On this episode of The ADHD Mums Podcast, Jane is joined by Tammie to discuss her journey of receiving a late-stage ADHD diagnosis at the age of 40.
Tammie shares her experiences with different medications, highlighting the positive impact of Dexamphetamine and the challenges she faced with Vyvanse, as well as how Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT) became instrumental in managing her ADHD-related struggles.
Tammie shares on how Rejection Sensitivity Dysphoria has impacted her life and how she manages it day to day.
Hello and welcome to
the ADHD Mums podcast.
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:I am back and I just started to feel
like it had been a while and I realized
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:that it had been September school
holidays and then I had a recovery
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:phase after that, which was needed and
we've kind of jumped straight back in.
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:Who we've got today is we have
a personal share on RSD, which
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:is something that a lot of us.
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:I've got in my own episode out
on RSD and a share that I did at
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:work that backfired completely.
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:I think I actually cried
during the podcast.
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:It's one of the ones I always
talk about taking down.
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:And, but it's also, I've
received a lot of DMS about it.
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:And I thought.
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:Gee, people are relating to this.
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:This is a podcast that's
about relatability.
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:So I've brought in somebody who's
offered to share about how that
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:is, has impacted their life.
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:So Tammy Ray was diagnosed with ADHD at
40 years old, which was one year ago.
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:She has two daughters with ADHD
and ASD and she grew up with
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:brothers diagnosed ADHD as children.
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:Tammy uses photography in a
way to express her creativity.
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:And she has had a really up and down
roller coaster ride, I suppose with
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:late stage diagnosis and dealing
with how that's impacted her.
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:So welcome to you, Tammy.
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:Thank you.
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:Thanks for having me, Jane.
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:I'm excited.
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:So I picked up Sammy from a Facebook
ADHD Mums group that I like to sit
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:in and commentate, ask questions,
and it's just always interesting.
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:And Tammy responded and said that
she'd be willing or interested.
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:to share her story.
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:Can you tell us a little bit about
why you were interested in, you
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:know, you even responded to the
Facebook post in the beginning.
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:I guess with ADHD, it's becoming
such a high topic now that
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:I like to share my story.
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:I'm very open, very honest
about My struggle with ADHD,
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:things that I've put in place.
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:So I just want to, I guess, share a
few things that I've been through,
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:things that affected my life, my
children's life, my whole family really.
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:So yeah, I like to be an open book and
it's, I guess it's just one of those
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:things that it's come to me so late
for myself, but I know so much about
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:ADHD that I really just wanted to.
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:Show up from a different perspective.
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:Yeah, beautiful.
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:Okay.
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:So do you want to give us a little bit
of an overview on you know What was
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:your life like up until your diagnosis?
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:How did all that, you know kind of happen?
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:I'm everyone always wants to know kind
of our stories around that Yeah, I guess
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:as you said in my intro I grew up with
brothers with ADHD, especially my younger
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:brother He was diagnosed in the 80s at
about four or five Even back then, my
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:mum had a lot of struggles trying to
get him, you know, the, the help that
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:he needed throughout his, his life.
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:But me being, I guess, I was able
to go to school and concentrate.
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:I was sort of left behind.
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:Yet, now that you see all these
other things with RSD and, you know,
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:being inattentive and all those
things, you're just like, oh, wow.
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:So, you know, I've been
through that with my life.
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:When my eldest daughter, who's about
to turn 20, was about five, I saw
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:it in her and I knew straight away.
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:You've got ADHD and we got her, you
know, we went through that process
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:with her and hers was really simple.
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:It wasn't until my youngest who
is about to turn 12 was diagnosed
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:and I knew she was autistic.
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:I, you know, that's just what it was.
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:But when the pediatrician said, oh, she's
ADHD as well, I sort of went back at him
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:and said, no, no, no, she can concentrate.
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:She sits in class.
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:Okay.
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:And he's like, no, no, no,
look at all these other things.
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:And, you know, it got me
thinking, well, that's me.
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:That's what I do.
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:So I went on this bit of a path that like,
oh, hang on, maybe, maybe I'm the same.
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:And one of my closest friends,
she's not diagnosed, but she,
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:every time she sees me, she's
like, oh my God, you were so ADHD.
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:Can you please go and get tested?
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:So, you know, I've sort of lived
with it my whole life without.
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:And the last 12 months for an adult
with ADHD has been such an education.
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:I've been really blessed to know
so much about childhood ADHD and
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:how to manage things around that.
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:But yeah, coming into adulthood and
trying to figure out myself as being
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:complex, so yeah, that's pretty much
where I'm at with it at the moment.
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:I'm just, I'm still educating myself
and trying to figure out where I am.
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:I was very blessed with my diagnosis.
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:I have been through a lot.
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:I had an ex husband from the military
who ended up becoming a narcissist.
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:So, you know, I had to deal with
that with rejection sensitivity
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:disorder, which wasn't very pleasant.
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:And then I've been seeing the same GP
for about, since my youngest was born.
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:So about 12 years, I've
been seeing her and it was.
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:I got into a new relationship about
two years ago and he started really
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:going, this is just not right.
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:This is just not right.
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:There's something wrong.
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:You need to go talk to your doctor.
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:So, you know, I've gone in there
and we had a chat about ADHD
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:and she goes, you know what?
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:You meet every single category.
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:I was very blessed then to get
straight through to her psychiatrist
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:who was about to retire and he took
one look at me and my family history
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:and I didn't have to do any testing.
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:I was really lucky that.
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:We went straight into diagnosis
and straight into medication.
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:He, you know, he could see from my
whole family history and everything.
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:So, for that side of it I was really,
I was really blessed that I, I
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:didn't spend thousands and thousands
because of my massive family history.
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:And the fact that I had the same GP, the
same psychologist, they were able to, Get
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:all the information and just be able to
straight away go bang, yeah, you're right.
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:Okay, so are you still on medication?
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:Like how has that journey been?
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:People always want to know about, you
know, what you've tried and how it went.
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:So with my children, I sort of knew
what did and didn't work with them.
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:So I sort of went straight away to the,
you know, concert is not going to work.
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:This isn't going to work.
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:So I went straight to Dex
and it was incredible.
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:Just straight away.
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:I was like, Oh my goodness,
the voices have gone.
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:I can concentrate.
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:I can sit.
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:I'm not stressed about every little tiny
aspect of my, my life at the moment.
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:And I, and we did that for a
month and it was really great.
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:I would, I take three tablets in the
morning and took my lunchtime, which gets
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:me through the day and it was really good.
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:But then the doctor's like, I
really want you to try Vyvanse.
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:Went on Vyvanse and it was horrendous.
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:It actually destroyed my
relationship in the end.
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:The come downs at the end of the day
were horrendous for me as a person.
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:I know it's worked, I have a co worker
who Vyvanse is amazing for her, but for me
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:personally it was those come downs at the
end of the day that were just horrific.
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:I was a complete mess.
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:So I went back to the doctor
and we went back to Dex.
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:With that as well, I, I have
PMDD as well I'm assuming.
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:I, you know, that's from what I've
read and how I feel about myself.
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:I was noticing that week before
my period was due was just,
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:don't be near me, I'd stay away.
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:So I actually went on a low dose of Zoloft
as well, so my doctor put me on that.
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:We were just going to do it for the week
of the period to see if that would help.
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:It ended up being really good
that it's mellowed me enough every
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:day, so I take that as well now,
plus all the different vitamins,
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:magnesium, fish oil, all those things.
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:My next step is to work on
my diet and try and get that.
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:So that it's, you know, I'm eating
foods that help the brain basically.
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:So yeah, so Dex for me now, I don't think
I'll change, I'm quite happy where I am.
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:It's, I was binge eating a lot.
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:I, I work, you know, on computers
and I sit at a desk all day.
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:So I was finding, I put on
30 kilos over the years.
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:And Two years ago, I've lost
30 kilos in the last two years.
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:First year.
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:Wow.
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:Congratulations.
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:Oh my God.
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:That's huge.
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:Yeah, it's great.
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:And being on decks has really, it
sort of not, not only does it, it
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:doesn't take away my appetite as such,
but it stops me from binge eating.
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:So I'm not sitting at my
desk all day and just eating.
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:Crap all day.
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:I'm actually at lunchtime.
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:I'm like, Oh, I'm hungry now.
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:I'll have lunch, have my medication
and that'll generally get me through.
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:I mean, I still, I don't know about
many other people, but I have a
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:really bad Coke zero addiction.
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:My daughter finds it hilarious, sends me.
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:You know, Tik Tok's about it all
the time and stuff, but that's my
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:vice and I need to drink more water.
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:So I need to figure out
how I'm going to do that.
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:Oh, look, it's always a
stepping stone, isn't it?
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:It sounds like you've done
incredibly well to find the
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:right medication, get diagnosed.
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:I mean, look how far you've come.
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:You've lost, what did you say?
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:30 kilos.
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:Yes, I was only looking at a
photo the other day from 20 to
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:now, and I'm like, wow, it's not
even the same person anymore.
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:I'm hearing, you know, massive weight
loss as well, and I know that this
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:is an RSD episode, but people will
want to hear this, that's for sure.
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:How do you think that ADHD has
impacted your eating and then, you
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:know, being from non medicated to
medicated, you know, do you think that
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:was part of it or how did that work?
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:Absolutely.
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:So it, I was a massive binge eater.
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:I would, anytime that I felt
any type of stress or anything.
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:I need chocolate.
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:I need this, I need that.
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:And I would be straight into it.
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:And it was, it was really out of control.
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:So when I went on the decks, that was
actually the first thing I noticed
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:was that I'd sit at my desk and
I'd get my work done, but I wasn't.
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:Um, opening the drawer for a snack
or, or whatever was next to me.
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:So when I, when my brain
was like, Oh, you're hungry.
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:I actually would just go and eat properly.
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:So, you know, I'd have a salad for lunch
instead of going, ugh, I can't do this and
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:race down to McDonald's and get whatever.
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:So I've, I've found that it's,
it's helped me think first.
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:Cause generally I'd get overwhelmed
and go, I can't do this.
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:I'm just going to get
us takeout or whatever.
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:So.
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:It's just changing those little
things in my head that I can slow
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:down and go, okay, I've got food here.
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:I can eat that.
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:And that's, that's what I find.
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:I need, I actually need
to remember to eat.
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:So before I take my meds in the
morning, I make sure I have.
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:Something to eat.
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:So I actually, you know, TikTok's
been so great for my diagnosis,
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:but I pre make most of my meals.
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:I, I live alone generally, my daughter
and I, she's 50, 50 with her dad and I.
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:So I pre make a lot of meals and
have them in the freezer ready to go.
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:I find that it's a really helpful
thing, especially in those
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:nights when you're home alone and
you're just like, Oh, screw it.
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:Uber Eats is so easy.
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:I can just jump into the
freezer and grab something out.
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:So, you know, I'll write a list every
second Sunday of things I want to
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:eat during the week and I'll chuck
them in the freezer ready to go.
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:So that's been really, you know, helpful.
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:The medication really did.
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:It's been a life changer
for my diet in that sense.
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:You know, I have up and down moments where
I'm not doing great and I'll just be like,
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:screw it and, you know, have a binge.
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:But I think that's just
part and parcel of life.
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:Instead of getting upset at
myself, I just, you know, have to
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:go, okay, well, it is what it is.
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:You make up for it.
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:It's all good.
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:So yeah.
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:Yeah.
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:Diet's been probably, yeah.
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:One of the biggest changes in my life.
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:And.
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:You know, you're working from home a lot
and you finally go into the office after
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:a while and people are like, holy, you've
got, you know, you're looking great.
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:It's, you know, it's a, that's a
dopamine hit that you need for the day.
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:So that's always a really nice thing.
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:I really like going in and you
know, I like to op shop as well.
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:So we, you know, I'll go find
something nice and new there and
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:wear it to work and you know, you get
complimented on how you're looking.
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:It's a really nice feeling.
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:Yeah.
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:Yeah.
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:Beautiful.
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:There's a couple of things in that.
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:I just wanted to pull apart what you
said because it's so interesting.
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:In regards to the pre made meals, I
thought that was really interesting
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:comment because I noticed, or I,
this is my opinion with ADHD, it's
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:very difficult to actually break down
those steps because if you think about
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:what it takes to buy the ingredients,
put together a recipe, cook it.
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:Put it into containers
and put it into a freezer.
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:Those are actually, there's a lot of
executive function in those steps.
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:And I was wondering, is that because
of medication that you've been
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:able to figure out how to do that?
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:I think therapy.
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:I do a lot of DBT, so
Diabetical Behaviour Therapy.
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:I think that's been a real
game changer in my life.
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:I find that I write lists.
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:So, the medication helps me with the
fact when I'm up and I'm ready, if I've,
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:and I can sit down and write a list.
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:Generally, if I sit down, I turn
the TV on and I don't move, but if
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:I'm medicated, I'll know I'll write
my list and then I'll, you know,
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:start moving throughout the day.
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:So it does help, but for me, from that
point of view, if I've got a list in
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:front of me, just step by step, even if
I don't get through it all, I'm okay.
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:But mine was more probably from
a therapy side than a medication
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:side that has helped me because if
I don't get through it or I'm not
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:stressed about it, it doesn't matter.
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:But lists, I have lists everywhere.
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:Everything's a list.
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:My daughter's got lists,
checklists for school.
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:I've got everything sorted.
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:So even, even my medications
on a, on a list so that I can
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:remember because I have, that's
something that I struggle with is.
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:It's remembering things and doing things.
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:I have to have it written down visually
so I can have it blaring in my face.
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:So yeah, the, the list is, is my thing.
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:So you know, I write what I want,
what I want to make, what I need to
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:buy and you know, everything down.
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:Do you just do it in an exercise books?
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:Where do you put all your lists?
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:How does that work?
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:I can't do it on my phone because
you can hide your phone and I
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:can hide my notepad in my phone.
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:So I'm a paper person.
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:I have notebooks everywhere.
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:I've got one on my desk, one in
my work bag, you know, one in my
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:car, one on the kitchen bench, one
sitting next to me, things like that.
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:So I generally write
them down in notebooks.
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:And then it's visual.
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:I, I like to leave them on my
kitchen bench because when I walk
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:through my door, my kitchen's right
there and I can see my, my to do.
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:I've got one on there at the moment
of things that I need to finish
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:my housework off for the week.
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:So yeah, I am very, I'm very, very visual.
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:I need it.
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:It needs to be in my
face or it doesn't exist.
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:Okay.
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:Okay.
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:Got it.
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:And the other thing I was going to say
was in regards to, you know, how you
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:were saying that when you get up and you
wanting to have lunch, You would actually
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:make yourself proper food instead of like
snacking through the day or, you know,
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:driving down to getting some take away.
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:I was wondering again, is that the impact
of therapy or medication that you are
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:able to slow down and actually make
the salad and then sit down and eat it?
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:Or what do you think has changed there?
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:It's probably, it'd be a bit of both.
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:So the pre made things is
what really gets me going.
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:So I spent, as I said before, I
spend every second Sunday doing
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:up pre made, not only that though,
but I get lunch things ready.
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:So like I've got a big bag of
carrots in the fridge that I've cut
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:up and they're ready so I can just
take a few out instead of going to
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:the other snack place and finding
just a packet of chips or whatever.
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:I'll go there and grab
carrots and just some dip out.
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:And that'll be my say morning
tea and things like that.
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:So I, I have to be really strict on
myself to make sure that I do that.
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:And it's a bit of both.
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:It's some days I don't take my meds
on the weekend because I want to give
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:my brain a little bit of a break.
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:But when I know that that Sunday
that I need to get things done and
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:I need to really focus, I make,
I take my medication that day.
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:Cause it will.
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:Help me focus to get all those
little items done for the day.
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:And then it sets me up for the week
and I don't have that stress of
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:going, Oh, what am I going to do?
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:You know, even if you get home 15
minutes late, you're just stressed.
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:But, you know, I've already got
everything pre made ready to go.
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:So that Sunday is a really significant.
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:It's the Sunday that
my daughter's not here.
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:She's with her dad that I
just, yeah, smash out a heap of
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:baking and things for myself.
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:I've got, I've actually
got it on my phone.
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:I've got an alarm.
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:So like on a midday on that
Sunday, the alarm goes off and
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:I know it's time to get moving.
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:Yeah.
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:That's just that little reminder.
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:It doesn't come off.
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:It stays on.
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:Yeah, I do that for my medication as well.
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:I fix my medication every Sunday into
my little container on Monday to Sunday.
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:It goes off at 6 p.
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:m.
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:on a Sunday night and I know that it's
time to get up and get that organized.
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:The other thing I wanted to
ask you about as well, because
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:obviously you were diagnosed at 40
and you had, you know, a brother.
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:Was it one brother or two brothers
that were diagnosed with ADHD as kids?
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:I have one officially diagnosed, one
probably unofficial, my older brother
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:is only my half brother so I didn't
technically grow up with him and we
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:have different mums, but he's definitely
ADHD because I'm pretty certain our
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:dad is as well, but my little brother,
yeah, he, he was, yeah, yeah, diagnosed
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:around four or five, I believe.
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:Yeah, so my mum went
through a lot through this.
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:If he's had the benefit of being
diagnosed early and interventions and
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:awareness and possibly medication,
like how do you think it's impacted
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:your life not finding out and not
making these changes until you were 40?
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:I did go through a time recently
where I was really hurt by my family.
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:I just felt that, and even my brothers
actually apologised to me one night.
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:Just saying he felt bad that he took
all of our parents time because they did
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:put a lot of time into his diagnosis and
that and it's not his fault, it's not
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:my parents fault, it just, that's life.
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:But there was a little bit of resentment
there on, for my parents because I
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:did always feel like I was left behind
and I had to fend for myself a lot
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:of my life and, you know, get, you
know, it's, it's hard because I don't
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:want my parents to feel like they're,
you know, they did wrong because they
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:didn't really, they just didn't know.
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:And, yeah, so there's been resentment
over the last couple of years of me
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:going, you know, it's unfair that I got
to adulthood without anything, and I
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:had to do it myself, and, you know, I've
got girls and I got them diagnosed young
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:so that I could get them help and make
sure that they have the best lives that
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:they can have, but I still, and even
till today, I still don't believe it.
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:I've had the life that I could have had.
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:I could have done so much more.
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:I love my life and I, and I love
what I do for a living at the moment.
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:It's all those what ifs.
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:What if I could have went
to university and studied?
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:Because my big issue is I
can't concentrate for too long.
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:I can't, I need visual.
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:I can't sit and listen.
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:I need, I'm always writing and.
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:Things like that, and it's just those
little things, and you're just like,
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:Hmm, I could have been, you know,
there's just this little part of me
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:that's like I could have been more.
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:And yeah, I get a bit frustrated
with my family with that, but
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:you know, it's not their fault.
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:The 80s were a tough time, you know, girls
were never diagnosed with ADHD in the 80s.
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:I don't, I don't know anybody that was.
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:So, yeah, it's, yeah, it's tough, you
know, I was called an emotional child.
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:You know, I cried, I still
cry a lot now, but, you know.
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:I was just emotional.
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:So I guess, you know, that
emotional, well, what was it?
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:Now, now I know what it is, but
back then they're just like,
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:Oh, you're just a sookie kid.
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:I was a sookie kid.
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:Yeah.
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:It's funny though, because it's, it's
a great way of looking at it though,
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:because even if your parents had have
taken you repeatedly to the GP or
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:wherever they went, you, they probably
would have been told that you were fine.
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:So.
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:It's, it's a really
difficult time, I think.
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:Yeah.
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:When I was about 11 or 12, around my age,
my youngest daughter is now, I, we moved
399
:from Tasmania to Queensland and I went
through this really horrible stage where
400
:I was getting all these stomach issues
and was in and out of hospital and my
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:mum was taking me to doctors and things
and we couldn't figure out what it was.
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:But now, you know, I know that, you
know, stomach issues can relate back
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:to ADHD because my youngest daughter
is the exact age I was and she's
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:having the same thing at the moment.
405
:You know, that could have been something
that they looked at, that it was
406
:more of a You know, it was more of my
head than an actual physical illness.
407
:So, you know, I had all
these testings done.
408
:I was horrified.
409
:I was 11 and scared.
410
:And, you know, they're putting
things inside me, trying to
411
:figure out what was wrong with me.
412
:And, you know, they never, you know,
till this day, they don't know.
413
:But now I'm aware of, you know,
this is all an effect of, of that.
414
:So, you know, I guess
in a sense, mum did try.
415
:Without knowing, because
you just don't know.
416
:Yeah, it's interesting, the, I've done
a couple of episodes on recognising
417
:ADHD in girls, and a few people
have brought up the stomach pains.
418
:And I remember going to hospital like
three or four times as a kid, and
419
:they were always talking about taking
out my appendix, but they never did.
420
:There was never any, any known cause
and still to this day, I always say
421
:to my husband, I remember the pain.
422
:It was real.
423
:It was real.
424
:I remember it and I know it was real.
425
:So when my daughter lays on the
ground with a, you know, a hot bag
426
:on her stomach and starts crying
and moaning and my husband's like,
427
:there's nothing wrong with her.
428
:I'm like, well, there probably isn't
anything physically wrong with her, but I
429
:think her stomach does legitimately hurt.
430
:And that's exactly what my daughter's
going through at the moment and
431
:I, and I hate it for her because
I just have to say there's, there
432
:is nothing I can do for you love.
433
:We have to unfortunately live
with this and do our best to
434
:keep going during the day.
435
:So yeah, she struggles really
badly with tummy issues at the
436
:moment and it's just not kind.
437
:Poor little thing.
438
:Is, I always wondered if mine
just went back to anxiety.
439
:Do you think yours and your daughter's
is anxiety or what do you think it is?
440
:I think there is a bit of anxiety there.
441
:And hers does flare up a
lot more when she's anxious.
442
:So when she's needing to do things,
it's, Oh, my tummy's really hurting.
443
:You know, sometimes I'm just like,
Oh, you got to suck it up, mate.
444
:Cause.
445
:We've still got to get things done.
446
:It's just unfortunate life.
447
:I, you know, I, I try and sort of help her
mask it a little bit by, you know, I'll
448
:give her like a multivitamin or something.
449
:And sometimes that just magically works.
450
:So yeah, I think, I think it's a
bit of everything, but yeah, there's
451
:definitely mind flares up a lot more
when I'm feeling anxious or overwhelmed.
452
:Absolutely.
453
:Okay.
454
:So let's go into the RSD.
455
:I just wanted to kind of get a general.
456
:Overview of, and plus, as I said,
people find it really interesting to
457
:hear other people's stories to see
the similarities and the differences.
458
:So in regards to RSD, because you said
that's had a big impact on your life.
459
:Can you tell us a bit more about that?
460
:Yeah, absolutely.
461
:So I actually had never
heard of RSD until.
462
:Earlier this year, so it was even after my
diagnosis, they were looking at Borderline
463
:Personality Disorder for me as well.
464
:And, you know, the correlation
between the two is significant.
465
:But when I really got into it, the
RSD, it's, it's significant in my life.
466
:There's many times.
467
:I always think about my eldest daughter.
468
:We're very, we're very close.
469
:I was only 21 when I had her,
so she's about to turn 20, and
470
:I think about her childhood and
how my RSD has impacted her life.
471
:So there'd be times where, you know,
she'd have a few friends that would
472
:hang out together, and she would
find out, and she would tell me,
473
:and I would feel rejected by that.
474
:Like, well, why weren't we invited?
475
:What, you know, what have we done wrong?
476
:You know, all these thoughts would go
through my head, and, you know, to the
477
:point where I actually Stop talking
to people like there's a lot of people
478
:that I had that were friends that
I now no longer speak with because
479
:of Things like that, where I went,
you know, a couple of the kids got
480
:together and they had a sleepover.
481
:My daughter wasn't invited.
482
:They sent her a Snapchat or something
like that and, you know, we got offended.
483
:And she, she came to me and I
couldn't control my emotions
484
:either because I was upset.
485
:with her, because I'm like,
well, why aren't I there too?
486
:They're all there together.
487
:They're supposed to be my friends.
488
:And of course I let it take over
and I messaged them and called
489
:them and just went, nope, I'm done.
490
:And I walked away.
491
:So I've lost a lot of friendships in that
over the last probably 10 years or so.
492
:My relationships, especially the one that
I've currently come out of, unfortunately.
493
:The RSD has always been
really bad with that.
494
:I, yeah, that, that one's a tough one.
495
:He's a, he's a great man and I adore
him, but he, he didn't deal well with
496
:my RSD because I have a lot of trauma
from my ex husband and I brought that
497
:over to our relationship and it'd
just be little things, you know, he'd
498
:be like, he's got children as well.
499
:And he'd be like, Oh, I'm going to go
hang out with the boys for a little bit.
500
:You know, we'll go down to the skate
park or whatever they wanted to do.
501
:And I would be like.
502
:Why am I not invited?
503
:Why can't I come?
504
:And I would get, I wouldn't say anything,
but I, I'd get, you know, pissed off.
505
:And I'd be just like,
well, this is just shit.
506
:Why, why can't Sienna and I come?
507
:Why can't we come and have
fun with you guys as well?
508
:But it's just him wanting to, you know,
just spend some time with his boys.
509
:And, you know, and I do that as well.
510
:I'll take my daughter out and we'll go
out and have fun, but I felt this massive
511
:rejection and I would get really angry
at him and he couldn't understand it.
512
:And neither did I at the time because, you
know, after and, you know, hours later I'd
513
:be like, Oh yeah, it doesn't even matter.
514
:Like he's just spending time with his
kids, but it really, you know, it put
515
:a massive effect on our relationship
because I just couldn't understand
516
:why we couldn't do everything as a
family unit when really, you know, they
517
:just want to bond as, you know, sons
and father, which is understandable,
518
:but now when I'm medicated, like
I can feel it come up, I can feel
519
:that overwhelmingness that I'm being
rejected, and It was only the other day.
520
:I think I was on the train going to work.
521
:It must've been Monday
or Tuesday last week.
522
:And I'd got a message from his,
my ex partner, but we still, we're
523
:still weird place at the moment.
524
:But he messaged me to say that he just
needed to spend some time on his own.
525
:And he gets like that.
526
:He can very much just
be on his own and happy.
527
:And I got this overwhelming
sense of what have I done now?
528
:This is.
529
:I can't understand why he's doing this
and I got really, really frustrated, but
530
:I'd only just taken my medication and
after sitting on the train, had my music
531
:on, probably about half an hour later,
the whole sensation came out of my body.
532
:And I was like, wow, my meds are amazing.
533
:Like that was just one real
moment where I realized that my
534
:meds have made me go, hang on.
535
:He's just wanting to chill on his own.
536
:Like, why am I getting so stressed out
about someone telling me he wants to hang
537
:out on his own for a couple of hours?
538
:And you know, I felt it.
539
:And in my head, I was like, I can't
live without my medication now.
540
:I knew in that moment, it was
last week, I had just this massive
541
:epiphany that I realized that
My medication, I have to take it
542
:because it's those things like that.
543
:Like I can, you know, I can sit in
the, I can sit at work and forget
544
:my meds and things like that.
545
:But it's all that other stuff like
the RSD that it really does help
546
:me just stay calm and rational.
547
:I'm not, I can be really illogical.
548
:So those rational thoughts come
straight in and they come straight out.
549
:But when I medicated, they don't
come straight up, they're there and I
550
:can feel them, but I don't say them.
551
:And that's.
552
:Where I felt this massive change
in my life, probably even just in
553
:the last probably three months.
554
:I've been living on my own
for about three months now.
555
:And I've really noticed that
I've been able to control that
556
:way more than I could before.
557
:And yeah, a little bit
of dbt in with that.
558
:Cause I do a lot of mindfulness and
I do a lot of adult coloring and all
559
:those things, but it really is my
meds that make me sit back and go,
560
:okay, process this easier and realize
that it's just, you feel rejected
561
:when you're not, you know, and social
media has been a massive, massive.
562
:Massive thing for that.
563
:So, you know, you'll see people getting
together, even people that I don't even
564
:want to hang out with, but I'll see
them, you know, they'll tag each other
565
:in a photo and just little wave of.
566
:Oh, why am I not?
567
:I'm not there.
568
:That's unfair, but I don't
even want to be there.
569
:It's a really weird feeling that
you feel rejected, but you don't
570
:actually care because you didn't
want to be there in the first place.
571
:It's a really, a really weird feeling.
572
:And it, you know, until I had that
name for it, and then I was able to
573
:go in and have a look and see what
rejection sensitivity disorder is.
574
:I was like, there are massive
light bulb moments and it's really.
575
:Just being able to identify it,
put a name and a label on it.
576
:People are like, Oh, I don't like labels.
577
:I love labels.
578
:I'm labeling it.
579
:This is how I feel.
580
:And even when I'm having a
rejection moment, I'll actually.
581
:Tell the person, look, I'm suffering
this at the moment, just give me
582
:a minute and I'll get over it.
583
:And you know, that's how
I'm trying to work my life.
584
:I'm, yeah, I do it at work.
585
:You know, there's a, Actually, one
of the stories I was going to tell
586
:and I've just re remembered it.
587
:When I first started at my old job, I was
at my old job for 15 years and I worked
588
:in the state government call center.
589
:We get a certain amount of calls
listened to per month and they
590
:evaluate them and see how we're going.
591
:So that doesn't work well for me because
if like, if you don't part that, you
592
:know, you can pass or fail calls.
593
:If you fail, they don't, as long as you're
not doing anything wrong, they don't
594
:care, but there's certain things that you
shouldn't be saying to customers on the
595
:phone or, you know, you can, you know, we
all make mistakes and things like that.
596
:But there was one of the
first ones I ever got back.
597
:I just looked at it.
598
:I was mortified.
599
:I, you know, I passed nine
of the, so we get 10 calls.
600
:I passed nine, but that one
call that I didn't pass.
601
:It was a mess.
602
:I was crying.
603
:You know, I just, I lost it.
604
:I'm like, why didn't I pass this?
605
:I don't understand.
606
:This is ridiculous.
607
:I, and everyone, you know, my boss
was like, it's fine, it's fine.
608
:It doesn't matter.
609
:You know, we know you're really good
at your job and things like that.
610
:And you know, I've had that whole time
that every time this has happened, I
611
:get that straight back on the emails.
612
:How have I, you know, how did I do
so bad and rah, rah, rah, rah, rah.
613
:And now I'm like, Oh, hang on.
614
:Just remember that this is.
615
:This is RSD, you know, I, I was talking
with my boss just before I move.
616
:I've moved jobs about three months ago
now into an amazing, incredible job.
617
:I was talking to my
boss just before I left.
618
:And I said, it's funny because I'll
send you this annoying email going,
619
:I can't believe I failed this and
then, you know, an hour later I'll
620
:be like, oh, don't worry about it.
621
:It's fine.
622
:And you know, he got used to it
cause he knew just to wait until.
623
:You know, I come back to him before he
actually said anything if I actually
624
:genuinely was upset with it or if
I just had that emotional reaction.
625
:So yeah, it's, yeah, it's
affected all means of my life.
626
:It's really interesting though to hear
someone else talk about it because I
627
:was actually thinking of my daughter
when you were talking because I
628
:always say to my husband, so she's
only, she's about to turn eight.
629
:And one of my good friends is
the teacher's aid in her grade.
630
:So I actually have a
outsider's point of view.
631
:That's a friend of mine that I trust.
632
:And then I get the actual version of
events from Gigi and Gigi's version
633
:of events all the time is just.
634
:She will talk negatively about two
particular girls who are both alpha
635
:females, and she's an alpha female.
636
:So she can't handle it, right?
637
:She can't handle anyone that's telling
her what to do when she's the boss.
638
:And, Anyway, it's interesting because
I'll mention to my friend, Oh, Gigi's
639
:having a hard time because of this
and this, and she'll be like, That's
640
:really funny that you say that because
she plays with this girl and this
641
:girl and this girl all lunchtime.
642
:She played soccer today.
643
:She had the time of her life, but all
I hear is these negative interactions,
644
:but often they're extremely small and
the school is really good because when
645
:they sit her down in this little empathy
circle that they do, the other girl
646
:either has no memory of this occurring
or it's so small they barely remember
647
:it and they're not affected by it.
648
:But for Gigi, it so consumes
her, she can't learn.
649
:It sounds like RSD, which is, I actually
was looking up like negative cognitive
650
:bias and all of these psych terms, and
now I'm like, this just sounds like RSD.
651
:And I look back now and I see
that my eldest daughter, and now
652
:that I'm more educated, I'm able
to handle my eldest daughter.
653
:My eldest daughter has RSD quite badly.
654
:She's basically me, modified.
655
:So, I can now handle her emotional
deregulation better as a parent
656
:than when she was little.
657
:Cause, you know, she still had,
she called me the other day.
658
:She was supposed to go vote.
659
:She's in Sydney and, but her
address is still here in Brisbane.
660
:And she didn't know where to
go and she's freaking out.
661
:And I'm like, right, hang on.
662
:And she's like, I just can't do it.
663
:I can't do it.
664
:It was 11 o'clock in the morning.
665
:She had all day.
666
:So.
667
:Normally I would, I would go up with
her, so I'd be up here going, I don't,
668
:you know, but I was able to stay
down and, and sort it out for her.
669
:And, you know, I sent her a couple of
links to where she needed to go and.
670
:It all worked out.
671
:But if that had happened a few
years back, we both would have just
672
:been completely all over the place.
673
:And, you know, we can't do this,
it's just impossible, but she had the
674
:same thing with girls in her grade.
675
:So a lot of, she's an alpha male,
she'll, alpha male, she's an alpha
676
:female, always will be an alpha female.
677
:And she's the same in class,
you know, she'd have these
678
:tiny little bits with girls.
679
:And then I'd go to the parents
and go, your kid said this
680
:about my kid and rah, rah, rah.
681
:They're like, I don't, I
don't think that happened.
682
:And yeah, again, you know, it just
caused so much disharmony between people.
683
:I think they stopped wanting to be around
us because it, you know, I was very
684
:defensive when it come to my daughter and
I was, I was lucky that I did have a few
685
:people in my life that understood us, but
in general, yeah, we, we did struggle.
686
:Both of us trying to maintain friendships,
even to this day, I still, I have a very,
687
:I have a lot of friends, but I only have
a couple of really close people that I'm
688
:bonded with and they just understand.
689
:I think we're all the same.
690
:I think we all congregate together for a
reason because we understand each other.
691
:Yeah, it's, it, well, yeah, you're
probably neurodiverse all of you
692
:together, which I tend to hang out
with neurodiverse people as well.
693
:That's right.
694
:We say, you know, we mean it in a funny
way, but you know, crazy loves crazy.
695
:So.
696
:One of us will, you know, we've got a
tribe, so we've got a tribe around us.
697
:So my, my best friend, she's actually
a foster parent and she's got seven
698
:children around her at all times and
a lot of them are on the spectrum.
699
:She actually diagnosed my youngest
down to the T of exactly what she had.
700
:She knew everything and I, I disagreed
with her and she's like, no, I know.
701
:And yeah, doctors proved her right.
702
:So she likes to tell me that
she told me so, but she's got a.
703
:10 year old foster son and my 11 year old
and him, they're like two peas in a pod.
704
:They've got the same autistic
interests and things like that.
705
:So Sienna doesn't, my youngest Sienna, she
doesn't have a lot of friends at school
706
:cause she doesn't relate to people her
own age and you know, we're trying to
707
:get through that struggle at the moment,
but out of school, she's got, you know,
708
:a couple of kids that are just like her
and she can go off and do her own thing.
709
:So I've really mellowed a lot
with her and found her a tribe
710
:that she can go and be with.
711
:Which has been a real blessing for her.
712
:Whereas I don't try and push
the friendships at school, where
713
:I did with my oldest Maddie.
714
:I, you know, I took her to school
things to try and push the friendships.
715
:But with Sienna, I can see that she's a
bit different and she's happy being in the
716
:library with the librarians in lunchtime
and has her friends out of school.
717
:So she's quite a, she goes to
high school next year though.
718
:So that'll be a whole new thing.
719
:A mum told me about a year ago, I
thought it was really good advice.
720
:She said to me, You want to spread
out the friendships with girls,
721
:particularly, and she's not, this
is just her perspective, right?
722
:This is just her as a mum.
723
:She's got two girls.
724
:And she said to me, you know,
if you're going to join Nippers,
725
:join, don't join the one that's
attached to the public school, if
726
:you're at the local public school.
727
:Join the one the suburb over.
728
:If you're going to join netball or
hockey, go to the one that's a little
729
:bit further, because if a fallout
happens at school, it won't consume them,
730
:because they'll have other friendships.
731
:But if everywhere you go,
those same kids are there, It's
732
:so triggering for the child.
733
:I thought that was really great
advice because their out of
734
:school friendships can be really
important to break up the intensity.
735
:Absolutely.
736
:So my eldest daughter did all
star cheerleading for eight years.
737
:So when we were having issues at school,
she had her, what we call her cheer
738
:friends, which were, we call it a family.
739
:It was a cheer family.
740
:So she, you know, she had
those two different worlds.
741
:And that, you know, thinking that
way, that worked really well because,
742
:you know, if she didn't have someone
here, she had someone over there.
743
:So that was always really great for her.
744
:So yeah, that is really true that,
yeah, don't try and mix school and
745
:well, you know, I think about it too.
746
:I don't, I mean, I've started a new
job, but I don't generally have a
747
:lot of friends that I work with.
748
:Like they're, they're coworkers and
things like that, but I don't generally
749
:hang out with them out of work.
750
:I've got my friends.
751
:Thanks.
752
:That understand me and understand
my quirks and things like that.
753
:So that's how I put it to
my youngest daughter that.
754
:You know, she, she's going through a real,
she, she's probably got a little bit of
755
:RSD at the moment where she's feeling a
bit rejected by the girls at school and
756
:she's not understanding why they don't
want to like the things that she likes.
757
:You know, I'm trying to explain that,
you know, sometimes the things that you
758
:like aren't exactly what the normal.
759
:You know, 12 year old girl will like so,
you know, you've just got to find your
760
:right people and you found them out of
work, out of school, you know, I don't
761
:talk to people at work, out of work often.
762
:So it's the same type of deal.
763
:So I'm trying to get
her through with that.
764
:But she doesn't have the RSD side as heart
bad as what my eldest daughter and I do.
765
:And I do wonder if maybe I push the
RSD on my daughter with the way that
766
:I would Transcribed React when she
was little so that she then felt that
767
:impulsiveness that I was feeling,
you know, just thinking about it
768
:now out loud, you know, I probably
did and I'm trying to sort of change
769
:that now, but she has a lot of that.
770
:I don't have any friends and you know,
this is happening and it's not fair.
771
:So I can see a lot of me and
her now that I'm diagnosed
772
:and I'm educating myself more.
773
:So that's been really, that's a bit
tough for me that I've put something
774
:on my kids because I never wanted
to do that because I always felt it.
775
:That's what happened to me as a child.
776
:I didn't get that type of privilege
where I could give my kids everything.
777
:That didn't make any sense.
778
:I, I didn't get a lot as a child, so
I try to give everything to my kids.
779
:And yeah, I look now and think, wow, I did
put a lot on my daughter, unfortunately.
780
:And yeah, it was really due to.
781
:Undiagnosis and education, you know, even
with, without the diagnosis beforehand,
782
:I had already started looking things up,
but the RSD never came up until yeah,
783
:earlier this year, I just, I was reading
up on something and the words came up
784
:and it just, it, yeah, blew my mind.
785
:I'm like going through, I'm
like, Oh yeah, that makes sense.
786
:That makes sense.
787
:That makes sense.
788
:And it's just those overwhelming
feelings that, you know, you're
789
:not wanted and everybody hates you.
790
:And it's just.
791
:It's a horrible feeling to have, and you
do, I, you know, I went through a stage a
792
:few years back where I just stayed home.
793
:This is when I was quite overweight.
794
:I didn't go anywhere.
795
:I didn't want to see anybody.
796
:Because I didn't want to be rejected
all the time, because that's how I felt.
797
:I was gonna go somewhere and do something.
798
:They were just going to, you know, not
want to be near me or I didn't even
799
:try for new jobs until this year due
to that fear of not getting it because
800
:I get so overwhelmed and upset that I
just didn't even want to apply for jobs.
801
:So I stayed in the same role for 15
years, even though everybody there said,
802
:Oh, you know, I needed more because.
803
:I love the job, I just, I needed more
out of my life, but I was too scared
804
:of rejection to go forward with it.
805
:It wasn't until I got a bit of a mentor
last year and she really helped me
806
:through and helped me start applying
and push me to apply for things.
807
:And even when I did get rejected on
those roles, like I still get upset,
808
:but I just had to realize, you know,
there's something out there for me.
809
:I'll get there.
810
:I just, you know, you need more time
instead of before I would just be,
811
:I would, you know, I'd go into this.
812
:Big depression for weeks
on end feeling worthless.
813
:So, you know, I, when I finally got
the role I've got now, you know, I
814
:felt, you know, grateful that I finally
found my feet and where I'm going,
815
:but I could have done this years ago
and I didn't because I was too scared
816
:because I didn't want to be rejected
and feel stupid and that's how I felt
817
:my whole life that, you know, I didn't.
818
:You know, even school exams back when you
were in high school, I didn't even do half
819
:of my exams because I thought I'd fail.
820
:So I may as well just fail.
821
:So why, why go and do these exams
when, you know, it doesn't, you know,
822
:you're not getting anything out of it
because you're just going to fail it.
823
:So yeah, it consumed my whole life.
824
:It's very upsetting now when I
look back that I've got to 41,
825
:I'm only now starting a career.
826
:All my managers are younger than me and
I feel influenced by them and I'm like,
827
:hang on this, also they're in their 30s
and I'm in my 40s and you know, I've
828
:just got to remember that, you know, I'm
still young, I'm 40, 41 and I've still
829
:got a long time left, but it's just
all those years and you've got to, I
830
:think you've got to sit down and really.
831
:And this is what I'm trying to do in
my life at the moment is, is mourn
832
:that, mourn what could have been.
833
:And that's what I've been going
through the last few months.
834
:It's just mourning the life I could have
had, the people that I've let go of my
835
:life that, you know, maybe I, I shouldn't
have all because I wasn't diagnosed
836
:with something that I could have been
as a child and really got the help for.
837
:So that's been really tough this year.
838
:A lot of people, a lot of
women that I interview talk
839
:about unfulfilled potential.
840
:Is, is really the thing that comes up.
841
:It's, and some of them are successful,
you know, they're, they're not, they're
842
:nothing to say that they haven't done
well, they have done well, but for them
843
:with what they know they could have
achieved and the people around them
844
:watching them go higher or, or get a, get
a different path that they could have had.
845
:That kind of seems to be a lot of
the grieving is that it's not that
846
:they're not successful, that it
just, they could have been more.
847
:Yeah, I feel the same.
848
:Like, it's not that I haven't been
unsuccessful, I've owned a home, you know?
849
:I've traveled the world, you know, my
children have everything they could
850
:possibly ever want in their lives,
but it's still that extra part where
851
:you're like, I could have, I could
have done more with my, you know, I
852
:could have felt, I could have been
so much more and I could have given
853
:more to the world like I am now.
854
:And I'm, I work for Aboriginal
Torres Strait Islander housing
855
:and in their projects team.
856
:And I absolutely love it.
857
:I'm, you know, I'm down low.
858
:But they know that I want more so
they give me more and I'm, I'm very
859
:blessed that they're very, I'm very
open about my ADHD there and how I
860
:communicate and things like that.
861
:So I'm very, very lucky to be in a
role where they're really open and
862
:honest and, and I'm just grateful that
they, you know, they know that I'm,
863
:I'm better than the role that I'm in.
864
:I needed a stepping stone.
865
:So I'm just grateful that I'm, I'm making
that opportunities happen for myself now.
866
:But if you had have told me two
years ago, I would still be stuck
867
:at my old job, just doing the same
thing day in, day out and hating it.
868
:So it, it sounds similar again in
the themes of the other women that
869
:I interview in terms of awareness,
like being diagnosis in my mind,
870
:aside from medication, one of the
largest major advantages is awareness
871
:of who you are and how you operate.
872
:Do you think it's the internal awareness
or do you communicate the awareness?
873
:Like how does, how have you managed
to Um, or positively manage your RSD.
874
:It's probably a bit of both.
875
:So I can, I think living on my own
has really helped because before
876
:there was somebody already there
and I would just verbal it straight
877
:out that what, you know, the RSD
was doing and, you know, it'd be all
878
:negative and horrible and just ruin
everything, but now that I'm by myself.
879
:I can take a minute and go, hang
on, why am I feeling so overwhelmed?
880
:And then I'll, you know, I'll either
leave it because it doesn't matter, or
881
:I'll go, oh, hang on, maybe it's a little
bit more, or I'll, I'll tell people.
882
:I'm pretty good at telling people,
like, I had to, I got some bad feedback
883
:earlier in the year from my boss.
884
:I wasn't in a great place that day
to begin with, but I really took
885
:it really badly, and I just had to
say to her, I said, it's actually
886
:not you, you're not actually doing
anything wrong, it's just my emotions.
887
:I can't control this at this moment.
888
:I said, you know, don't feel like
you're doing anything wrong by giving
889
:me bad feedback because I can take it.
890
:It's just that I need to have this
moment in this moment, unfortunately.
891
:So I'm pretty good.
892
:I'm very open about it.
893
:If I'm having one of those moments,
I'll tell people, just give me a second.
894
:I need a moment and I'll, you
know, I'll either walk off.
895
:So I'm more self aware
than I've ever been.
896
:I mean, it's still slow process.
897
:It's only been probably the last six
months that I've really started to.
898
:Understand RSD and really work it.
899
:And DBT is just phenomenal for that.
900
:I'm very blessed that my psychologist
was able to do that one on one with me.
901
:She's amazing, but that, yeah, just
stopping and just breathing for a second
902
:and, you know, giving myself that moment
to whether or not, which way I'm going
903
:to go, but I think, I think telling
people makes people more accepting.
904
:So, you know, in the past,
people just think I was, as I
905
:said, as a kid, I was emotional.
906
:No, I just felt rejected and,
you know, that was my feelings.
907
:It wasn't somebody else's feelings and
it didn't mean that anyone was doing
908
:anything wrong because they weren't.
909
:It's just.
910
:How I felt, but I didn't know
that at the time and now I do.
911
:So it's, yeah, it's really, it's a
difficult one to, to process and it,
912
:and it's still, you know, a lot of
people don't understand it in my life
913
:and that's okay, I try to educate
as much as I can, that this is just
914
:who I am or who my children are.
915
:Sometimes we can't, can't
control it, but no one's perfect.
916
:And there is going to be times
where I don't, and all I can do is
917
:just say, look, this is what it is.
918
:I'm putting a label on it, I
can apologize, but I can't, I
919
:physically can't take things back.
920
:So it is what it is, I guess for
me, I'm, yeah, if you can't accept
921
:that part of me, then I can't
really have people in my life.
922
:And I've, I have removed a significant
amount of people out of my life recently,
923
:even, you know, you do your Facebook
and like I did a massive cold cause
924
:I was just like, I don't actually
need these people around before.
925
:I was like, Oh, I have this many
friends on social media and la da,
926
:because to me that was a dopamine hit.
927
:But now.
928
:I just don't need it.
929
:I don't need all these people knowing
things about my life and, you know,
930
:I just want to keep my, my, my circle
how it is and small and, you know,
931
:talking to those that genuinely.
932
:Want good for me and my children.
933
:So that's yeah, I think I
went on a whole journey there.
934
:Oh, no, I loved it I was gonna ask you
one more burning one and then we'll
935
:finish up I wanted to ask you if you
start to feel the sensations of the RSD
936
:coming on like let's say you receive a
message you Get a phone call something
937
:happens And you start to feel it.
938
:Let's say this is best
case scenario, right?
939
:Like I understand good days, bad
days, you can't always be perfect.
940
:In that, what would be the best
case scenario for you for like for
941
:someone listening who might want
to work towards, you know, making
942
:some changes in RSD for them?
943
:What could you recommend doing?
944
:I think if you can, and sometimes
it's hard in the moment, but
945
:it's just to take a breath.
946
:And I know people say that all
the time, Oh, just deep breathe.
947
:And my daughter hates it.
948
:She hates being told to breathe.
949
:She just wants to punch people pretty
much when someone tells her to breathe.
950
:So I think if you can just step away from
the moment and if you're in a place, it's
951
:just to write down how you're feeling.
952
:This is what my psychologist
said to me because when I have
953
:that overwhelming feeling.
954
:I need to get, I have to
get it out of my head.
955
:It can't stay up here.
956
:So I'm either going to
verbalize it or send a message
957
:or do something to somebody.
958
:But what I do now is, I write it down.
959
:This is where I do use
my notes on my phone.
960
:So I write it, instead of writing it
as a text message and verbal diarrhoea
961
:ing to somebody, I just write it in my
notes, at least then it's out of my head.
962
:And hopefully by then, and I've got
through it, I can realize the process
963
:that hang on and that even if I do need
to send it, what I've been doing now
964
:is I'll write it all out in my notes
and then I go through and I actually
965
:go, Oh, that doesn't need to be said.
966
:And I remove it.
967
:That doesn't need to be said.
968
:And I remove it because I like to,
when I tell a story, it's got a
969
:backstory to the backstory to the
backstory of why I am where I am.
970
:So, and I, I do that, I, I, pardon
me, I was doing that at work as well,
971
:and it wasn't until one of the ladies
at work said, we don't need a novel,
972
:we just need, we need this, not this.
973
:Like, you know, you need
smaller, not bigger.
974
:So it's, so it's me, it's, you know,
I have to, I have to backspace my
975
:life is pretty much what I say.
976
:So, you know, I've just got to
delete the words that don't.
977
:Does it matter to the story?
978
:And my psychologist actually said to
me, instead of writing a paragraph, dot
979
:point, so I, I dot point, you know, down
the things and then I'll, you know, go
980
:up and go, okay, that doesn't matter.
981
:That doesn't matter before I'll send
things through 90 percent of the time.
982
:I've got really good at it.
983
:If I'm really overwhelmed.
984
:No, it just goes out as verbal diary.
985
:You know, I had that this week.
986
:I just, I got overwhelmed this
week and verbal diary it out.
987
:Shouldn't have.
988
:Yeah.
989
:But I can't take it back, you
know, I'll come, you know, I've,
990
:I've left that parked it for
now and I'll come back to it.
991
:You know, I like to concentrate
on work during the week.
992
:I'll come back to it on the weekend and
go, okay, this is where I went wrong
993
:and data, data, data, and sort that out.
994
:But for now I'm just
leaving it where it is.
995
:So yeah, it's a, it's, it's always
going to be there and it's always in the
996
:back of your head so you, you can, if
you can feel it and I've been blessed
997
:now that I can feel it coming, that
I can start learning to control it.
998
:But it doesn't always work.
999
:But yeah, taking that step back and trying
to, yeah, write it down or walk away from
:
00:47:34,470 --> 00:47:36,330
the situation is probably the best part.
:
00:47:36,340 --> 00:47:39,470
It's not always possible, especially if
you're dealing with another person with
:
00:47:39,470 --> 00:47:42,370
ADHD and you're just going backwards
and forwards and getting nowhere.
:
00:47:42,370 --> 00:47:43,060
That's.
:
00:47:43,460 --> 00:47:46,200
It's not always pleasant, but
in general, yeah, I would just
:
00:47:46,340 --> 00:47:48,250
try and take a second to myself.
:
00:47:48,660 --> 00:47:49,650
I do the breathing.
:
00:47:49,660 --> 00:47:53,700
My kid hates it, but I like it because
it just gives me that minute to stop.
:
00:47:53,980 --> 00:47:54,270
Yeah.
:
00:47:54,270 --> 00:47:54,660
Okay.
:
00:47:54,730 --> 00:47:55,100
Okay.
:
00:47:55,390 --> 00:47:56,880
Look, that's, that's great advice.
:
00:47:56,880 --> 00:48:00,690
And I think you've come such a long way,
particularly with the food as well, which
:
00:48:00,690 --> 00:48:05,370
we talked about earlier and also the
RSD and you know, having two girls with
:
00:48:05,370 --> 00:48:08,840
ADHD, ASD is, you know, a ride in itself.
:
00:48:09,210 --> 00:48:11,020
So I think you're doing an incredible job.
:
00:48:11,030 --> 00:48:12,620
Thank you so much for sharing your story.
:
00:48:12,975 --> 00:48:13,505
Thank you.
:
00:48:13,565 --> 00:48:14,295
I appreciate it.
:
00:48:14,295 --> 00:48:14,935
No, it's been good.
:
00:48:14,975 --> 00:48:18,585
Yeah, I'm, I'm, I feel lucky to have
ADHD to be honest, because I can.
:
00:48:19,050 --> 00:48:20,950
I use it in my work.
:
00:48:20,950 --> 00:48:23,830
I found a job where I can have
a lot of things on the go.
:
00:48:23,890 --> 00:48:26,960
So I'm really blessed that it's
my, we call it, and the lady,
:
00:48:27,630 --> 00:48:31,010
the person I work with, they say,
you know, it's our superpower,
:
00:48:31,580 --> 00:48:34,400
so let's use it to our benefit.
:
00:48:34,420 --> 00:48:36,240
And so we can incorporate
that in our work.
:
00:48:36,240 --> 00:48:38,330
And that's what I've
tried to teach my kids.
:
00:48:38,330 --> 00:48:39,080
Find a job.
:
00:48:39,645 --> 00:48:44,505
That you can incorporate what people
would see as a, you know, a negative,
:
00:48:44,875 --> 00:48:46,205
turn it around and make it a positive.
:
00:48:46,205 --> 00:48:49,005
And that's what I'm trying to
do now and just use it for good.
:
00:48:49,505 --> 00:48:53,055
Yeah, we actually had a session with
our psychologist that comes over.
:
00:48:53,435 --> 00:48:54,695
He's mobile, thank God for him.
:
00:48:55,095 --> 00:48:56,625
And he does kids and everybody.
:
00:48:56,655 --> 00:48:57,265
He's great.
:
00:48:57,265 --> 00:48:58,565
He's a busy man on those days.
:
00:48:58,935 --> 00:49:02,075
But he came over and he had a chat
with my husband and I yesterday.
:
00:49:02,085 --> 00:49:05,875
It was really interesting because he
said with my kids, and I assume this
:
00:49:05,875 --> 00:49:07,850
would be his blanket for any kid, Right?
:
00:49:08,260 --> 00:49:11,660
You want to embrace their strengths
and celebrate who they are, and then
:
00:49:11,660 --> 00:49:15,720
try and cradle the world that can
be in a way that can accept them.
:
00:49:15,780 --> 00:49:18,390
And that's absolutely what we
have the freedom to do as adults.
:
00:49:18,850 --> 00:49:23,310
We can find a job that suits, we can
find a lifestyle that suits, but when
:
00:49:23,310 --> 00:49:27,180
you're in a schooling system, that
can be a really hard thing to navigate
:
00:49:27,180 --> 00:49:29,830
because the box is pretty inflexible.
:
00:49:30,290 --> 00:49:34,170
So we were talking about how we
can get them to embrace their
:
00:49:34,170 --> 00:49:39,325
strengths, but still survive in the
box that is school, it's a hard one.
:
00:49:39,615 --> 00:49:40,445
That is a hard one.
:
00:49:40,445 --> 00:49:43,285
And that's probably a whole
other kettle of fish on its own.
:
00:49:43,315 --> 00:49:45,465
There is just the, yeah, education.
:
00:49:45,855 --> 00:49:49,355
I mean, we're lucky that my daughter's
school is quite small, so she has a
:
00:49:49,355 --> 00:49:51,125
really great network to be able to.
:
00:49:51,695 --> 00:49:54,455
Do what she needs to do, but my
eldest daughter did not have that.
:
00:49:54,485 --> 00:49:58,345
And she was highly intelligent
and bored out of her brain.
:
00:49:58,385 --> 00:50:02,004
So at ADHD, it just wasn't great.
:
00:50:02,285 --> 00:50:03,355
She ended up homeschooling.
:
00:50:03,385 --> 00:50:04,045
That's a whole year.
:
00:50:04,275 --> 00:50:07,925
So, because it just, yeah, I've
opened up the schooling box.
:
00:50:07,925 --> 00:50:08,615
Sorry, Tammy.
:
00:50:08,645 --> 00:50:12,575
But I just was, when you were talking
about embracing who you are and using it.
:
00:50:13,100 --> 00:50:17,070
I was just like, yes, the world, the
world should be friendly enough for
:
00:50:17,080 --> 00:50:20,830
everybody to embrace their strengths,
neuro typical, neuro diverse.
:
00:50:21,820 --> 00:50:26,800
Why can't we create a environment that
suits everybody from any race, gender,
:
00:50:27,210 --> 00:50:30,600
ethnicity, like all, like what, why can't
we, anyway, whole nother thing, Tammy.
:
00:50:31,060 --> 00:50:34,030
Let's finish up because I'm going
to try and keep under an hour, but
:
00:50:34,030 --> 00:50:35,190
thank you so much for your time.
:
00:50:35,190 --> 00:50:36,020
You've been so good.
:
00:50:36,100 --> 00:50:37,790
I really appreciate how
open and honest you've been.
:
00:50:38,380 --> 00:50:38,950
Thank you.
:
00:50:39,020 --> 00:50:40,050
I appreciate your time.
:
00:50:40,840 --> 00:50:41,230
Okay.
:
00:50:41,230 --> 00:50:44,970
And for anyone listening, if you love
this episode, please go and give a
:
00:50:44,970 --> 00:50:47,150
review on Spotify or Apple podcasts.
:
00:50:47,760 --> 00:50:50,550
The reason that I ask is that
it makes it easier for people to
:
00:50:50,550 --> 00:50:51,740
find the podcast in Australia.
:
00:50:51,740 --> 00:50:55,270
So the more ratings it's got, the
higher it comes up on the list.
:
00:50:55,660 --> 00:50:59,350
The reason why I say that is because
we've still got a lot of UK and US
:
00:50:59,380 --> 00:51:00,910
podcasts coming in over the top.
:
00:51:01,210 --> 00:51:03,980
And then I hear people say to me,
Oh, I didn't know that you existed
:
00:51:03,980 --> 00:51:07,080
because I've been listening to
all of the ones internationally.
:
00:51:07,400 --> 00:51:08,360
Nothing wrong with them.
:
00:51:08,360 --> 00:51:11,250
Don't get me wrong, but I think
Australians, there's something
:
00:51:11,250 --> 00:51:15,090
special about hearing from Australian
women about Australian women.
:
00:51:15,120 --> 00:51:16,920
So I really want to get
that message out there.