Categories
- Arts & Entertainment
- Business
- Communications
- Computers
- Culture & Society
- Disease & Illness
- Fashion
- Finance
- Food & Beverage
- Health & Fitness
- Hobbies
- Home & Family
- Home Based Business
- Internet Business
- Legal
- Pets & Animals
- Politics
- Product Reviews
- Recreation & Sports
- Reference & Education
- Religion
- Self Improvement
- Shopping
- Travel & Leisure
- Vehicles
- Writing & Speaking
Information
6 Steps to Survive ADHD Overwhelm - Learn to Plan Your Day
Submitted: 2007-09-03 13:36:26
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher |
Like many people today, do you find life overwhelming? Is getting through one day an exhausting marathon? Does your day include kids to be picked up, doctor's appointments, bills to be paid, and dry cleaning to be retrieved?. Are you afraid to open envelopes for fear of seeing the negative bank balances and the unpaid bills? Are you afraid of wasting time and money on impulsive flings every time you go shopping? It all adds up to a paralyzing sense of doom called overwhelm.
Today's hectic world puts tremendous pressure to perform on everyone, but if you have ADHD (Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder) the pressure is magnified several times over.
Here are four ways ADHD contributes to that desperate feeling.
Number one is poor organization. ADHD is known as the disorder of disorganization. If you have ADHD, you have difficulty sequencing actions (or papers thus the unmanageable piles). Difficulty organizing the events of the day is just one example.
The second problem is an elastic sense of time. You have difficulty estimating how long tasks will take adding to the problem of planning the day.
Third is what I call the slipping clutch or the getting-started syndrome. When you do fix a time to do a task it still doesn't get done because you can not start. Instead you get sucked into the internet or the TV or another low priority activity.
Finally, the lack of boundaries makes it difficult for you to say "no", so you have too many things to do. Poor boundaries also mean that you absorb more than your share of emotional overload; other peoples problems swamp your brain and make it difficult to think coolly about what needs doing.
Take these 6 steps to plan your day and beat overwhelm.
1. Stop. Recognize that overwhelm has captured your brain and is interfering with your ability to plan and get things done. Take a minute to observe how you are feeling. Take several deep breaths into the abdomen and exhale slowly.
2. Listen to your self-talk. Change negatives to positives: tell yourself "you can do it". Talk out loud to yourself at each step as though you were explaining to a another person (your coach for example) what you need to do.
3. Make a list of the tasks you need to do, estimate the time needed including travel or set up time. Then weigh the importance and urgency of each task. Could some items wait until tomorrow or next week?
4. Consider what help you can get. Could a husband or a friend pick up the kids?
5. Plan the day. Group tasks according to location. If you have to go out, consider the time of day, driving at commuting time could double the time it takes. If you must go at commuting time allow extra time.
6. Write out the day's route map and put it in your purse or place it where you can't forget it.
Now you are ready to go. Go!
Still having difficulty? A coach will help you stay on track.
Sarah Jane Keyser is an ADHD coach with an international practice who helps adults and adolescents find joy and fulfillment with ADHD.Learn more about coaching for ADHD at www.CoachingKeytoADD.com .
For more tips on living with ADHD see Brain Skills for ADHD.
Article source: Expert Articles
Most Recent Articles in Organizing category
- How Having an Organized Home and Life Positively Impacts Our Planet & Ourselves - By: Heidi DeCoux
The future of our planet begins at home. Our level of organization has an impact, whether or not we realize it, and whether or not we want the responsibility. - The Easiest & Fastest Way to Keep a "Company-Ready Clean" House - By: Heidi DeCoux
Do you ever find yourself running around your home stuffing items into closets and drawers because people are on their way over and you are less than satisfied with the condition of your home? Here is a simple 5-step plan for you. - 4 Simple Steps to an Organized Closet - By: Heidi DeCoux
Keeping your closets organized makes it much easier to keep your home clean. Picking up your house becomes much easier and more pleasant because it takes a lot less time to put things away when you have a neat and organized closet. Also, you (and other members of your family) will be more likely to put things away when there is a specific place for everything. This article will give you four easy steps to help you get your closets organized and keep them organized. - Is All of Your Stuff Depleting You of Happiness? - By: Heidi DeCoux
Are you always striving to feel happier in your life. You can be happier just by living with less stuff. In this article you will learn how living with less can increase your happiness and what you need to do to achieve it. - Self-discipline - By: Sharmila Murthy
My mentor Jim Rohn once said "We always pay the price. Either we pay the price of regret, or we pay the price of discipline." Which price are you willing to pay, will decide what results we have in our lives. - Depart From Your Comfort Zone - By: Rebecca McClain
We are, by nature, creatures of comfort. Yet, discomfort is a necessary evil if we expect to live our best life. - 5 Steps to an Organized Closet - By: Jenna Hart
It can seem very overwhelming at first to try and attempt to organize your closet. Learn how to get organized with these 5 simple steps. - 4 Steps to Prioritizing Your Life - By: Joanna Lindenbaum
When we begin to look into that together, we often find that their priorities do not match how they spend their actual time. If you are not spending your time and your days according to what's most important to you, chances are you will end up feeling harried, unsatisfied, and disappointed with your life. - A Tidy Office Is More Productive - By: Lesa Parham
Whether you work from home or at an office, desk tidiness, or lack thereof, can become a problem. But, as real estate agents well know, an organized desk is far more productive than a disorganized one. - 10 Tips to Help Ease Holiday Stress - By: Angelique Ellerman
Don't let another holiday season wear you down and frazzle your nerves. Following are some ideas that can help make Christmas, Thanksgiving and other holidays more enjoyable and less stressful.
