• LavaPlanet@lemm.ee
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    17 hours ago

    I tried to explain to someone that our (adhd) brains are literally incapable of forming habits. They tried to remind me of all my bad habits, therefore I was wrong. And that was just too much for me to unpack and explain to them (they didn’t know me or my habits, they were just talking about the bad habits that come along with adhd, but thats a whole other story)

    But when someone told me habits are something you do without thinking about it. Like, at all.

    I’ve never had a habit in my life. I have to think through every step of every task, no matter how many times I’ve done them before, nothing just runs of its own volition. And I could have done something literally 10,000 times and I’ll still miss a vital step and screw it up.

    That fun effect is called, executive dysfunction. Yay!

  • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pub
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    20 hours ago

    3 month habit? Those are rookie numbers lol. In one 3-day stint of a hospital stay, I once completely lost a habit I had developed over more than 5 years prior.

  • Bahnd Rollard@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    It helps is it was a hyperfixation at one point. In my case, timelieness was a problem, around the same time I was learning programming (Ruby/Rails) and needed so odd time functions to handle multi-timezone inputs. I ended up with a minor fixation on UTC, multiple clocks set to it and a scary ability to do timezone offsets in my head. Bonus, im not late for shit anymore.

  • trash@leminal.space
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    1 day ago

    My mom used to say this type of shit to me all the time. She also refused to get me tested or anything so there’s that too.

    • musubibreakfast@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      You had one consistent habit, which was moving through the world untested and unmedicated. Most of your success can be attributed to this habit.

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I hate this. You think you’ve got a good streak going and have been doing well for weeks and weeks, then something interrupts the pattern for a day or three…and it’s like trying to start from scratch all over again.

    • KeenFlame@feddit.nu
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      13 hours ago

      I know but then it’s so easy to give up, and even if you don’t, the next time something slightly disturbs the balance, such as it being Thursday, you need to achieve a monumental life changing effort again just to do the exact same thing you did for months…? And the crazy thing is that even experts on the subject don’t seem to understand going “it’ll get easier just keep at it” my sister in Christmas, I am fourty freaking years old I don’t think I’ll suddenly be able to not randomly forget brushing my teeth

    • Crankenstein@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      It’s so fucking hard.

      Life is just a loop of scrambling to be stable, struggling to maintain it, then inevitably falling back to square one when something knocks you out of the routine.

  • GlendatheGayWitch@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    That’s what the time machines are for. Gotta go back and make it a habit for your 3 year old self, so that it sticks with you more in your adult life. Basic habits like brushing your teeth before bed, washing your hands before eating, and others commonly taught to young children tend to stick better. I wonder if it’s more about the percentage of life with the habit, rather than current habit holding streak that helps keep the habit.

    • Ashenlux@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      19 hours ago

      For hand washing, just develop a minor germ phobia from the covid pandemic. Now I wash my hands before I eat, after I get home from the outside world, and after I touch anything my mind deems “unclean”. It does of the side effects of dry hands.

  • 18107@aussie.zone
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    2 days ago

    I’ve had a habit for 10+ years. One day I just forgot, and it was weeks later when I thought “didn’t I use to do something at this time?”

    I never managed to get that habit back.

  • BJHanssen@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Half the problem with autism and adhd both is difficulty with habit formation and maintenance.

    You don’t need habits. You need routines with reliable contextual triggers. They’ll fail from time to time and you will just have to be okay with that, and try to figure out exactly what made them fail when they do so maybe you can fix it going forward. But it will still occasionally fail.

    You can’t make a sieve not leak without making it not a sieve.

    • Modern_medicine_isnt@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Triggers are the real key. Like needing to use the bathroom in the morning. Then hang a habit of taking meds right after. You have to look at the habits you already have, and connect new things to that. You can also build new habits, but if they are forced, they won’t have a high success rate. I built a habit of looking back into a space I am walking out of when not in my home. I built it on the anxiety of forgetting something. So it stuck. I try to build a habit of letting others talk, but it has no trigger, so it hasn’t stuck.

      • BarrelAgedBoredom@lemm.ee
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        2 days ago

        That’s why I have my meds, deodorant, shoes, hair brush, and hair ties on/near my coffee table. I make my coffee every morning, sit at the couch and (except brushing my teeth) get ready for the day. I let my brain put things where it’ll actually use them.

        I just moved a few weeks ago. At my last place all of that was in my kitchen. It’s weird how moving changes where my brain wants to do stuff

        • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          I let my brain put things where it’ll actually use them.

          And this is why I hated cleaning my room as a child. It’s been a consistent point of contention between my mother and me all my life, but whenever I “cleaned” the way she wanted me to, I couldn’t find a damn thing afterwards.

          Certain things go on my nightstand for a reason. Certain things need to be out on a table, fully visible, near my door. Some clothes are in one spot because they were lightly used but are not soiled, and that concept eludes my mom (she would insist on just washing it.) Things are where they are for reasons. Instead of teaching me how to keep my stuff organized (which is a skill I clearly could have used instruction on), I was taught that “cleaning” means “shoving everything into a drawer or closet.” (It was “out of sight, out of mind,” for my mom.)

          I’d inevitably forget what I put where, leading to long searches to find each and every important thing. As soon as I found all the important things and set them where I’d naturally be able to use/remember them, that’d be the cue to be told that my rOOm’S tOo mEsSY again.

          And the cycle repeats…

  • Coelacanth@feddit.nu
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    2 days ago

    If I don’t engage with something basically every day I just forget it exists. Doesn’t matter if it’s a friend, a TV show I’m watching or working out every morning.

    • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      The one exception is when you end up on a runaway train of thought.

      You go for a walk and you see a seagull, which reminds you of the last time you went to the beach, which reminds you of coconuts, which reminds you of a silly cartoon you used to watch, which reminds you of a specific day in elementary school when a kid quoted an episode, and then you start to wonder what that kid’s up to as an adult today.

      And maybe you have the thought of, “I should reach out to them. I think they added me on Facebook like 15 years ago.” But then a nearby car honks. You snap out of the thought and look around. You don’t know what car honked, but you do spot a dog. It’s an uncommon breed and you can’t remember the name of it. You then spend the next minute or so either guessing the wrong breed or going down the alphabet, hoping to trigger the right name.

      By the time you give up guessing and decide to look it up on your phone, you’ve completely forgotten about that kid from elementary school. The thought has vanished back into the void whence it came.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    The problem is that it takes someone else to remind you to do the thing often enough and with enough impetus to make it a habit

    Which will only last until the first time you’re sick and can’t, and then that habit is gone

    • ComradeSharkfucker@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      I played guitar for 3 years until I cut the tip of my finger off with a mandolin. Literally haven’t touched it since

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 day ago

        If you haven’t heard of Tony Iommi, he was (is?) the guitarist for Black Sabbath who cut two of his fingertips off, on his fretting hand, in some kind of shop accident at work.

        Despite this, he popped on a couple of thimbles and proceeded to basically invent the power chord and was a pioneer of guitar riffage.

        You only lost one, so you’ve already got one-up on him!

        • PrimeMinisterKeyes@leminal.space
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          17 hours ago

          The right hand of V-3’s Jim Shepard was pulled into a wood planer machine, resulting in significant damage to two fingers and minor injuries to others. After being rushed to the hospital, a plastic surgeon performed multiple surgeries, including two flesh grafts and a bone graft. The recovery process was challenging, involving his hand being temporarily attached to his groin to facilitate healing. Once they cut it loose again, he resumed playing guitar with the hand still completely bandaged and released one of V-3’s finest records, “Negotiate Nothing”, later that same year.

        • Bartsbigbugbag@lemmy.ml
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          1 day ago

          Django Reinhardt had pretty bad damage to his fretting hand too from a fire, and that dude shredded like no other.

          • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            1 day ago

            like no other

            Literally lol… Forced constraints and limitations are often a huge impetus for creating great art.

      • DrSteveBrule@mander.xyz
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        1 day ago

        Does mandolin have more than one meaning? I know it as type of lute instrument, but I can’t imagine someone cutting theirself on one.

      • Oniononon@sopuli.xyz
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        1 day ago

        I used to paint and draw daily every day for 5 years. Then i tried 3d. Used to do it every day for 8 years. Then i tried programming.

    • Lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      My phone does that for me. I use a habit tracker with undismissable notifications that take only a “Yes” or “No” answer (it’s a bit more customizable, but this is how I use it), which helps keep me accountable for my habits.

      Unfortunately, it’s been almost 3 months for a habit that I’m trying to nail down and I still forget sometimes.

  • ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    “Making it a habit” is just a big lie to fix any problem even for NTs. I don’t have ADHD and I will drop something I’ve done consistently for 6+ months in a heartbeat if I miss a single occurrence, and then it takes conscious effort for weeks to get back to it.

    • ChexMax@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Even if something tickles my brain it still doesn’t become a habit. I genuinely don’t think, in my 30s, with dozens of daily systems and all things considered a damn organized life, that I have a single habit. Everything I do is painstaking. Everything is conscious thought. I do laundry every single day and I have to think through the steps. Brushing my teeth is a slog. Figuring out what to eat is so difficult I often skip it despite just eating the same things over and over. If I don’t set alarms, I will forget to feed my kid. Alarms for vitamins that I’m not allowed to dismiss until the vitamin is swallowed. I am struggling to think of a single thing that is automatic. I have to think about opening the blinds every day. I have to think about turning off the lights at night (I think about the consequences of leaving them on to decide which lights I leave on. Every night). Nothing happens out of habit.

      • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        This, 100%.

        It’s funny, after I read your comment I tried to think if anything I do is purely out of habit, rather than a deliberate choice. I thought, “Falling asleep?” at first, but then remembered my insomnia. Hell, it’s 4:15am right now.

        I can’t even sleep overnight “out of habit.”

  • AddLemmus@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    Dr. K. put it like this in a video: Habit forming is not in the frontal lobe, and is not directly affected by ADHD.

    It has not worked for me yet, but I’m currently trying again. I suspect that, indirectly, ADHD does play a role, and additional tricks are needed, but I have hope.

    • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Isn’t the current scientific understanding that ADHD is a result of neurotransmitter dysfunction? Neurotransmitters work across the whole brain.

      I don’t understand why the “location” of “habit forming” in the brain should matter, considering that neurotransmitters function across the entire nervous system. Is there more context to that phrase?

    • SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      That’s all well and good in theory, and sure, it’s something a doctor says

      But a lot of the time I’ve just found that they just don’t know what they’re talking about, thus indirectly contributing to the stigma by making it seem like it’s just “our fault” yet again

      I’d love for nothing more than for me to fix my life. Hell, I’ve been trying my whole life. I’ve been putting such a great burden on myself I’ve burned myself out completely. It’s far from as simple as that

      Sorry, it’s not directed at you, I’ve just seen these influencers pop up here and there and they annoy me, especially by their know-it-all attitude

    • LwL@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I would guess that starting the habit is harder wirh adhd. Something doesn’t become a habit after just doing it once, you need to do it for a while first. Adhd can make that harder both because you might simply forget and because of executive dysfunction.

      I would think that for people without adhd the “forget it once and suddenly it’s gone” also applies (seems consistent with my understanding of human memory), but restarting it might be easier so it doesn’t feel like it.

      • AddLemmus@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        That is also my understanding: You may or may not a “habit person” almost regardless of ADHD, but starting it is harder, and losing it easier with ADHD.

        I hope that was the only problem in my case, and we’ll see in a couple of weeks.

        During therapy it might be best to start, so there is someone who supervises it and calls you out. Maybe being active in a community like x-effect. Any kind of accountability entity.