candidlyautistic:

aut-of-space:

600-spiders-in-a-trenchcoat:

aut-of-space:

Somehow, it’s 90% of the time easier for me to spontaneously do something (if I have the spoons) than to spontaneously not doing something I was prepared to do.

So I wondered… how is this for other autistic people?
Reblog and tell me about it!

It’s similar for me. I think it’s because the underlying problem is changing plans. If I was expecting to be doing something, and then all of a sudden I’m not, plans have changed, expectations are broken, and I don’t know how to deal with it. If I’m spontaneously doing something, often what that means is that my plan was, in a sense, “I don’t have a plan, and am just going to roll with whatever happens”. While that’s more stressful than having a well defined plan, it’s way less stressful than having a defined plan that falls apart.

You actually put it into words! Thank you.
How executive dysfunction affects me in detail is something that I can’t really grasp yet.

This is one of the most bizarre things about executive dysfunction I never knew I needed answered…

OK, probably time for a cheese sandwich or something to regroup after the cooking disruption. (New idea: frozen tilapia!)

Still set to work on that in a while, but the blood sugar crash trying to happen isn’t going to help anything. Plus I need to get some meds in shortly.

At least getting temporarily stalled on supper past 9 p.m. is less of an issue with me the only human here relying on it tonight. *wry smile*

OK, change of plans to have either plain zucchini or possibly substitute quick cooking red lentils or something in that curry. Because it looks like we already ate the last canned chickpeas I thought we still had, and the only other thing here is some canned baked beans. Nope, not even rinsed off 😕

I know it’s constantly humid here, but it’s still kind of impressive how Mr. C left an open bag of potato chips sitting there for only a couple of hours–and they’re already kind of stale 😦

Finally got the battery swapped in the kitchen wall clock. Noticed yesterday afternoon that it was stuck at about 12:15, and put off dealing with the several steps involved. (At least I knew where the right size batteries are this time…) So I kept getting startled and thrown off by automatically glancing at it anyway, my sense of time is just that bad.

That may have taken over 24 hours, but it’s working again now 🙄

One of the three specific items I went to the store to get: coffee.

What did I not make it home with? Hmm.

To make that even more frustrating this time, I actually stopped on that aisle–and got distracted looking at some mint tea before I made it as far as the coffee 🙄

Exhausted enough that I really don’t want to go back now, but coffee. Not enough for another batch left, or I probably would have skipped the shopping run anyway.

A little too relevant in that last reblog:

A burnt out bulb may go unrecognized as a problem – there’s two other bulbs in the room, it’s a little dimmer, so what? It might take all three burning out before you see it as a problem.

Yeah, I think one of the reasons I get so frustrated is that I don’t seem to get hung up on that particular step very much. While living with someone who could let all three burn out, and not necessarily be put out enough to replace any even then. (Not exaggerating.)

Harder for me to understand or figure out how to help deal with, when some prompting isn’t always enough to get the concern really registering.

(That’s before we get to the “it’s important to know my blind spots and learn to function around them” part of that same commentary. Another frustrating thing, when someone close to you just seems not to recognize that there is any blind spot there, yeah.)

About Executive Dysfunction; for neurotypical people

hansmoleskine:

spoonie-living:

anarcho-shindouism:

truthisademurelady:

yeronika:

beowulfstits:

Friends, family members and loved ones of learning disabled and mentally ill people need to have a working knowledge of what Executive Dysfunction is, and respect the fact that it is a prominent feature of that person’s psychology and life.

Executive Dysfunction is best known as a symptom of autism and ADHD, but it also features in depression, anxiety disorders schizophrenia, OCD (which by the way is also an anxiety disorder), personality disorders; etc, a whole myriad of mental illnesses and disabilities can result in executive dysfunction.

Years ago when I was like 14 and had recently learned of my autism diagnosis, I watched a youtube interview between autistic people, and an autistic woman said something along these lines:

  • “Sometimes, a lightbulb will burn out, but I cannot change it. I have the physical capability to change the lightbulb, and I want to change the lightbulb, and I know I need to do it, but because of my autism I just don’t do it. So the lightbulb remains unchanged for weeks. Sometimes people have to change the lightbulb for me.”

When she said that I related so much, because constantly throughout my whole life I have wanted and needed to do things with my wanting and needing being akin to my spurring an extremely stubborn horse who refuses to move. For the first time I learned that I wasn’t just “lazy”, I had a condition that prevented me from doing things as easily as other people can, but unfortunately it took me years since then to understand that.

Imagine that you are a horserider, but your horse is entirely unwilling to move even if you want to move. You dig in your heels, you raise the reins, but the horse refuses to respond. Your wants and needs are the rider, and your executive functions (the parts of your mind responsible for getting things done) are the horse.

I think it’s incredibly dangerous for neurotypical loved ones to not understand, or be aware of, or respect executive dysfunction. Neurotypical can assume that we are just being lazy, careless, selfish or difficult, when in reality we want to do the thing but our brains prevent us from consistently and reliably doing the thing.

That misinterpretation can lead to toxic behavior and resentment on the part of the loved one, which will harm us emotionally and do us a lot of damage gradually over time.

That damage can take the form of internal self-criticism, complicating executive dysfunction even further and making it worse.

edited for easier reading!

I think about this a lot, because I have to.  In my own life, as a parent who struggles with executive dysfunction and yet has to teach a child basic life skills, it’s important to know my blind spots and learn to function around them.  He’s watching me and learning from my example, so I have to do my best to explain what I can’t always do, and try to do it anyway.

Executive function is such a fundamental and yet hidden trait.  It is in charge of reasoning, flexibility, problem solving, planning, and execution/prioritization of necessary steps in any action.

Each task is never one task.  Take changing the lightbulb – from beginning to end, it’s a series of steps that must be put in proper order:

  • Notice light bulb is burnt out.
  • Recognize that it can be fixed by putting in a new light bulb
  • Remember where new light bulbs are stored
  • Go to light bulb storage area
  • Select new one
  • Find stool or chair to stand on
  • Take out old bulb, put in new one
  • Screw in bulb
  • Replace chair or stool to previous spot
  • Throw away old bulb

That’s not even all of them, but it’s a good enough summary for now.  There are hidden stumbling blocks in every single step. 

  • A burnt out bulb may go unrecognized as a problem – there’s two other bulbs in the room, it’s a little dimmer, so what?  It might take all three burning out before you see it as a problem.
  • Maybe you forgot where the bulbs are, because it’s been a while.  Searching the house is a task you put off, because it’s messy/disorganized/big/you have other more pressing matters.  The bulb can wait.
  • You find the bulb storage, but you’re out of new ones.  You have to shop.  You’re busy, you put it off until the next time you shop, by which time you’ve forgotten you need a light bulb.  Repeat cycle.
  • You’ve been depressed for a while, or maybe you’re just a messy person.  A stack of important documents is on the chair you’d use to stand on to get to the bulb.  You know if you move those documents you’ll forget where they are, and it’s tax stuff/homework/your mom’s birthday card, and you can’t forget that.  The bulb gets put aside until you deal with those things.  But you don’t want to deal with them now, so the bulb waits.
  • Throwing out the bulb requires safe disposal so that you don’t break it and accidentally cut yourself, or someone else in your home.  You have no idea how to safely dispose of it.  You put off changing the bulb until you figure out what to do with the old one.

On and on and on.  Each step requires problem solving, prioritization, and reasoning.  These are the hidden processes that go on in our minds every single moment of every day.  Difficult tasks build up, compounding the problem of completing others, until each action requires ten more before you can solve the minor problem you started with.  Changing a light bulb ends in a night of doing your taxes.  Doing the dishes ends in standing in the dish soap aisle at the grocery story for a half hour trying to figure out which soap to buy for the dishwasher.

When a simple action requires the same effort from you as the most complex, abstract problem-solving…. to put it mildly, you’re fucked.  Every day tasks require exhausting mental gymnastics.

So, be kind to the person who can’t seem to change a light bulb.  There’s a lot that can stand in the way.

this is such a good addition to my post

Important info!

thank you for breaking this down, it’s so difficult for me to explain why “simple” tasks seem monumental to me

Ridiculous yet effective ways to deal with Executive Dysfunction

kestrel-tree:

Dealing with
executive dysfunction and ADHD becomes so much easier when you stop trying to
do things the way you feel like you should
be able to do them (like everyone else) and start finding ways that
actually work for you, no matter how “silly” or “unnecessary”
they seem.

For
years my floor was constantly covered in laundry. Clean laundry got
mixed in with dirty and I had to wash things twice, just making more
work for myself. Now I just have 3 laundry bins: dirty (wash it
later), clean (put it away later), and mystery (figure it out later).
Sure, theoretically I could sort my clothes into dirty or clean as
soon as I take them off and put them away straight
out of the dryer, but
realistically that’s never going to be a sustainable strategy for me.

How
many garbage bins do you need in a bedroom? One? WRONG! The correct
answer is one within arms reach at all times. Which for me is three.
Because am I really going to
get up to blow my nose when I’m hyperfocusing? NO. In
allergy season I even have
an empty kleenex box for “used
tissues I can use again.”
Kinda gross? Yeah. But less gross than a
snowy winter landscape of dusty germs on my
desk.

I
used to be late all the time
because I couldn’t find my house key. But it costs $2.50 and 3
minutes to copy a key, so now there’s one in my backpack, my purse,
my gym bag, my wallet, my desk, and hanging on my door. Problem
solved.

I’m
like a ninja for getting pout the door past reminder notes without noticing. If I really don’t want to forget something, I make a
physical barrier in front of my door. A
sticky note is a lot easier to walk past than a two foot high
cardboard box with my wallet on top of it.

Executive dysfunction is always going to cause challenges, but often half the struggle is trying to cope by pretending not to have executive dysfunction, instead of finding actual solutions.