I worked with a guy in the 90’s and his son was constantly in trouble at school. I don’t know why, but thankfully he and his wife resisted Ritalin.
Fortunately the young man was referred to a school psychologist who actually helped and recommended a transfer to a magnate school of music. The change in environment had an incredible effect on the kid’s behavior and academic performance. Not only did he excel at music, but also in academic subjects he was previously failing.
So after all that, the Pscho-babblers can’t say definitively that some has or doesn’t have ADHD. Their diagnosis is all subjective and they drug kids with NO long term benefit. Next they will recommend lobotomies for those diagnosed with ADHD as we return to the fifties style medical practice with lobotomy trucks going up and down streets like ice-cream trucks. NEVER TAKE YOUR KIDS TO A PSCHO-BABBLER!
Psychs still can't decide if it's nature or nurture that makes someone.
And adhd like many so called issues can be misdiagnosed because they have the same similarities to giftedness.
I often wonder how many smart kids are just drugged up
When boys and girls education was merged, they took the curriculum from the girls schools and threw out the boys curriculum. Now they see boys as defective girls then 'fix' them with drugs.
Feminism and big pharma both run amok.
Strong men create good times, something something, pussies fuck everything up.
ADHD is a deficiency of fats needed by the brain to calm someone down. Give these so afflicted lots of saturated fats. They will gain control of themselves.
People with ADHD have magic powers. They see patterns no one else sees.
People with ADHD aren’t broken. They’re wired for wonder.
They notice what others miss: a shift in tone, the flicker in someone’s eyes, the pattern buried beneath the surface. Their attention isn’t gone—it’s everywhere. Scanning. Absorbing. Following threads most people don’t even see. What looks like distraction is often deep engagement with something the rest of the room has overlooked.
Their minds are like constellations—brilliant bursts of connection, ideas firing across galaxies. They don’t move in straight lines because creativity doesn’t either. It loops, jumps, rewinds, and leaps. ADHD brains are designed to explore those edges. To imagine. To invent. To sense things before they form into language.
They feel everything—deeply. Joy, injustice, beauty, boredom. They don’t numb easily, and that’s both their burden and their brilliance. Empaths, intuitives, truth detectors—they’re often the ones pointing out the elephant in the room, or the magic no one noticed.
ADHD can be hard, yes. The world isn’t built for nonlinear thinkers. But that doesn’t make them less. It makes the world narrower when it doesn’t adjust.
These are the dreamers. The trailblazers. The soul-spotters and pattern-seekers.
They don’t just think outside the box. They forget there’s a box.
I think you just described my childhood. I was constantly in trouble with my teachers and my grades never met my potential. I grew up to become a math teacher who won a lot of awards for my work. Thank God they didn’t have those drugs available in the 60s.
I worked with a guy in the 90’s and his son was constantly in trouble at school. I don’t know why, but thankfully he and his wife resisted Ritalin.
Fortunately the young man was referred to a school psychologist who actually helped and recommended a transfer to a magnate school of music. The change in environment had an incredible effect on the kid’s behavior and academic performance. Not only did he excel at music, but also in academic subjects he was previously failing.
So after all that, the Pscho-babblers can’t say definitively that some has or doesn’t have ADHD. Their diagnosis is all subjective and they drug kids with NO long term benefit. Next they will recommend lobotomies for those diagnosed with ADHD as we return to the fifties style medical practice with lobotomy trucks going up and down streets like ice-cream trucks. NEVER TAKE YOUR KIDS TO A PSCHO-BABBLER!
Psychs still can't decide if it's nature or nurture that makes someone. And adhd like many so called issues can be misdiagnosed because they have the same similarities to giftedness. I often wonder how many smart kids are just drugged up
Too many!!!!
When boys and girls education was merged, they took the curriculum from the girls schools and threw out the boys curriculum. Now they see boys as defective girls then 'fix' them with drugs.
Feminism and big pharma both run amok.
Strong men create good times, something something, pussies fuck everything up.
exactly, and 'they' don't like to hear this^
boys need to be allowed to be boys. burn up that energy, along with a proper diet, and you won't have ADHD...
100%
ADHD is a deficiency of fats needed by the brain to calm someone down. Give these so afflicted lots of saturated fats. They will gain control of themselves.
People with ADHD have magic powers. They see patterns no one else sees.
People with ADHD aren’t broken. They’re wired for wonder.
They notice what others miss: a shift in tone, the flicker in someone’s eyes, the pattern buried beneath the surface. Their attention isn’t gone—it’s everywhere. Scanning. Absorbing. Following threads most people don’t even see. What looks like distraction is often deep engagement with something the rest of the room has overlooked.
Their minds are like constellations—brilliant bursts of connection, ideas firing across galaxies. They don’t move in straight lines because creativity doesn’t either. It loops, jumps, rewinds, and leaps. ADHD brains are designed to explore those edges. To imagine. To invent. To sense things before they form into language.
They feel everything—deeply. Joy, injustice, beauty, boredom. They don’t numb easily, and that’s both their burden and their brilliance. Empaths, intuitives, truth detectors—they’re often the ones pointing out the elephant in the room, or the magic no one noticed.
ADHD can be hard, yes. The world isn’t built for nonlinear thinkers. But that doesn’t make them less. It makes the world narrower when it doesn’t adjust.
These are the dreamers. The trailblazers. The soul-spotters and pattern-seekers.
They don’t just think outside the box. They forget there’s a box.
I think you just described my childhood. I was constantly in trouble with my teachers and my grades never met my potential. I grew up to become a math teacher who won a lot of awards for my work. Thank God they didn’t have those drugs available in the 60s.