BigDunc'sFod
Player Valuation: £35m
Hi mateHaven’t had to post in here for a while. Managed to get some sort of grasp on my alcohol/substance abuse problem, had some ups and downs, but still really struggling with life.
Left my previous job for something more challenging, but it feels a little too much, to the point where it affects my life. The job is probably a level down in terms or technicality, but the sheer volume is overwhelming. By the end of the day I’m pooped. Don’t use alcohol/cocaine as a crutch but I just smash a takeaway and spend hours in bed to compensate.
I was diagnosed with ADHD not long ago. Not sure how I feel about that, seems vogue to slap that tag on people lately. I was prescribed Methylphenidate by the psychiatrist, but my local GP don’t want to take on the responsibility of dispensing it, and I can’t afford to pay privately (would have to pay about £100 a month for the drugs and £90 for each session with the psychiatrist). Not even sure I want to be taking what is essentially methamphetamine to cope with life.
To cut my ramble off, I’m basically asking a) does anyone with an incredibly busy job have tips on how to manage a heavy workload, and b) has anyone been diagnosed with ADHD and found ways to manage without medication?
Seems like you're going through it but first off kudos for addressing your substance/alcohol dependency. I know that's a long road and not really one that's ever over but I hope you are proud of your direction there.
Very busy job here (or at least I think it is, quite the rat race in New York), and in my experience I've found either people are really good at hustling/never stopping and just get in their groove or they're very careful about schedule management. I work in IT though. All in all I do find it quite demanding and unhealthy in the sense that I'm often working longer than a 9-5 (very typical here too work much longer) and do things like with through lunch to catch up on stuff or to make sure my team are doing okay.
I shared this only to say that sacrificing well being, if that is something that is on the table, isn't always the best of the options. I'm lucky that I am competent at my job and so the workload management is really the hardest part rather than struggling with challenges around not knowing how to do my work any more and I've managed through a combination of independently switching off and managing my time with my calendar (the visual helps me) so that I get block of hours to do focus work and other periods where it's 20 little things an hour. The schedule management took me a long time to get right and the thing that took the longest was delegation and saying no (or at least not right now) to work out helping others (auto declining appointments and things like adding prep or though times to my calendar as an appointment with myself has helped ... Reading that it sounds really weird!. If any of this sounds like you, I found that articulating I was struggling with workload helped because nobody had even realised a lot of this work was being done in the first place.
No idea what kind of work you do (sorry) but priority and time management tactics like KANBAN for priority (another tip here is to show a supervisor your conflicting interests if you're given something else on your full plate) and Pomodoro for time may be something to look at. If you're in an office environment or similar, there's a great app called marinara which is used that gives you countdowns and reminders to stick to your focus times. Pomodoro essentially is breaking down your work into little sprints of 25 mins and taking a mini break. I think that approach could help with ADHD?
All this being said if you have ADHD it may simply be that it's so difficult to keep focused that the work cannot be managed without you needing meds? It's not unusual to be diagnosed later in life especially as there have been more guidance (the US have the DSM5 but I'm sure there's similar in the UK?) in recent years as things like neuro divergence are normalised and celebrated. I imagine it's not an easy amount of work but maybe explain the meds challenge to your doctor and see if they have ideas on how to deal with that? Maybe there are groups, charities, community organisations or other non profits that have programs or similar that could help with the logistics of dispensing or coat reduction?
Yikes, sorry for the long post but hopefully there's a nugget or two in here that will help a little. I don't have the heart to delete everything and be more concise haha