Is Your ADHD a Gift?

I wouldn't say my ADHD is a gift or a curse, it just is. Being able to pay attention and stop procrastinating would have definitely made my life easier, but would the tradeoff have been less creativity and curiosity? I'll never know. I regret not getting diagnosed and treated much sooner, but without ADHD I would be a different person, so how can I hate it? It's a part of who I am, and I'm trying to accept myself.     ~~~ Unknown person

Cynthia Hammer, MSW

Cynthia Hammer, MSW, was diagnosed with inattentive ADHD in 1992 when she was 49 years old. The following year she created the non-profit organization, ADD Resources, with a mission to educate adults and helping professionals about ADHD in adults. She ran the organization for 15 years before retiring.

During the Covid isolation she wrote a book about her life with inattentive ADHD which should be published by the end of this year. In writing the book, she was dismayed to learn that children with inattentive ADHD continue to be under-diagnosed and adults with inattentive ADHD often are incorrectly diagnosed with depression or anxiety.

She created a new non-profit in 2021, the Inattentive ADHD Coalition (www.iadhd.org), to create more awareness about inattentive ADHD and the need for early diagnosis and treatment.

https://www.iadhd.org
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What Makes ADHD Diagnosis and Treatment Challenging?

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Executive Functions: A Simple Explanation of our ADHD Challenges