Like autistic people get to be autistic. That’s a word, and it has meaning. Someone can be autistic because it’s a type of person (spectrumy type). In my opinion, ADHD sucks as an identifying term. It’s 3 letters, one repeated. It means nothing as it is spelled and can’t be owned as an identity because they’re letters, not a word. “I’m adhudd.” The initials include “disorder” in it. That sucks. Autistic people don’t go around saying, “Hi, I’m austically disordered,” cause that’s not accepting. Is there a term that is smooth and not judgmental for ADHD? Maybe we can take Aspergers since it got dropped, but add the ‘d’ to get “Adspergers”. Nah, that’s stupid af. What about multibrained? I feel multibrained because I act like I’ve got multiple brains running in my head doing their own thing all at the same time, and I bounce around them based on who knows what.

What? Oh, yes…I’ll have the spaghetti bolog-knees. Do you guys have red pepper…crushed red pepper? Yeah, thanks. Cool. I like your name tag. Is that really your name? Samsquatch?..oh! It’s Samuel, but you changed it to Samsquatch! I love Trailer Park Boys. Fuck off, Leahy! Yeah. Sorry. I got excited.

Okay. So…um, is there a descriptive word for ADHD that isn’t ADHD?

      • @cynar@lemmy.world
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        22 months ago

        There is the term neurodiverse, which is an easy catch all for neurologically abnormal, but not broken.

        Neurospicy is a play on this, spicy vs bland. People have strong opinions on spicy, very few have strong opinions on bland food.

  • @xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    362 months ago

    We all tried to come up with a nice concise term for ADHD but ended up writing multi page papers instead.

    • @atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
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      62 months ago

      I started thinking about it, and thought that adhd kinda looked like a palindrome, which made me think of anagrams and how they’re often used as a reveal in bad mystery plots. So I wrote a program to generate anagrams from an input in rust because I wanted to learn rust and never thought much about the algorithms for generating anagrams before. I then hit some complexities with multiple words as anagrams. I’m currently optimizing the dictionary look up by refreshing my knowledge on searching and sorting algorithms.

      I expect to make more progress on this task tomorrow.

    • DankOfAmericaOP
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      92 months ago

      This makes me think of Tabasco. Not that it’s good or bad. It’s neutral. I’m just sharing.

      • DankOfAmericaOP
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        142 months ago

        Ok, it’s your moment. Let’s hear it all. Dump it. Why do you hate it?

        • Coelacanth
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          92 months ago

          I also deeply dislike the phrase for much of the same reason as the other replies. It’s a phrase that evokes high-functioning TikTokers looking to quirkily stand out from the crowd and in general downplays the reality of many neurodivergent people and their very real, very tangible struggles.

        • @hypnicjerk@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          it’s such a heckin pupper way to describe one of the biggest challenges i deal with in my life. i’m not grim about my neurodivergence but i’m sure not perky about it either.

          • Eyedust
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            12 months ago

            I can respect this. I have all this creativity, 98th percentile in creative writing standard tests in the US (SATs, but this was also a while back), and I can’t ever get beyond the start of a book before I’m bored, hate it, feels like work. I’m immediately drawn to other, shinier things to do. Forget neurospicy, I feel neuroblocked. I’m neuroselective of what I want to neurodo.

            It’s like drowning, but you can pick from a bunch of tiny straws poking up in the water to get air. Some days you want the yellow straw, oh but wait the green straw looks good… but there’s that temptress the red straw in the corner, the sly devil. Sometimes you just want to breathe so you grab multiple straws in one day. Sometimes no straws look good and you just drown that day. However, by ADHD law, you can never use the same straw twice in a week.

        • Magister Sieran
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          232 months ago

          I can’t speak for hypnicjerk, but I personally dislike the term because it feels too glib.

          I can’t do shit because of executive dysfunction and I forget things all the time, that’s not “spicy”, it’s preventing me from having a life.

    • @hedgehogging_the_bed@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I hate this, but I use it because “I’m from a neurodivergent family” sounds worse to my ears that “My whole family is some flavor of neurospicy.”

      We have 2 ADHD+anxiety, 1 dual ADHD+Au, and 1 dual ADHD+NVLD.

  • ALQ
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    282 months ago

    I like to call it the “ta da!” because the Spanish acronym is TDAH. Who doesn’t like being able to say “ta da!”?

    • @adarza@lemmy.ca
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      142 months ago

      remember back in the early days of windows… like 3.1 era… when windows started, it did that. like “see? i actually booted up!! TA-DA!!”

    • Phantaminum
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      12 months ago

      I gona have to implement that, it is kinda hard for me to say TDAH in a fluent way.

    • @orize@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 months ago

      I disagree with providing clues about certain conditions. Doing so can lead to misinterpretation, as people’s perceptions vary widely. While it’s inevitable, it’s possible to live in a way that minimizes the impact of these perceptions, and I would advise everyone to do so.

      ADHD, although it shares similarities among individuals with this neurodivergence, manifests uniquely in each person.

      ADHD is distinct from autism, particularly in how individuals with ADHD manage conversations.

      ADHD is also different from intellectual disabilities.

      Despite these differences, all these conditions fall under the umbrella term “neurodivergent.” However, I prefer not to use this term, as it can lead to overthinking and reliance on preconceived notions. I just tell people I have ADD on paper and if they want to understand it/me better, they will ask. Or I will provide them the info I seen they are missing. Lol!

    • DankOfAmericaOP
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      22 months ago

      I’m like 95-100% filtered at first to avoid upsetting anyone. Very rarely, I’ll make it to 0% unfiltered with only the most accepting and trustworthy people.

    • @theneverfox@pawb.social
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      102 months ago

      Agreed. It’s like they start looking for confirmation, so they start expecting and noticing every little mistake. Or they don’t see it, and give you unsolicited speeches about how they struggle to focus to and you just need discipline… In fact, you should stop taking your meds

      I just tell people without telling people. “I can’t sit still for too long, I have to walk”, “the music/videos and stim toys help me focus”, “my thought process is weird, I know that sounds unrelated but it makes sense to me”, “I know you’re writing up a list, I need to take notes to process what you’re saying and if I don’t doodle I can’t pay attention to this boring ass meeting

      If you take on the label, they don’t see you as managing your symptoms, they look for the cracks. If you explain your compensation strategies and areas of difficulty, they usually are pretty supportive and will even respect the level of thought you put into it

      • 𝕮𝕬𝕭𝕭𝕬𝕲𝕰
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        22 months ago

        Conversely I’ve met people who were diagnosed as adults and who then blame everything they do on their ADHD - “you know, now everything makes sense about me!”.

        Ditto with Autism, to be fair - you don’t get to excuse being an arsehole just because you’re not neurotypical, Dave.

      • @recklessengagement@lemmy.world
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        22 months ago

        “They look for the cracks” is an excellent way to put it.

        I don’t even tell friends, except those who are very close. Too often, it changes the way people treat me.

  • Possibly linux
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    2 months ago

    It is not cool or trendy to be Autistic…

    I know that you probably don’t mean it that way but I do think it is important to see people for who they are.

  • Majorllama
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    72 months ago

    It’s not exactly what you’re looking for but I have described having ADHD as like having a TO-DO list except any time something new is added to the list you have to roll a dice and decide which thing on the list you’re going to do right now. On the rare occasion nothing else comes up before you finish one task you’ll be golden. But if anything should pop into your mind it throws the entire things back into the random TO-DO list which you will then reroll.

    This is the perfect visual example of what living with ADHD is like: https://youtu.be/AbSehcT19u0?si=EwsCg-xZVZOpbbLN

  • themeatbridge
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    2 months ago

    I gave a joke answer, but I also have heard the term “kaleidoscope” to describe the shifting mental state, and I liked it. Maybe “kalaidoment”?

    • Orize
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      02 months ago

      That doesn’t fit well, because a person with adhd doesn’t want to be assumed has autism. It would be an unnecessary hurdle for the interpreter to get past lol