November 27th, 2011 at 3:46 am (Adult ADD/ADHD)
As if the ADHD adult doesn’t have enough stress to contend with, consider the potential added stresses of the holiday season. For some, the holiday season is both joyous and stimulating. Yet others of us may already be struggling to manage our current pre-holiday “To Do” list.
So consider the potential additional challenges for the ADHD adult faced with tending to the seasonal tasks of holiday shopping and contending with the hoards of ‘friendly” shoppers. But wait! There’s more: Don’t forget the gift wrapping and possible looming deadlines for shipping. Do I hear the sounds of stress and rising blood pressure?
Here are some hints to support you:
Plan: There is a well know adage that say’s, “Those who fail to plan, plan to fail”.
- Take time to put your “To DO” list on paper. Get it out of your head!
- Create a time line using a calendar. What’s due by when?
- Prioritize your list. What’s most important and most urgent?
- At the end of each day – review your ‘TO DO’ List and cross out all those tasks that you managed to complete for the day.
- Next, add those additional tasks that you completed that were not on the original TO DO list and cross those off as well.
- I know it sounds redundant but be sure to make a new ‘TO Do” list every day.
Be Gentle to Yourself. I recently heard someone say, “It’s hard to move forward while you’re kicking yourself in the butt”. Be gentle with yourself. Do the best you can and be aware to not judge yourself if you didn’t complete as much as you had intended.
Take time to enjoy the holiday season.
- Spend quality time with friends
- Take time to exercise regularly. It’s good for your body and reduces stress.
- Eat healthy and mindfully …slow down.
- Speaking of slowing down, try meditation, yoga, deep and gently breathing and relaxation.
Celebrate your successes and your holiday season.
~ May your holiday season be filled with joy, happiness and gentleness.
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November 23rd, 2011 at 11:36 pm (Adult ADD/ADHD)
Thanksgiving Greetings

Happy Thanksgiving
From CoachRudy
ADHD Center for Success
I wanted to take a moment to wish you a Happy Thanksgiving
I hope that you’ll take time to relax and enjoy your day
with family, friends and loved
~CoachRudy
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November 20th, 2011 at 11:15 am (Articles, Time Management)
Eliminate Time-Draining E-mail Habits
If you are feeling overburdened and stressed at work, your online habits may be partly to blame. Poor e-mail management often is a sign—or the cause—of other time management woes. A top culprit: mismanaging incoming messages.
Marsha Egan, president of The Egan Group, a success-coaching firm, offers a self-management program that teaches you how to eliminate time draining e-mail habits and boost your productivity. First, Egan says, you need to alter your perception of e-mail: Stop viewing the act of checking e-mail as a task in itself; come to see e-mail as merely a task delivery system. Then adopt these habits:
- Empty your inbox every time you check it.
- Live by the two-minute rule. If you can handle any incoming message in two minutes or less, do so immediately. That could mean replying to, forwarding or simply deleting a message.
- Use a filing system. Create action folders and use them temporarily to file e-mail messages that will take longer than two minutes to respond to. Treat those messages as items on your daily to-do list.
- Control incoming messages—instead of letting them control you. Change your “send and receive” e-mail function from “Automatic” to “Every two hours.”
Source: Success Magazine July/August 2007
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November 13th, 2011 at 1:46 am (Articles, Time Management)
There are many possible reasons for putting off until tomorrow what you intended to do today. It is only once you know why you are doing it that you can figure out what to do about it.
| Reason |
Solution |
| You need more information to do the job right. |
Replace what’s currently on your list with a different task, such as “gather needed information.” |
| It’s overwhelming to think about. |
Break the project down into smaller chunks. Don’t post the project name on your list, only the next step. |
| The deadline is far away so you still have time. |
Set interim deadlines to be sure the final one doesn’t creep up on you. |
| You don’t like the task. |
Delegate it, swap with someone else, or create a reward system for yourself. Be sure to follow through on the reward even if it’s only a fifteen-minute break to read a magazine, or this technique will become less effective over time. |
| You don’t know where to start. |
Start anywhere. This will motivate you to continue and complete the task. |
| Other priorities get in the way. |
Review your hopes and dreams. How important is this project to reaching them? Get clear on this so you know to move this item up the list or drop it permanently. |
Source: “The Organized Life: Secrets of an Expert Organizer” by Stephanie Denton
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November 1st, 2011 at 11:43 pm (ADHD In The News)
More info re ADHD medication shortages.
I just received an email from ADDiva Linda Roggli. I cannot verify the following information but Linda is a trusted Coaching colleague. I’ve listed her note without editing…
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For brand name Adderall it’s a problem with API (Active
Pharmaceutical Ingredient) – the manufacturer can’t get
enough of it. For other drugs it’s the DEA/Justice Department
quota on controlled substances – demand outstripped
the projected inventory because more people were diagnosed
with ADHD than expected. And there are geographical
distribution inequities that cause some parts of the US
to be out of controlled substances and others to be flush
with them.
I learned today that the mail order pharmacies are stockpiling
ADHD drugs so that might be a possible source if insurance
will cover it.
I find it interesting that the new brand name drugs – Vyvanse,
Daytrana and even Metadate are in full supply. No problems
getting them at all…hmmmm…
I am doing more digging to find out who controls the
API chain (and did you know that 40% of the active
ingredients come from China, India and Italy??)
~Linda
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November 1st, 2011 at 11:21 pm (ADHD In The News)
If you’ve been watching the news or if you’ve visited your local pharmacy lately you’re probably aware of the current nationwide prescription drug shortage.
In The News – Raleigh, N.C. — Although President Barack Obama ordered federal officials Monday to help reduce shortages of critical drugs as much as possible, pharmacists are still advising patients to plan ahead on filling prescriptions.
The executive order calls for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to speed up its safety reviews and push drug companies to better communicate on supplies.
Hospitals and pharmacies nationwide said supplies of more than 200 drugs to treat everything from attention-deficit disorder to cancer and to protect patients during surgery are limited.
“The level of shortage is the worst in history right now,” READ MORE
More on…“Current Drug Shortages”
Locate available med’s -I received the following resource for a pharmacy locator phone number that goes to Shire Customer Service and is supposed to be able to help individuals find a pharmacy that has your ADHD medication on hand.
Call Shire Customer Service at 1-800-828-2088 or the Shire Pharmacy Locator at 1-800-828-2088 select “Option 5” for assistance in locating a pharmacy in your area with product availability.
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