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The CDC Defines ADHD As A “Neurobehavioral Disorder Characterized By Pervasive Inattention And/Or Hyperactivity-Impulsivity And Resulting In Significant Functional Impairment.” ADHD—Also Known As Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder—Affects Many People In This Country. That Is Why We've Decided To Launch This Site. Welcome To ADHDupdates.com. This Site Is A Free Information Resource That Will Answer All Your Questions About ADHD. As
You Explore This Site, You'll Discover...
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Everything You Must Know About ADHD, Attention Deficit Disorder, Attention Deficit Disorder Medicine, ADHD Medication, And ADHD Camps.
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Attention Deficit Disorder A To Z

Comprehensive Guide to ADHD for parents.
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ADD To C3 Kids

The All-Natural, Drug-Free Way For Children, Teens And Adults To Win Against ADD And ADHD.
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Old Me New Me
Stories And Guided Imagery On Cd To Help Children And Teens With Behavioral Problems, Anxiety And ADHD.
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Adult ADHD: Finish That Project!
Author: Tellman Knudson & Stephanie Frank
Ok, so you've got Adult ADHD, and you've got this unfinished project. Or more probably, several unfinished projects! And you only have about 10-25% left to do to finish it...but you just can't seem to do it. What can you do?
First of all, you've got to picture what it will be like when it’s complete. What is this project going to do for you when it’s done? How are you going to feel? What is the end result? People with Adult ADHD tend not to focus on accomplishments once they're done, and that can be very de-motivating.
Maybe you're creating a product, or writing a book. Maybe you're creating a new system. What is the benefit to you? If you hate creating a system (common to Adult ADHD) in your business or life, focus on how much more time you'll have to do what you want when you're at the end of it.
If you're writing a book and you have Adult ADHD, you're probably having trouble finishing that last 15%. Think about all the people who are going to read it and appreciate it. Picture it as vividly and specifically as you can. Imagine yourself in an arena with 30,000 people in a stadium opening your book, your piece of information that you put out to the world, smiling, loving it.
If you have Adult ADHD, you need to be looking at not only what it’s going to be like when it’s done, but you have to imagine it in the most exciting way humanly possible. You can exaggerate. Make the picture larger, brighter, more exciting.
That works well for all the "visual" people with Adult ADHD. Interestingly though, only 20% of the people out there with Adult ADHD can actually picture anything in their heads when they close their eyes. That leaves 80% of Adult ADHD people who can't.
How can a non-visual person with Adult ADHD visualize? Imagine what it would look like if you could picture it. Or what it would sound like, or what it would feel like, or what you know about it conceptually. Those are all different ways of imagining something that work well with Adult ADHD.
Another thing Adult ADHD people can do to motivate themselves to finish a project is to create a reward.
What is it that you really want, that you can hold off for yourself, as kind of a carrot for finishing the project? This has worked very successfully for me, and others with Adult ADHD. I use a book as an example because this was a project that I personally had a hard time finishing.
It was a highly technical content book on TCP/IP with lots of numbers and figures. It was 1,400 pages long. It was a big, fat book, but I was under contract and I had to finish it.
There was a deadline, which usually helps with Adult ADHD, but that still didn't give me the motivation. Having someone hold a stick over you with a deadline, that can be de-motivating more than anything. However, at that particular time in my life, there was one thing that I really wanted.
I love dogs, and I wanted a puppy. So I went, in the middle of writing the book, and picked out my puppy. I left her at the kennel. I took her picture and I put it on my desk.
I still have that picture today. Underneath the picture, it says, "Write a book and get a puppy." My puppy’s six years old today; the day I finished writing my last words, and sent them off to my publisher, I called my aunt and said, "Come on. We're going to go get the puppy." That was a great motivator, a reward, that worked for me, and could work very well for you, if you have Adult ADHD.
Interestingly, again, rewards don't always work for people with Adult ADHD. Maybe you have a childhood block against them; but regardless of where you're at, if rewards work for you, use them every single day, and if they don't, then do something like visualizing your project finished.
You can make your internal picture more real by writing about it, even taking pictures that remind you of your goal and putting them up around your house or office, like I did with the puppy.
There are three more techniques you can use to focus and finish a task: Mini-Deadlines, Egg-Timers, and Sensory Stimulation. To find out more about these and other techniques for overcoming Adult ADHD, see below!
About the Author:
Stephanie Frank & Tellman Knudson will help you focus, beat distraction, and take charge of your life and financial destiny! To claim your special Free VIP membership to ADDGold (value: $127) go to http://www.adhdgenius.com
Read more articles by: Tellman Knudson & Stephanie Frank
This article is distributed by: www.iSnare.com
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A Quick Note
From The Publisher...
If you like the article above, you may be
interested in the following article which is also related to ADHD...
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Adult ADHD Symptoms: Is This You? |
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A bit like the elephant on the dinner table that families don't talk about, adult ADHD is something that people often know is there but don't necessarily talk about.
But at some point they say "Okay, this exists. This is a problem. I don't know if this has been a problem that has been genetic, or what, but what I do want to know is the answers to some of these questions about why I'm struggling with these ADHD symptoms."
Recently, ADHD Secrets did a worldwide survey in which they asked 30,000 people who have ADHD symptoms or think they have adult ADHD, what their ADHD symptoms are and what kinds of problems this causes in their lives, both at home and at work.
One respondent wrote in that because of adult ADHD, it had taken him literally over an hour to write an email that was one sentence long.
Can you imagine?
One hour to write one sentence, just because his ADHD symptoms made him unable to deflect daily distractions.
But if you or someone you know has adult ADHD... |
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ADHD, Attention Deficit Disorder News |
ADHD medicine shortage frustrating patients, parents Trish Luberda makes her living as an education consultant and advocate for people with special needs. But those credentials have been of little use in a crisis closer to home, as she has tried desperately to get her hands on the medication that two of her daughters, ages 11 and 17, need to manage their attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). ADHD: Is Stigma Back in Style? With the latest ADHD controversy, it seems as if we've regressed to an era when all mental health problems were blamed on Mom Anesthesia in Early Childhood May Be Linked to ADHD THURSDAY, Feb. 2 (HealthDay News) -- Children who have more than one surgery with general anesthesia by their second birthday might be at higher risk for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), a new study suggests. General anesthesia in infancy linked to higher risk of ADHD Infants who undergo surgical procedures requiring general anesthesia in their first two years of life may be at increased risk of developing attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) as they grow older. |
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