic. I’m not a different person now, I just found something where the bulk of my work provides me the dopamine I need to stay engaged. I’ve also got some masking strategies, which took me 30 years to develop because I had to do it on my own.
Nobody looks at a paraplegic and says, “boy are you lazy.”
Please don’t let other people define you. Don’t mistake your ADHD for a character flaw. Find your ikigai. It won’t fix your ADHD, but it will make you a whole lot happier.
Ikigai:
A motivating force; something or someone that gives a person a sense of purpose or a reason for living. The feeling of accomplishment and fulfillment that follows when people pursue their passions. Activities that generate the feeling of ikigai are not forced on an individual; they are perceived as being spontaneous and undertaken willingly, and thus are personal and depend on a person’s inner self.
A casual community for people with ADHD
Values:
Acceptance, Openness, Understanding, Equality, Reciprocity.
Rules:
Encouraged:
Relevant Lemmy communities:
lemmy.world/c/adhd will happily promote other ND communities as long as said communities demonstrate that they share our values.
Great write up about how some of us can get the motivation we need.
I love that you found your ikigai!! 🥰 I helped my husband find his in small engine repair and vintage garden tractor restoration, and I’m working on figuring out my own in the administrative and creative stuff I do for our business.
A few years ago, I found this ikigai diagram, printed it, and hung it up in the bathroom where it’s visible from the shower, and I think seeing that every day has fueled our shift to self-employment and community engagement.
That’s how I found the word, I saw that diagram.
I appreciate this message, because the depression that comes from not accomplishing things makes me feel lazy.