ChatterBank4 mins ago
I Would Have Posted This Earlier....
23 Answers
.....but I got distracted!
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/h ealth/a rticle- 2402902 /Chroni c-laten ess-Man -57-who s-late- diagnos ed-medi cal-con dition. html
I loathe bad timekeepers to the point that I no longer have contact with a friend who, over a period of 12 years, was never on time when we met up.
I am struggling to get my head around this chap, he had 11 hours to get ready for the cinema and was still late?!?!? I've encountered diagnoses of ADHD in children/teenagers but I would have thought that by adulthood coping mechanisms and medication would have managed the problem better than this.
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I loathe bad timekeepers to the point that I no longer have contact with a friend who, over a period of 12 years, was never on time when we met up.
I am struggling to get my head around this chap, he had 11 hours to get ready for the cinema and was still late?!?!? I've encountered diagnoses of ADHD in children/teenagers but I would have thought that by adulthood coping mechanisms and medication would have managed the problem better than this.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well i must be biploar as must be everyone i know as their/mine "Symptoms" tick every box
People with bipolar disorder experience unusually intense emotional states that occur in distinct periods called "mood episodes." An overly joyful or overexcited state is called a manic episode, and an extremely sad or hopeless state is called a depressive episode. Sometimes, a mood episode includes symptoms of both mania and depression. This is called a mixed state. People with bipolar disorder also may be explosive and irritable during a mood episode.
Extreme changes in energy, activity, sleep, and behavior go along with these changes in mood. It is possible for someone with bipolar disorder to experience a long-lasting period of unstable moods rather than discrete episodes of depression or mania.
A person may be having an episode of bipolar disorder if he or she has a number of manic or depressive symptoms for most of the day, nearly every day, for at least one or two weeks. Sometimes symptoms are so severe that the person cannot function normally at work, school, or home.
People with bipolar disorder experience unusually intense emotional states that occur in distinct periods called "mood episodes." An overly joyful or overexcited state is called a manic episode, and an extremely sad or hopeless state is called a depressive episode. Sometimes, a mood episode includes symptoms of both mania and depression. This is called a mixed state. People with bipolar disorder also may be explosive and irritable during a mood episode.
Extreme changes in energy, activity, sleep, and behavior go along with these changes in mood. It is possible for someone with bipolar disorder to experience a long-lasting period of unstable moods rather than discrete episodes of depression or mania.
A person may be having an episode of bipolar disorder if he or she has a number of manic or depressive symptoms for most of the day, nearly every day, for at least one or two weeks. Sometimes symptoms are so severe that the person cannot function normally at work, school, or home.
I totally get this, it's all about routine and familiarity of a situation, we're taught this at school. Our mums would wake us up for school at the same time every morning, we would get up and get ready and leave at the same time, we didnlt have to think about it as we were herded out the door and sent off to school. The assembly bell told us where to be, the lesson bells, the timetable, the lunch bell the hometime bell. We got home, tea was ready, then bedtime when we were told.
As adults we live our life around routine, I know what time to set the alrm for an 8 am shift I know how long it takes to get ready and travel to an 8am shift, I know what time to set the alarm for a 11am shift and how long it takes to get ready and get there, yet if i have to start earlier, or later, i am thrown into the unknown and really cannot plan it out the same way. I have to allow loads of extra time as my routine is thrown.
It's the same with anything I do, if i am going somewhere the next day that is unusual or different i cannot sleep and will panic that If i do sleep i will miss the alarm.
I know that i have to plan an awful lot to get things right, if this man does not have the necessary planning ability, his brain will not be able o cope with the variation of his routine.
As adults we live our life around routine, I know what time to set the alrm for an 8 am shift I know how long it takes to get ready and travel to an 8am shift, I know what time to set the alarm for a 11am shift and how long it takes to get ready and get there, yet if i have to start earlier, or later, i am thrown into the unknown and really cannot plan it out the same way. I have to allow loads of extra time as my routine is thrown.
It's the same with anything I do, if i am going somewhere the next day that is unusual or different i cannot sleep and will panic that If i do sleep i will miss the alarm.
I know that i have to plan an awful lot to get things right, if this man does not have the necessary planning ability, his brain will not be able o cope with the variation of his routine.
When I was at school, ADHD didn't exist. Kids were branded 'naughty' or 'hyperactive'.
Does this bloke work? Until lately, I've started work at 3 or 5am. That involves getting up, wash, cuppa, cig, getting dressed and straight out of the door. Now, since I've been on nights (8-8) I have time to flaff around beforehand, meaning I'm more likely to be a few minutes late than ever before, as I'm up at 4pm.
A colleague at work is always ten minutes late, I ask them why they just don't get up ten minutes earlier?
Does this bloke work? Until lately, I've started work at 3 or 5am. That involves getting up, wash, cuppa, cig, getting dressed and straight out of the door. Now, since I've been on nights (8-8) I have time to flaff around beforehand, meaning I'm more likely to be a few minutes late than ever before, as I'm up at 4pm.
A colleague at work is always ten minutes late, I ask them why they just don't get up ten minutes earlier?
Some of you might find reading up on DSM 5 interesting.
One example - http:// www.nhs .uk/new s/2013/ 08Augus t/Pages /contro versy-m ental-h ealth-d iagnosi s-and-t reatmen t-dsm5. aspx
One example - http://