Posts Tagged: ADD/ADHD


12
Jan 09

ADD and Planners

Thinking about buying a new planner, calendar, or datebook?

Consistently using a planner or time keeper of some sort is a great way for someone with ADD-ADHD to help keep track of appointments and to-do lists as well as a central location to store important things like addresses and phone numbers.  But, the wrong planner can cause just as much difficulty as it can help.

Get The Right Planner

To get the right planner is an exercise of matching up your lifestyle and specific ADD/ADHD  traits with an available planner.  How do you do that?

First, match your planner or date book to your lifestyle.

Before you decide about daily, weekly, or monthly planners, look at how your days typically work.  Do you have several meetings scheduled each day at specific times?  Or, do you have a list of to-dos each day, but no specific times?  Or, is your life one where you have many different projects with deadlines and milesotnes, but where the exact date that things happen isn’t important?

Most planners have a list of times for each day.  That is fine if you are a salesperson with meetings at 9:00am, 10:30, 1:15 and so on.  But, if you are a computer programmer with just two meetings scheduled per week (maybe a team meeting on Tuesday and another meeting on Friday afternoons) then all of those times running down the side might just be distracting.

Since we aren’t looking for MORE distractions, you might want to look for a planner without the times, or at least where the times are easily ignored (small non-stand out font).

Next, it is time to decide what time-frame you need for you planner.  Daily planners have lots of room for each day, but tend to be bigger and heavier which means you might be less likely to use it consistently.  Monthly planners don’t have much room for each day, but might be very useful for tracking deadlines.  Weekly planners often offer a nice middle ground between the two.

Lastly, get a planner without a lot of “noise”.  Some planner makers seem to think that the more stuff they print on each page, the better the planner.  That is NOT true for those of us with ADD / ADHD.

Avoid planners that insist on printing the name of the month, days, and who knows what else in multiple languages.  All of that extra text is nothing but a distraction waiting to happen.  (Hey, I didn’t know the French word for Wednesday.  It sounds like the Latin word.  Well, at least I think it does.  Maybe I should look it up…)

Also, avoid planners that put a bunch of useless information in the planner to make it thicker.  You don’ t need to know what time it is in Turkistan, nor do you need to know how to convert hectares to acres (or at least you won’t need to know it when you are doing your planning.)

Calendar makers cram all of this in to make their planners seem more impressive, but it is just wasted space and extra weight.  If you can’t find one that you like without a load of extra junk, grab an exacto-knife or razor and cut those pages out.  Your planner will be lighter and smaller, and you’ll be more likely to use it.


13
May 08

ADD ADHD and ADDessories

ADD or ADHD affects millions of Americans. There are several books out there and many web sites as well full of useful information on ADD and ADHD. Some of the more famous books include the Dr. Hallowell books, Driven to Distraction and Delivered From Distraction, and the Kate Kelly book, You Mean I’m Not Lazy, Stupid or Crazy?!: The Classic Self-Help Book for Adults with Attention Deficit Disorder. These books can help you navigate through what ADD/ADHD is and how it affects people like you. For the most part, these books make excellent references for what is ADD and also for what is not ADD. They are also very helpful for showing you that you are not alone and that there are many successful people who have ADD and cope with many of the same things you do. What they seem to be missing are specific practical advice or techniques that a person with ADD can use in their daily lives.

If you read many finance books eventually you’ll notice that virtually all of them have some version of the idea that if you give up your daily latte and saved the money instead that you would make millions of dollars after 30 years or whatever. That’s great, but what else is there?

As you read books about ADD and ADHD, you’ll find that the common “solution” is something called a launch pad. A launch pad is basically a place where you put necessary items so that you don’t forget them, or spend time looking for them. Things like keys, watches, wallet, that report for work and so on all should go on your launch pad. That’s great, but what else is there?

ADHD and Focus

The truth is that everyone whether they have ADD/ADHD or not has a finite amount of things they can focus on. For people with ADD this may be more noticeable than for others. However, ADD/ADHD is not some crippling disease. It can’t stop you from achieving what you want to achieve, but it can make things a little more burdensome. Imagine a child who is left handed. Always an overachiever, this child goes through school earning nothing but praise and high marks until one day, he gets a disappointing grade in handwriting. The problem? Using the same spiral notebooks as everyone else causes him discomfort when he tries to write because his arm lays across the metal spirals. This isn’t a problem and needed be the cause of any troubles for the child as long as someone notices and provides a solution. A notebook that has a top spiral for example, or maybe a notebook specially made for left-handed people with the spirals on the the opposite side.

ADD Tips Tricks and Stuff

That is what ADDessories is all about. As a person goes through their life with ADD there are literally hundreds or thousands of tricks and tips and tools than can make those little burdens a little less difficult. These tools are the accessories, or more specifically ADDessories, that provide practical real world solutions for people with ADD.