No. 1 ADHD Superpower

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Can you relate? 🫡💙

Here’s the number 1 ADHD Superpower I wish I knew about after getting diagnosed.
If you have ADHD your brain can paradoxically become very calm & focused in high-pressure environments.
Because things that make others nervous or anxious provide your brain with the right chemicals it needs to become focused and engaged.
Giving you the ability to think and collect new information at hyperspeed so you get really good at executing.

This is why once a deadline approaches you can usually work non-stop to reach the finish line and I’ve now found a way to artificially trick my brain into this state in a matter of seconds allowing me to complete the most boring tasks at hyperspeed without procrastinating whenever I want to.
If you want to know how you can easily do this yourself. I’m hosting a free online pre-event on January 27th where I’ll reveal exactly how I do this and:
Why this trick works every single time for almost everyone with ADHD
And why this doesn’t require any willpower or discipline
There are only 5000 seats available! Comment “Event” if you want to secure your seat for this event on January 27th at 5 PM CET.

#adhd #adhdsupport #adhdawareness #ADHD #adhdbrain #adhdparenting
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For everyone who can’t find the link to sign up, it’s: event.ADHDVision.com 🙏🏼

adhdvision
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If the event is free why not just upload a video and tell everyone the trick? That would get it out to everyone who needs it rather than forcing ADHD people to sign up for a thing that they will most likely forget about. If this trick is really that life changing you should want to get it to as many people as possible any way that you can. An event at a specific time with only 5k seats is not the right way!

pixywings
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Just tell me bruh…. I felt like we were homeboys

DallasinCali
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Yep. I have to agree. I’m always eerily calm when there’s a crisis or medical emergency. My focus is “ find a solution ASAP”

RandomMiss
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This is sooo true. I couldn't choose a career path in college. I fell backwards into law enforcement. It was perfect. I went from broken thing to broken thing each shift. So many people commented on my abilities during crisis. I always wondered what that was.

usposandman
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I always call this "Eye of the Storm" mode.

mr.ptolemy
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You'd be amazed how many EMS workers have ADHD. Its our perfect job. Plus no long term dealing with annoying patienta

kitwhite
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I can successfully run a crew of construction workers on a huge jobsite, under massive pressure

I feel extremely calm and competent when dealing with surprise issues like medical emergencies, automobile accidents, speaking in public without preparation, etc.,

I haven't overcome my executive dysfunction and paperwork phobia long enough to even open my mail in over 2 years

TheRepublicOfJohn
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Military taught me how, every job has the threat of jail if not done immediately. No more procrastinating.

jefflangham
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I'm a cashier at a grocery store and it was right before Christmas and we were super busy. I had a customer come through my line and she asked me if the store had been busy and I said yeah and she said "Well you look really calm and collected." I guess that was the ADHD showing 😂

Hannah-K--
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My biggest problem is that 99% of my work depends on other people getting their stuff to me on time. And they all like to smile and wave at deadlines as they pass.

laurafox
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i live in iran and have adhd, i cant reallly attend the meeting, please make video out of it later on

edit: i watched the event and it was the most nonsense waste of time

MrAlpha-ccew
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A people and also myself always joke that I would be terrible in an emergency. well, my mother, her friend and I took a walk the other day and found a dead person. they didn't know what to do, they were shocked. it was a drug overdose. And I used to do drugs. so I started telling them what to do I ripped the girl's jacket off started chest compression all while trying to help my mom catch the dog, and the girl ended up living. I felt calm. not nervous or anything.

ashleyleavitt
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I experienced this during the summer. I worked routing school buses and we misunderstood a boundary the school district wanted. Turns out we had to redo two weeks of work in a day. My two co-workers worked hard helping out for about 10 hours each but I didn't stop for 16 hours until it got done

AutkastKain
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I just found a perfect job for me in my area. I work at a factory where my job is to get training on most of the positions so that when someone is absent, I'll be the one to take-over, so I get to train for a week, and then switch to a new position. The other good part is that it's only night shift which is an ideal time for me to work, as well as having almost no leaders at the warehouse at that time meaning everyone is left on their own devices and is okay as long as the job gets done at the end of the day. I've been a worker for a decade now, and I only wish I could've found this job sooner.

JinroHz
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Hoping you post the vid of the comming event

theangusschmaloer
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Unfortunately as a person who has adhd i signed up, put a reminder, still forgot that i signed up for this meeting. Still, thank you for everything.

RaphIlkan
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What got me through was - JUST START. If you need to write a report, literally start writing anything - but just begin. You will be amazed that by the 15 - 20 minute mark you’re on a roll. The hardest part is to get into the habit of STARTING !!!

L_MD_
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Totally relate.

At one time, I was the lowly mechanic for a bicycle magazine. At the time, I was the only mountain biker there, all the others were road.

There was a huge mountain bike road test. The deadline got closer and closer. I couldn't figure out where to start writing. I was panicked.


The lead editor took me out for burgers and beer. We had a great time, and we got shitfaced. We went back to the office afterward, smoked a joint, he did a little, left me on my own, wasted.

Suddenly, I got an idea, sat at the computer (original Macintosh), started writing.

I kept going and going. By 4AM I had written four articles and a sidebar. The following morning was deadline... nailed it.... relief...


The editor in charge was blown away. Being ADHD, we rarely get kudos... but he said he only had found a few grammatical errors and was done by the time I showed up the next day.

That was 38 years ago. I hadn't been diagnosed. I just thought I was a boring stupid loser who liked to ride bicycle, play guitar... now I was a nationally published author, with zero college.... how'd I get here?

I was diagnosed 10 years later, was told I had a very high IQ.... really? Me?

The real world does not get us at all, because we do not conform, nor obey, and therefore, are written off as lazy losers in "their" eyes.

I'm still sofucking angry... I'm now retired. It's boring.l aas hell... I hate it. I wish I was working.

Thomas-pqys
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That will be midnight where I’m at, so I hope you’ll post a recording sometime.

JEBavido