• Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    I thought of a quick mental pace, frequently jumping from thought to thought, inevitably going off on tangents. That’s what I interpreted from the line about being “smarter and faster.” However, having that quickness translated into “smartness” is far from the only way for it to manifest.

    You may have a quick mental pace, but it doesn’t help you find solutions - it just repeatedly pulls you into depression or anxiety by effortlessly connecting negative thoughts to literally anything that crosses your mind. Or you have quick thoughts, but struggle to track back to things from earlier on - leading to a feedback loop of distraction that makes conversations, movies, and sometimes even your own ideas, very difficult to follow.

    Side note: I feel like if I lived in a pre-literate society, I’d be far more disabled than today. I don’t know how I’d function if I weren’t able to write down my thoughts, or read (and re-read) information. The written word provides a structure and direction that the spoken word and abstract thoughts don’t have. I may be seen as “smarter” in the modern world, but someone like me from the ancient past would’ve been at a massive disadvantage.

    • bestboyfriendintheworld@sh.itjust.works
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      13 hours ago

      I feel like if I lived in a pre-literate society, I’d be far more disabled than today

      Living and working in a more close knit social group could offset many ADHD issues. Our strengths and weaknesses could balance each other out.

      Information retainment and such can be accomplished with songs and stories.