View Full Version : Positive Traits of ADHD


Keppig
09-20-05, 11:05 AM
Enthusiasm, Empathy and High Energy Among Traits the Disorder Carries
By Marilyn Lewis for MSN Health & Fitness

ADHD hasn’t changed, but how experts view the disorder is evolving in a new direction. Instead of only focusing on the difficulties posed by ADHD, today, the upsides are likely to be noted, too: the quick-wittedness, the speedy grasp of the big picture and the great enthusiasm for nearly everything. These traits make ADHDers endearing and simultaneously exasperating.

This change may sound like just a new way of describing the same old thing, but to those with ADHD, the difference is profound. An estimated 2 percent to 4 percent of American adults and 3 percent to 7 percent of children have the brain-based disorder.For them, it’s the difference between seeing themselves as broken and thinking of themselves as having advantages, even if they have to cope with being fidgety, distractible or easily bored.

In praise of ADHD

JetBlue Airways CEO and founder David Neeleman is famously frank about his ADHD. He was diagnosed in 2001, seven years after he realized he had it. By then, he’d already founded and then sold Morris Air. He had done so well in his own eccentric way that he felt he was doing fine without medication. Still, Neeleman says he’s not anti-meds: “I have talked to a lot of people who swear by the medication.”

Neeleman credits ADHD with his creativity and “out-of-the-box thinking”—it led him to invent e-tickets while at Morris, for example. “One of the weird things about the type of [ADHD] I have is, if you have something you are really, really passionate about, then you are really, really good about focusing on that thing. It’s kind of bizarre that you can’t pay the bills and do mundane tasks, but you can do your hyper-focus area.” He spends “all my waking hours” obsessing about JetBlue. The rest of his life, Neeleman says, would be a “disaster” if not for his wife, who manages their home and children; his accountant, who pays the bills and tracks his finances; and his personal assistant, who sends him his schedule every day and steers him from appointment to appointment, keeping him on track.

Ken Melotte, 43, of Green Bay, Wis., is quick to credit ADHD for his successes, too. “I have ideas immediately,” says Melotte, who’s on the management team of a national trucking firm. “I instantly start working on solutions, seeing different ways to do things.”

Yet, ADHD has been a struggle for him. Melotte doesn’t care for medication. The disorder vexes him most at work, as a project manager, when he had “a terrible struggle” keeping track of all the details. On the other hand, he believes that ADHD traits like empathy, intuition and the ability to motivate and inspire others made him a successful manager.

A “context disorder”

ADHD is considered “context disorder,’ ” Thom Hartmann says. Hartmann, an expert on the disorder, is one of the few who saw the positive side of ADHD before it was fashionable.

“If a left-handed person has a job cutting origami with right-handed scissors, that doesn’t mean they have a disability; they have context disorder,” Hartmann explains. “Short people trying to play basketball have a context disorder.”

People with ADHD “may instead be our most creative individuals, our most extraordinary thinkers, our most brilliant inventors and pioneers,” writes Hartmann in his 2003 book The Edison Gene: ADHD and the Gift of the Hunter Child. He posits that the people with ADHD may carry genetically coded abilities that once were, and may still be, necessary for human survival and that contribute richness to the culture.

A spate of books has come out that echoes Hartmann’s positive spin, including Delivered From Distraction: Getting the Most Out of Life With Attention Deficit Disorder, by Drs. Edward Hallowell and John Ratey, and The Gift of ADHD, by Lara Honos-Webb.

To Hartmann, “Any kind of difference, even those differences that may make life more difficult or be viewed by some as pathologies, have to have some sort of upside, outside of pure disease processes. Otherwise they wouldn’t survive in the gene pool.”

Source (http://articles.health.msn.com/id/100109339?GT1=6997)

Craig
09-21-05, 09:28 AM
I find myself more optimistic than perhaps I should about my ADHD. I have a personal belief that it's only called a disorder because it causes so much disorder in our lives. It is a difference in our brains, no question. But I approach it from the viewpoint that when I find my purpose, what I was made for, the traits given to me by said differences will put me ahead of the competition. I may think differently than most of the population, but I'm not stupid. I'll see things they don't, and that gives me an edge.

ADHD will be my strength, but it comes at a heavy price.

Craig

Gourmet
09-21-05, 10:13 AM
Dr. Edward Hallowell was on the Today Show this morning. I wish that he had touched on some of the positive traits, but instead he focused on the numbers of adults that are undiagnosed and the negatives that adhd presents.

The woman they had as a guest had adhd and was an artist and daydreamer...they did not mention that adhd in anyway was contributing to her positives. I was disappointed.
This was obviously not the intent of the interview, but I wish that the positives could have been mentioned at least briefly considering he is an expert and had the opportunity.

They did laughingly refer to the controversy with Tom Cruise, though.

"But that's a different show...."

Thanks Kassie for the information..I agree that we should focus on the positives and I am a believer that my adhd contributes to my problem solving skills through necessity and therefore enhances my creativity.

pith30
10-01-05, 11:28 PM
Dont say anything positive or the folks around here will break out their pitchforks. Just wine, talk about your meds, and make fun of anyone who breaks these rules. I know im just learning also, just some friendly advice.

mctavish23
10-01-05, 11:37 PM
I have respectfully disagree with that perception.

My concern is always for accuracy in the research qouted, which is separate and apart from personal opinion.

As for ADHD, I view it as a devastating disorder,with many more debilitating impairments than positives.

There are definately some positives and I believe those need to be highlighted.

At the same time, a person needs to have a realistic understanding of what they're up against.

An optimistic attitude is important, irrespective of ADHD.

Uminchu
10-01-05, 11:42 PM
If I were a Neeleman, or an Edison, or an Einstein, I'd be stoked with having ADD too. All the "moral failings," "personality flaws," etc. would be worth having ideas like that.

scuro
10-01-05, 11:54 PM
Yeah but who says they were ADHD? Did they have a diagnosis?

Personally, I think Einstein was the new ADHD innattentive subtype. He didn't have a classic hyper-ADHD bone in his body. :) I'm worried about the Aspie's though, they will probably want to claim him too.

Uminchu
10-02-05, 12:13 AM
Personally, I think Einstein was the new ADHD innattentive subtype. He didn't have a classic hyper-ADHD bone in his body. :) I'm worried about the Aspie's though, they will probably want to claim him too.
Why worry about the Aspies? We'd kick their butts in a fight. :)

Cliff
10-02-05, 04:51 AM
Just a thought, but maybe in order for new ideas to be born we need people who can think outside of the box, which is where we come in.

Who knows but maybe normals need us as much as we need them?

Draven
10-02-05, 10:03 AM
Thanks Kassie for the information..I agree that we should focus on the positives and I am a believer that my adhd contributes to my problem solving skills through necessity and therefore enhances my creativity.

This just reminded me of something. I didn't go to class much when I had Algebra and I got my GED before I had Algebra 2 but when I went to collage, I did remarkably well in College Algebra and I never could figure out why it came so easy for me.

Up until the third chapter of the book, it was just all about numbers but the third chapter was Problem Solving and all the sudden, I had it. As long as I could relate the numbers to an actual situation,, I had no problem what so ever. I ended up with a 97% in that class and tutored it the next year.

Algebra, Sociology, and Psychology were about the only classes that I truly enjoyed and I ended up excelling in all three. To bad for the rest of my classes. lol

Nova
10-03-05, 09:40 AM
Dont say anything positive or the folks around here will break out their pitchforks
Good luck, getting me to stop posting positive information, on here, lol ! :D
I have plenty other 'boards' that I post on..when I'm in a whiny, sniveling, and meglomaniacal mood.
Nova