neurodiversity

Create a new post for topic
Join the Conversation on
neurodiversity
38.3K people
0 stories
1.1K posts
About neurodiversity Show topic details
Explore Our Newsletters
What's New in neurodiversity
All
Stories
Posts
Videos
Latest
Trending
Post
See full photo

Things I Want More of in This Season of Life

As I’ve gotten older, I’ve started to embrace a slower lifestyle.

I used to get overwhelmed by all of the things that I thought I needed to do in order to live a successful life. I thought that I had to have it all figured out—career, relationships, financial stability.

But the truth is, I don’t.

And I’m learning that’s okay.

I don’t want to be so hard on myself anymore for not being where I thought I’d be in life. It’s too draining emotionally and mentally to always be doubting yourself and your abilities.

Instead of letting my mind control me, I want to start letting more positive energy flow through me.

This season of life is offering me an opportunity to see the beauty in the ordinary. An opportunity to live life at my own pace.

And deep down, that’s what I think I’ve always wanted all along.

Here are some of the things I want more of.

More Slow Mornings

I want mornings where I don’t wake up and feel like the day is already ruined.

More often than not, I’ll wake up and one small thing will spark some sort of emotion out of me. Usually, it’s irritation or frustration about something.

I want to change the attitude of my mornings.

Start slowly.

No immediate scrolling on my phone.

Enjoying my cup of coffee on the patio.

Getting some sunshine before it gets too hot.

Jokingly, I hear sunshine is supposed to give you energy.

I just want more time to wake up gently instead of immediately feeling behind.

More Little Joys

Picking up fresh flowers at the grocery store to liven up my living space.

Reading all of the books that I haven’t touched and finding new ones to escape into.

Summer sunsets.

My favorite meal after a long day.

Songs that instantly feel like comfort.

I’ve learned that happiness is truly hidden in the ordinary things, and I want to notice those moments more often.

More Meaningful Connections

I want more conversations that go beyond small talk.

I want more people I can fully be myself around.

More moments of feeling understood.

I think all of us have ups and downs in friendships and relationships.

But for me, I learned the hard way who is and who isn’t a stronghold in my life.

I’ve lost friends and partners whom I’ll most likely never speak to again.

And the strange part of it all is that I lost these friendships and relationships because I was just being myself.

With that comes a lot of heartache, grief, and feelings that you’re the problem.

And those feelings don’t just disappear no matter how much time has passed.

Those moments of losing people made me feel like everything I thought about myself was true.

I’m not smart.

I’m not likable.

I’m boring.

The list goes on.

When someone you cared for and adored tells you those things about yourself that you already secretly fear, it does damage.

So, I want to embrace the people in my life who chose to stick around and let me be myself free of judgment.

Friendships and relationships are very important to me, and I don’t want to waste my time on people who don’t see me and accept me for who I am.

More Creating Memories With the People I Love

I have a tight-knit friend circle.

I actually met most of them in middle school, and we’ve maintained close relationships to this day.

I’m so lucky and forever grateful to have friends in my life who love and support me.

All of us are actually going to Romania for our friend’s wedding.

This will be our first time out of the country together, and I can’t tell you how excited I am to make new memories that I just know will last a lifetime.

Whenever I’m with them, I’m happy just being in their presence.

Sure, my mind wanders, and I can get into an overthinking funk, but they truly see me and appreciate me for who I am.

And that means more than they probably realize.

More Comfort in Being Exactly Who I Am

For most of my life, I’ve never really felt comfortable in my own skin.

I always had low self-esteem and a lack of confidence.

I was really hard on myself because I couldn’t do things as easily as others could. And that struggle made me feel weak.

The truth is, I spent my whole life confused about who I really am.

But once I was diagnosed, things started to make sense and fall into place for me.

I gained a new perspective and a new understanding of myself.

It gave me hope, purpose, and answers.

I don’t want to constantly judge myself like I used to.

I don’t want to feel disconnected from myself or appease others by becoming someone different.

I just want to be comfortable with who I am.

And I’m slowly getting there.

My confidence has grown.

My self-esteem is getting higher.

I’m getting there, little by little.

More Celebrating How Far I’ve Come

I think it’s easy to focus on how far we still have to go.

The goals we haven’t reached yet.

The things we still want to change.

But lately, I’ve been trying to remind myself to look back, too.

I’ve survived things I once thought would break me.

I’ve learned so much about myself.

And I’ve grown in ways that I never, ever expected.

There are versions of me from years ago who would be very proud of the person I am today.

And I want to celebrate that more often.

More Gentleness With Myself

Perhaps more than anything, I want to be kinder to myself.

I want to stop expecting myself to function like everyone else.

I want to stop measuring my worth by productivity.

I want to stop feeling like I’m somehow behind.

I want to give myself the same understanding and compassion that I so easily offer other people.

I think this season of life is more about returning to myself and making room for the things that matter.

About creating a life that feels softer, slower, and more aligned with who I truly am.

What is one thing you want more of in this season of your life?

“To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment.”— Often attributed to Ralph Waldo Emerson

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #ADHD #Autism #AutismSpectrum #selfcare #MightyTogether

Most common user reactions 1 reaction
Post
See full photo

The Simple Habit That Helps Me Feel More Like Myself

Lately, I’ve been getting outside more.

Which sounds simple, but for me, it hasn’t always been that easy.

More often than not, there is something within me that sees even simple things as a hassle. If I go outside, that means I have to stop whatever it is that I’m doing and make time for it. And when I’m hyperfocused on work, writing, or a project, I rarely want to do that.

It’s strange how I tend to neglect the things that would probably help me the most. I’ve never really understood why I do that, especially when I know that once I actually get outside, I’m happy.

I feel lighter, more focused, and more motivated.

The problem is always getting there.

I’ve always been someone who loves being comfy at home. I don’t really like to go out if I don’t have to. I like being in my own space.

And my safe space just so happens to be my room.

I’ve usually got my fan going because I overheat easily, my TV on in the background, and my computer right in front of me.

What can I say? It’s my little bubble of happiness.

But I’ve also realized that when I stay in that comfort zone for too long, my energy drops, my motivation disappears, and my world starts to feel a little smaller.

The other day, I decided to take advantage of my townhouse’s pool.

I love swimming. It’s always been my favorite form of exercise. But somehow, being comfortable inside often keeps me from it.

As a caregiver, my mom wanted to get some movement and therapy in by doing a little swimming. And honestly, doing that requires a lot of energy from both of us.

This was our first attempt at getting her into the pool, and long story short, it was exhausting—mentally and physically.

But once things settled and I got her back inside, I decided to stay by the pool for a little while.

I brought my portable speaker, some ice water, and a hat because my face burns ridiculously easily.

And honestly?

Just lying there on the chaise lounge, listening to my music and feeling the warmth of the sun against my skin helped re-center me.

It was peaceful.

There were no racing thoughts. No anxiety. No pressure to be productive.

I was simply there.

And it made me realize that I want—and deserve—more moments like that.

Moments that make me feel alive.

I think we sometimes put too much pressure on self-care.

We think going outside means we need to go on a long walk, hike a trail, or do some intense workout.

I used to think that way.

But going outside can look like different things:

Drinking your coffee on the patio.

Sitting in the sunshine for ten minutes.

Reading a book outside.

Gardening.

Taking a slow walk.

Eating a meal outdoors.

Sitting by the pool and doing absolutely nothing.

Those moments count.

I think that for many neurodivergent people, life can feel like a constant stream of stimulation.

We’re dealing with noises, screens, responsibilities, and thoughts that never seem to slow down.

Creating moments of quiet and connection can really help us reset.

For me, I’ve learned that sunshine, fresh air, and slowing down help me feel more grounded. They help me reconnect with myself.

You don’t have to spend hours outside every day, either.

Sometimes five or ten minutes is enough.

Enough to step away from everything for a little while.

I’m learning that some of the most meaningful things are often the simplest.

Sometimes self-care is stepping outside.

Feeling the sun on your skin.

Taking a few deep breaths.

Doing absolutely nothing.

Just being there.

And honestly?

I think I need more of that.

What is one simple habit that helps you feel more like yourself?

#MentalHealth #selfcare #Neurodiversity #Anxiety #ADHD #Autism #Mindfulness #MightyTogether

Most common user reactionsMost common user reactions 6 reactions 2 comments
Post
See full photo

The Lost Days

“In the middle of winter I at last discovered that there was in me an invincible summer.”

— Albert Camus

If I had to give one chapter of my life a title, I think I would simply call it The Lost Years.

The reason I would call them that is because it was a time filled with doubt, struggles, and uncertainty. Not because those years didn’t matter, but because I felt lost within them. I didn’t really know who I was, where I was going, or how to find my way back to myself.

In my mid to late twenties, I went through a really difficult period in my life—socially, physically, mentally, and internally. I felt like I had no sense of direction. Which path do I choose? That question was constantly on my mind.

But it wasn’t just the big life decisions. It was all the little things that added up each day.

I was in a deep state of depression. I barely left my bed. Tears seemed endless. My mind replayed everything that had ever gone wrong in my life and convinced me that things would never change. That I would never find stability, happiness, or a sense of safety.

There was one major event during that time that changed me in ways I never expected. I don’t really want to get into the details, but it left a lasting impact on me.

For a long time, I felt worthless. Like I was an afterthought. Like everyone else was moving forward while I remained stuck.

I had one friend during that time who helped pull me out of my funk every once in a while. He had the kind of personality that could always make me laugh and smile. We were practically inseparable for years.

Looking back now, I realize I spent much of my twenties helping him pursue his goals, dreams, and plans for the future. Mine, however, quietly took a back seat.

I’m not blaming him for that. If anything, it made me realize how much of a people-pleaser I was. At the time, I didn’t see it that way. I thought I was just being supportive and being there for someone I cared about. It wasn’t until later that I realized I had become so focused on helping someone else build their life that I stopped asking myself what I wanted for my own.

I didn’t socialize much outside of him and his partner. I had never been in a relationship, which made me feel behind in life. I felt like everyone else was moving forward while I was somehow stuck in the same place.

And because my depression had convinced me that I was somehow unworthy, I never really focused on building a life for myself.

So instead, I lived vicariously through him.

When I look back now, I think, it is what it is.

I can’t go back and change it.

I can only learn from it.

The reason I call them “The Lost Years” is because I only knew how to be there for other people. I didn’t know how to be there for myself.

I didn’t know who I was outside of helping others. I didn’t know what I wanted, where I was going, or what kind of life I wanted to build.

I think we all have a chapter like that. A season marked by grief, uncertainty, burnout, disappointment, anxiety, and simply trying to keep our heads above water.

I remember isolating myself from the outside world. I’d spend day in and day out locked away in my room, trying desperately to quiet the negative, nagging thoughts about how much of my life I had wasted.

I kept thinking, my life could have been what I always envisioned if I had only tried to make it a reality.

But no.

I was stuck.

Stuck in a never-ending cycle of past decisions, past experiences, and things that changed the trajectory of my life.

I kept myself “entertained” by watching comfort shows and movies. I couldn’t read because it was too hard to focus on anything other than my misery.

I ate comfort foods: cheese quesadillas, grilled cheese sandwiches, beef taquitos—anything familiar and safe.

Exercise was out of the question because I could hardly move beyond my comfort zone.

It’s funny how the place that brings you the most comfort can also become the place where you hide from your life.

I felt so disconnected and dissociated that I couldn’t even imagine who the real person was beneath all of the weight I was carrying.

Essentially, I had zero clue who I truly was.

Mind you, I was undiagnosed at the time and didn’t understand my feelings and emotions as well as I do now.

For years, I carried all of this without understanding why I felt the way I did. I thought I was lazy. I thought I was too sensitive. I thought I was too emotional. I thought everyone else had somehow figured out life while I was still trying to understand myself.

Then, a few years ago, I attended an ADHD conference.

Something there struck me to my core.

For the first time in my life, I felt seen.

I remember listening to people describe experiences that I had spent years thinking were just personal flaws or things that made me different. Suddenly, I had words to explain things I had struggled with for years.

It was a true “aha” moment.

That conference changed me.

Not because everything suddenly became better.

It didn’t.

I still had struggles. I still had difficult days.

But something shifted.

A massive weight lifted from my shoulders because I finally had a better understanding of myself.

It gave me hope.

It gave me a reason to start again.

I felt a little more comfortable in my own skin.

So, I started writing. A lot.

Eventually, I created this blog to share my story in hopes that others might resonate with it.

Writing became a way for me to process my experiences. It became a way to connect with others. It became a reminder that the things I thought made me feel alone were actually things many other people quietly experienced too.

It gave me passion. It gave me a desire to make improvements and small changes.

I no longer wanted to sit back and watch life happen.

I wanted to be a part of it.

That’s why the quote above resonates with me so much.

Even in the midst of winter, there was still an invincible summer within me.

I just couldn’t see it yet.

Looking back now, I realize I spent so much of my life trying to become who I thought I should be that I never stopped to ask myself who I actually was.

I was constantly comparing myself to other people. I was measuring my life against timelines that didn’t belong to me. I thought I was behind.

But I think that’s the thing about difficult seasons.

You don’t always recognize how hard they were until you’re on the other side of them.

At the time, I thought I was wasting years of my life.

I thought I had fallen too far behind.

Now, I have a little more compassion for that version of myself.

She was depressed. She was overwhelmed. She was carrying more than she realized. She was trying to survive without understanding why everything felt so difficult.

And maybe that’s why I don’t look at those years quite the same way anymore.

Were they hard? Absolutely.

Were they years I wish had looked different? Yes.

But they also shaped me.

They helped me understand myself.

They led me toward writing.

They led me toward building something meaningful.

They led me toward finally asking myself what kind of life I wanted.

Maybe they were lost years.

But maybe they were also the years that slowly brought me back to myself.

Have you ever had a season of life where you felt lost? What helped you find your way back?

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #Depression #Anxiety #AutismSpectrumDisorder #ADHD #ADHDInGirls #MightyTogether

Most common user reactions 1 reaction 1 comment
Post
See full photo

What's something you appreciate—or are learning to appreciate—about being neurodivergent?

While the world isn't always kind or accommodating to those of us with neurodivergent minds and bodies, that doesn't mean there aren't wonderful and beautiful qualities that make us who we are.

A few days ago, I was scrolling online and came across the idea of "embracing your whimsical side," and I thought it was such a fun perspective! It's inspired me to appreciate my own whimsical side—to be unapologetically myself, embrace my depth, honor my high sensitivity, celebrate my creative mind, and cherish all the things that make me different.

What about you? What's something you appreciate—or are learning to appreciate—about your neurodivergent self? ☺️

#Neurodiversity #ADHD #Autism #SensoryProcessingDisorder #Dyslexia #Dyscalculia #MentalHealth #Anxiety #Depression #PTSD

Most common user reactionsMost common user reactions 2 reactions 4 comments
Post
See full photo

Is chaos good for us?

This question really got me thinking.

For the longest time, I thought all chaos was bad.

Now I realize there are different kinds.

There's the kind that overwhelms me...and there's the kind that turns into a memory I wouldn't trade for anything.

What kind of chaos feels good in your life—and what kind doesn’t?

I'd love to hear your thoughts!

#Thoughts #Neurodiversity #ADHD #ADHDInGirls #Anxiety #chaos #quote #MentalHealth

Most common user reactionsMost common user reactionsMost common user reactions 6 reactions
Post
See full photo

I used to think peace meant having everything under control.

A plan. A routine. A calendar that looked exactly how I imagined my life should look.

And I really believed that if I could just stay organized enough, prepared enough, ahead of everything… then I’d finally feel calm.

But life doesn’t really work like that.

Plans change. People change. Circumstances change. Sometimes everything changes all at once and you’re just trying to catch up to it.

And no matter how much I try, I can’t really organize my way out of the unexpected.

I’ve noticed something too… we tend to call all of that “chaos” like it’s automatically a bad thing.

Like it just means stress, disorder, things falling apart.

But I don’t think it’s that simple anymore.

I think there are different kinds of chaos. And they don’t all feel the same in my body.

There was a day in London that comes to mind.

I was at the Tower of London, which I was really excited about. I’ve always loved British history, especially anything royal, so this was one of those moments I had really built up in my head.

It started off normal enough. A good day. We were walking around, taking everything in.

And then the weather just… flipped.

What had been a nice morning turned into this sudden, heavy downpour. I mean the kind of rain that doesn’t ease you into it — it just hits.

I was inside the White Tower when it started, looking at all the armor and displays, completely unaware of how bad it had gotten outside.

And when I finally met back up with my parents, everything was just… chaos.

I was soaked instantly. My shoes were ruined. People were rushing everywhere. My mom was in a wheelchair at the time and I just remember that feeling of guilt seeing them waiting out in that weather.

It was one of those moments where everything feels like it’s happening at once and you can’t really slow it down.

After that we went to see Wicked in the West End, still wet, still kind of overwhelmed, still trying to shake off the day.

And honestly in the moment I just remember thinking, I want this day to be over.

But what’s funny is… that’s not what I remember now.

Now I remember being in London.

I remember the Tower.

I remember sitting in that theatre with my family watching Wicked.

It didn’t feel good in the moment, not at all.

But it didn’t ruin anything either.

It just became… part of it.

There is definitely a kind of chaos that overwhelms me.

As someone with AuDHD, I know that feeling very well.

Too many decisions happening at once. Bright lights. Crowded spaces. Conversations overlapping. Plans changing before I’ve even adjusted to the last version of them.

It doesn’t feel exciting. It doesn’t feel spontaneous.

It feels like my brain is trying to hold onto everything at the same time and slowly losing grip.

And I end up exhausted in a way that’s hard to explain unless you’ve felt it.

For a long time I thought that meant I just needed to avoid chaos completely.

But I don’t think that’s actually true.

I think I just didn’t understand there’s more than one kind of it.

Because there’s another kind of chaos that feels completely different.

It’s a kitchen where everyone is cooking at once and nobody is doing it “right.”

Someone’s laughing too loud. Someone’s asking where things are. Music is on. Dogs are running through the house like they own it.

Nothing is organized. Nothing is controlled.

But I’m not overwhelmed in it.

I’m actually okay in it.

It feels warm. Familiar in a strange way.

Alive.

And the older I get, the more I realize some of my favorite memories were never really planned.

They just… happened.

Because someone said “come with us.”

Because we stayed out longer than we meant to.

Because dinner took longer than expected and nobody really cared.

Because something small turned into something we still talk about years later.

Those are the moments that stick.

Not the ones that went perfectly.

But I also don’t want to pretend all chaos is like that.

Some of it is heavy.

Some of it changes you in ways you don’t get to choose.

Becoming a caregiver.

Getting my AuDHD diagnosis later in life.

Realizing the life I thought I was building wasn’t going to look the way I expected.

That kind of chaos doesn’t feel poetic.

It just feels like life asking more of you than you feel ready for.

My caregiving experience especially is something I’m still learning how to carry.

There are mornings where I think I know what the day will look like… and then five minutes later everything changes because my mom needs something I didn’t expect.

There isn’t really a “plan” most days. There’s just adjustment.

And I love her. I really do.

But it’s also a lot. Emotionally, physically, mentally.

Some days it just sits heavy in my chest in a way I don’t even know how to explain.

That’s its own kind of chaos too.

Not the kind that makes memories.

The kind that just asks you to keep going anyway.

And I think that’s why I keep coming back to this question.

Is a little chaos actually good for us?

I don’t think it’s a yes or no answer.

The kind that overwhelms your nervous system? No.

The kind that makes you feel unsafe in your own body? No.

But the kind that surprises you…

The kind that changes your plans just enough to give you a memory you never would’ve planned…

The kind that pulls new people into your life or shifts something in a way you didn’t expect…

That kind feels different.

That kind feels like it’s part of being alive.

These days I still love my routines.

I still need quiet mornings. I still need familiarity. I still need things to feel steady most of the time.

That hasn’t changed.

But I don’t think peace is about controlling everything anymore.

Maybe it’s just about noticing what kind of chaos you’re standing in.

And learning which ones you can hold…and which ones you need to step away from.

Because when I look back, the moments I remember most were never the ones I carefully planned.

They were the ones that happened in spite of me trying to plan them at all.

What kind of chaos feels good in my life—and what kind doesn’t?

“Life is what happens to us while we are making other plans.” — John Lennon

#MentalHealth #Anxiety #ADHD #AutismSpectrumDisorder #Neurodiversity #chaos

Most common user reactions 1 reaction 1 comment
Post
See full photo

The Small Things That Take All My Energy

For a long time, I never understood why I’d feel so completely drained after a small task. I’d observe others working away, barely breaking a sweat. Meanwhile, I’m over here running a mental marathon just trying to keep up.

Maybe it’s because I’m constantly overthinking, or maybe it’s genuine exhaustion. Either way, it affects me more than I ever realized.

It’s always been difficult to navigate my energy. Sometimes I feel ready and raring to go. Other times, I feel like a zombie, frozen in place. I always push through my day regardless of how I’m feeling, but there are certain things that drain me beyond belief.

These probably don’t seem like big things. But for me, they’re often the reason I end the day completely exhausted.

For me, that looks like this.

Making Phone Calls

I can rehearse, memorize, and plan out what I’m going to say ten different ways and still feel my body tense the moment it comes down to crunch time—when the call starts.

There’s so much uncertainty when it comes to going into a conversation. Not knowing what the other person is going to say next. The pressure to respond in real time without the buffer of processing.

I’ve always struggled with making and receiving phone calls because it takes me a while to process information. Whenever I hear my own voice, I tend to focus on that instead of what I’m actually saying because it becomes such a distraction. I’m thinking too much about how I’m coming across while I’m in the middle of the conversation.

It’s not just draining. It’s nerve-wracking. Sometimes it even makes me physically ill. Sweats, headaches, tension, nausea—it all builds up from one small phone call.

Switching Tasks Too Quickly

Generally, it’s not the work that’s exhausting. It’s the sudden switch.

My brain doesn’t move like a clean slide between tasks. It feels more like shutting one room down while another is still full of noise.

Even small changes, like answering someone’s question while I’m already in the middle of doing something else, can make me feel like I’ve lost my place.

There are moments when I’m lost in writing a blog post or cooking a meal, and an outside distraction completely breaks my focus.

The thing is, I get so hyperfocused on what I’m doing that if I’m pulled away for any reason, it doesn’t just interrupt my task—it changes my entire mood. I become frustrated because I’m in the middle of doing something I love, and then I have to stop abruptly because I need to switch my attention elsewhere.

My caregiving duties require a lot of my attention, and I’m more than happy to help whenever I’m needed. But even when I finally have a break, I’m usually writing. One interruption is sometimes all it takes to lose my train of thought, and then it’s hard to begin again.

Hearing Multiple Sounds at Once

The hum of fluorescent lights. A high-pitched squeaky voice. Phone notifications. Car horns. People talking nearby.

None of it is too “loud,” but all of it is happening at me at the same time.

It’s like my brain tries to tune into everything equally, and instead of choosing one stream, it just… short-circuits.

I stop being able to think clearly. I just survive it.

There was a time when I went to a movie theatre and people weren’t following the rules. They were having side conversations during the film. Movies next door were vibrating through the walls. Phones kept going off because they weren’t silenced. People reacted loudly throughout the movie.

My brain couldn’t focus on what I was watching.

It drove me up a wall. I actually had to leave the theatre because there was too much going on all at once.

One, it always annoys me when people don’t consider other people’s experiences.

Two, my brain simply can’t handle that much happening at once.

When I’m trying to focus, I need quiet. Outside noise has always been one of my biggest distractions.

Unclear Instructions

“I’ll need this soon.”

“Just fix it a bit.”

“Can you make it better?”

These kinds of directions don’t give me something to do—they give me something to decode.

And decoding takes more energy than doing.

I don’t struggle with effort. I struggle with ambiguity.

I’ve never been good at following verbal instructions. I’ve always preferred visuals because that’s how my brain understands things best.

When someone gives me instructions just by talking, I’m too busy thinking about something else—the sound of their voice, what I’m going to say in response, or trying to remember the beginning of what they said while they’re already explaining something else. I just can’t focus on every word being told.

And if someone doesn’t specify exactly what I need to do, I’ll sit there for what feels like forever, completely stuck because I don’t know where to start.

I had a job where there were constant interruptions during my work. My boss would yell questions from her desk while I was in the middle of another task. It was like she expected all of us to stop what we were doing immediately, make whatever she wanted the priority, and then wonder why our original work wasn’t finished minutes later.

She mostly gave verbal instructions because she didn’t know how to visually show us what she wanted. Between the constant conversations, stacks of paperwork, her talking to herself, and her dog barking in the office, it became incredibly overwhelming.

It was work I genuinely loved, but all of the interruptions and verbal instructions left me mentally exhausted.

I hated having to ask someone to repeat themselves after they’d already explained something, so I’d sit there trying to remember key words and piece everything together on my own.

Decision Making

I only recently learned about decision fatigue, and it makes so much sense.

Even the smallest decisions drain me.

Whether it’s deciding what to order for dinner or figuring out my next step in life, I feel overwhelmed.

It’s not that I don’t know how to decide. It’s that every decision costs energy.

Any time someone asks me, “What do you want to do?” “What do you want to eat?” or “Where do you want to go?” my immediate answer is almost always, “I don’t know.”

The thing is, my brain starts running through every possible option. What sounds good? What if I change my mind? What if I regret my choice?

Sometimes I’ll stand in front of the refrigerator knowing I’m hungry and still not know what to make because making the decision feels harder than making the meal.

It’s Never Just One Thing

None of these moments would matter on their own.

But they stack.

By the end of the day, I’m not exhausted because of one big event. I’m exhausted because of a hundred tiny things that most people would never think to count.

I used to think I was just stupid, lazy, and weak. But I’m finally learning to accept that this is just how my brain works. It doesn’t mean I’m incapable. It just means I use my energy differently than other people do.

And that’s okay.

What are some of the “tiny things” that quietly drain your energy each day?

“I am tired in the way only a soul can be tired.” — unknown

#MentalHealth #Neurodiversity #ADHD #Autism #Anxiety #MightyTogether

Most common user reactionsMost common user reactions 4 reactions
Post
See full photo

Finding Joy in Simple Moments

I had a beautiful day today.

It’s a rarity that I feel joyful, and I think it’s because I don’t always allow myself to feel that way.

For most of my life, I’ve struggled to fully feel connected to myself. You know, appreciate, respect, and even admire the person I am. I’ve been too caught up in my own head, questioning and second-guessing my every thought and every action. There’s so much going on in my mind that I’m rarely still enough to enjoy what’s happening around me.

But today, something was different.

I didn’t feel the usual heaviness that I generally carry. I woke up thinking today was going to be a good day because I was seeing one of my very best friends. She’s been in town for a while now, but it was our first chance to really hang out, just the two of us.

We did what we always do—eat.

We went to an Italian restaurant for lunch and ordered a few things off the menu. We sat outside to enjoy the ocean view, feeling the breeze coming off the water as we sipped crisp white wine with our pasta dishes. We talked, laughed, and caught up on everything happening in our lives. It felt so nice to just sit there, enjoy the moment, and be together.

And for once, I wasn’t stuck in my head.

I was just there.

I love being with her because she brings back so many wonderful memories. That’s the beautiful thing about being close to someone for over twenty years. You build a lifetime of memories together.

We were talking about that—how close our friend group has stayed since our middle school and high school days. We’ve always been a tight-knit group, and we’ve always been there for one another through thick and thin. She reminded me of that, and it made me realize that I really do have the right support system in my life.

One of the things we’re all looking forward to at the end of the summer is attending her wedding in Romania. First off, I still can’t believe I’m actually going—pinch me, please. And second, I get to watch one of my best friends marry the love of her life. I couldn’t be happier to celebrate such a special moment with the people I love.

Just talking about it today filled me with so much happiness.

Being by the beach, sharing a meal, laughing together, and talking about both old memories and future adventures reminded me how much joy can exist in the simplest moments.

Today made me realize that not every day will hold the heaviness I always assume will be there.

And maybe that’s something I need to remember.

I shouldn’t assume how a day is going to feel before I even experience it. I shouldn’t expect the heaviness to always show up.

Maybe I just need to live in the moment a little more.

No expectations of myself.

No second-guessing.

Just be.

And maybe that’s the key to letting joy and happiness in.

Maybe joy doesn’t come from waiting for life to be perfect. Maybe it comes from noticing the moments that were there all along.

When was the last time you allowed yourself to be fully present and enjoy a moment without overthinking it?

“Be where you are; otherwise you will miss your life.”— Buddha

#mentalheath #Neurodiversity #MightyTogether #Depression

(edited)
Most common user reactions 1 reaction
Post

Finally finished my book and if anyone wants a copy it'a going to be free for the first two months (once the price change takes effect)

My book is finally published today and I decided to sell it for a dollar 😊😊😊📚 www.smashwords.com/books/view/2057473 #ADHD #ADHDInGirls #Neurodiversity #Agoraphobia #MentalHealth #Anxiety #BipolarDepression #SubstanceRelatedDisorders

(edited)

Fu@k Stigma

Fu@k Stigma is a raw, honest, and empowering guide for anyone navigating mental health, recovery, and self-discovery in a world that often misunderstands it. Blending lived experience with practical tools, this book challenges harmful narratives and shows readers how to reclaim their voice, redefine their identity, and take control of their journey. Through real stories, bold insights, and actionable strategies, Fu@k Stigma helps you move beyond shame, embrace support, and build resilience on your own terms. This isn't about quick fixes or pretending everything is fine—it's about doing the real work, finding what actually helps, and learning to advocate for yourself with confidence. If you're ready to stop letting stigma define you and start defining your life your way, this book is your unapologetic companion.
Most common user reactionsMost common user reactionsMost common user reactions 26 reactions 16 comments