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ADHD as a difference in cognition, not a disorder | Stephen Tonti | TEDxCMU

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    Cool!
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    Hi, my name is Stephen Tonti,
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    and I'm a director, a writer, an actor,
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    a drummer, a scuba diver, a soccer player,
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    a camera operator, an airbrush artist,
    a physicist, a stargazer, a rock climber,
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    a snowboarder, a model maker,
    a stage manager, a camp counselor,
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    a PA, a DJ, a club president, a magician,
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    and for a brief stint in May 2012,
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    I was called upon to repair
    two stopwatches which had stopped working.
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    (Laughter)
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    Who am I, you ask?
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    My name is Stephen Tonti, and I have ADHD.
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    (Laughter)
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    ADHD stands for attention
    deficit hyperactive disorder,
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    and I was first diagnosed with ADHD
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    not by a diagnostician,
    or a private practice, or a pediatrician,
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    but by a second-grade teacher
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    who was interviewing me for a spot
    at the school she was working at.
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    My family had just moved
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    from New Orleans, Louisiana,
    to Dallas, Texas,
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    and I was in a search
    for a new academic home.
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    During this particular interview,
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    this particular teacher
    received a message ahead of time
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    from my first grade teacher
    back in New Orleans
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    to check me for any signs of ADHD.
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    Just as she reached
    the series of questions
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    devised to evaluate whether a child
    between the ages of five and 17 is ADHD:
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    Wham! I fell out of my chair.
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    (Laughter)
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    No, I didn't slip.
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    And no, the chair didn't
    crumble beneath me.
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    Behind the teacher's desk
    was this giant window,
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    and through that window was a giant field,
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    and on that field
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    were what appeared to me at the time
    to be hundreds of thousands of kids
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    my age.
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    They were all playing with a great,
    inflatable, rainbow beach ball,
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    and as they moved all around the field,
    all I could do was keep track of them.
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    So I leaned a little bit to the left,
    and I leaned a little bit to the right,
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    a little bit more to the left,
    a little bit more to the right
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    before the disaster.
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    I still maintain today
    that window was a trap, and I was setup.
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    (Laughter)
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    So I was rejected from Middle School
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    because I was an eight-year-old boy
    who couldn't sit still in his chair.
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    There was this complex
    marshmallow-related incident
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    between myself and some
    of the staff there, but anyway.
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    I ended up at the
    Episcopal School of Dallas.
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    Over the next 11 years,
    I tried everything.
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    When I say everything, I mean everything.
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    Extracurriculars: I tried computing,
    robotics, carpentry, canoeing,
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    rock climbing, poetry club, logic club,
    poker club, comedy club, and camping.
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    I went camping at least
    twice a year for four years.
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    And the band - oh my god.
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    I tried trumpet, saxophone, electric bass,
    piano, stand-up bass, guitar, acoustic -
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    Did I mention I played sports?
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    It was Texas. We played sports.
    I tried all of them.
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    And the drums.
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    I even took a short-lived
    stab at the heart.
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    I played seven different instruments -
    "played" being a very generous term.
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    (Laughter)
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    When all of a sudden my theater -
    my school built a theater -
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    and I thought, why not?
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    So I started the shop building sets,
    then the sound booth, the light booth.
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    Then my teacher asked me to act,
    so I played Conrad in "Ordinary People."
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    I said, "Can I direct?"
    and she said, "Go for it!"
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    So I directed "12 Angry Jurors" -
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    because this is high school, people,
    and you can't direct "12 Angry Men"
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    with a drama school
    that has three boys and four girls -
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    for the people doing math at home,
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    that's seven drama students
    for a show with 12 in it.
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    (Laughter)
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    Before I knew it,
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    I was auditioning and interviewing
    in drama schools across the country,
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    and that's when Carnegie Mellon found me.
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    And I love it here. I really do.
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    But moving on. So what?!
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    I have ADHD, and ADHD
    is misunderstood as an inability to focus,
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    but it's much stranger than that.
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    It's not a lack of focus - period.
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    It's that I have a hard time
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    selecting something
    and giving it my full attention.
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    Something has to grab my attention,
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    peak my curiosity,
    and then I can hyperfocus.
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    This is a good thing and a bad thing.
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    It's a bad thing
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    because I have a hard time
    completing things that don't excite me.
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    We live in a world
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    where you have to read
    your textbooks and pay your taxes.
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    And yes, big textbooks
    with no pictures frighten me.
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    And no one likes handling taxes -
    actually, some of you might like that.
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    (Laughter)
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    But the upside is,
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    when something does peak my curiosity,
    I become obsessed and I hyperfocus.
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    I spend a lot of time with film.
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    I can spend upwards of 12 hours in a row
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    editing clips, sometimes
    until 6:30 in the morning.
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    In the theater,
    when I have to put a show up,
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    I'll pull 15 hour days for weeks on end,
    and I enjoy that; I love that.
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    I can read a 500-page novel that I love
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    much faster than a one-page article
    that I don't care for.
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    It's easier for me to see the big picture.
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    As a director, I have to track 20 people
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    with very different jobs
    from designers, to writers, to actors,
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    and I find handling that much easier
    than finishing that one-page article,
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    which I'm still working on.
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    (Laughter)
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    David Neeleman,
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    the founder and CEO of JetBlue,
    who is also ADHD by the way,
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    says, "I have a hard time
    doing the mundane things in life.
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    I have an easier time planning
    a 20-aircraft fleet
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    than I do paying my light bill."
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    Yeah.
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    So, another good thing about ADHD
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    is because I felt
    compelled to try everything,
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    I was able to explore all the possible
    career paths I might not have
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    and might not have discovered
    what I truly want to do.
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    So many teens and young adults
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    are expected to focus
    on one or two fields of study
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    and one or two hobbies,
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    and hope and pray
    they like the ones they've chosen
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    or that've been chosen for them.
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    My job is to tell other people stories,
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    and I find it's easier time doing that
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    when I can draw
    from all of these other perspectives.
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    It's easier for me to see the world
    through the eyes of a drummer
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    because I've tried that.
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    It's easier for me to see the world
    through the eyes of a graphic designer
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    because I've tried that too.
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    ADHD is a difference in cognition,
    not simply a disorder.
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    We're attention different,
    not attention deficit.
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    But because it's treated
    and misunderstood as a disorder,
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    it's treated at something
    that needs fixing.
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    So the idea seems to be that:
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    we need to get rid of my ADHD,
    but there's no getting rid of it.
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    There's just sedating it.
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    I was lucky.
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    My high school teachers
    were hip, young progressives
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    who were delighted to give me extra time,
    the additional attention,
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    and the overall freedom to express myself
    the way that I felt necessary.
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    So many other kids with ADHD
    aren't as lucky.
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    For example, my roommate.
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    Adam has been my roommate for four years.
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    He is an excellent actor in the school
    of drama and a brilliant thinker.
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    We both grew up in Dallas, Texas,
    and be both have ADHD.
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    Adam's high school was different.
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    Now even though he grew up
    only 15 minutes north of me,
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    Adam's high school had harsher penalties
    for falling out of a chair.
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    When you're a kid diagnosed with ADHD,
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    your doctor administers
    a series of amphetamines,
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    and everybody waits.
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    Because no one has a clue
    how you'll react.
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    You might get more calm.
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    You might become depressed.
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    You might lash out
    at the people around you.
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    The difference between Adam and me
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    is when a new medication
    may cause me to act out,
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    my teachers immediately advise my doctors
    that I change my medication.
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    However, when Adam tried a new medication,
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    his teachers wrote this in his report,
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    "Adam is less motivated, less animated,
    and less involved in class activities,
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    but at least, he's quiet now."
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    We need a healthier understanding
    of people with ADHD,
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    and it starts at home.
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    I had mother and father
    who supported every obsession.
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    I distinctly recall
    my father asking one day,
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    "Son, you're only 14.
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    what could you possibly want
    with an air compressor?"
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    (Laughter)
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    To which I responded,
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    "I want to airbrush t-shirts and shorts
    to sell to my classmates and friends."
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    (Exhale)
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    Alright then.
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    And we would go out and get it.
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    I would play with it
    and I'd obsess over it.
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    During the summers,
    when I went off my medication
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    and my body was wrecked
    with the effects of withdrawal,
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    my mother sat by my side,
    literally coaxing the migraines out of me.
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    With their support,
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    I was able to explore,
    and my obsessions grew and multiplied,
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    and I was able to maintain my sanity.
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    Schools need to develop a better attitude
    towards students with ADHD, as well.
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    There's plenty of examples out there.
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    For instance, the Eagle Hill School,
    in Hardwick, Massachusetts.
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    The Eagle Hill School believes
    that every student can learn.
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    That learning differently
    requires teaching differently.
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    And that we must educate
    our kids, our students,
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    to learn about learning
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    in order to form new beliefs
    in a search for intellectual autonomy.
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    Professors who act more as mentors,
    as opposed to disciplinarians, inspire me.
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    When teachers level with me,
    I feel like I'm more in control;
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    that there's a dialog
    regarding new ways of thinking
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    and approaching a problem,
    focusing, completing tasks.
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    We have to create and develop
    a healthier relationship with medication.
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    I think that Ritalin, Adderall, Concerta
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    should only be prescribed to someone
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    who can physically handle the effects
    of these drugs and their withdrawal.
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    12 is far too young.
    16 is still too young.
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    There are so many
    alternatives to medication.
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    Studies have shown that for some
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    it's just an added weight
    or pressure to help them focus.
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    And these things exist.
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    There are weighted pads
    that help people feel more comfortable
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    so they can complete tasks on time.
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    For some people,
    it's tics, like chewing pencils,
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    so give them rubber coated pencils.
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    We have to teach kids to teach themselves;
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    it's the best thing
    we can do for our kids.
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    And lastly, our society
    has to embrace cognitive diversity.
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    For example, Specialisterne,
    or The Specialist,
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    is a Danish organization
    that trains people with autism and ADHD
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    as consultants in I.T. and other
    more technically oriented tasked jobs.
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    We have to turn this joke around
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    on those who believe that my disorder
    divides me from my more "normal peers."
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    Besides, who here at Carnegie Mellon
    really qualifies as normal, anyway?
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause) (Cheers)
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    A great author, a masterful playwright
    and a sublime poet once writ ...
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    Any guesses to who I speak of?
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    (Audience) Shakespeare!
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    Thou art correct!
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    (Laughter)
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    Shakespeare sonnet 121.
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    'Tis better to be vile than vile esteemed
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    When not to be receives
    reproach of being,
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    And the just pleasure lost,
    which is so deemed
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    Not by our feeling but by others' seeing.
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    For why should others'
    false adulterate eyes
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    Give salutation to my sportive blood?
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    Or on my frailties why are frailer spies,
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    Which in their wills
    count bad what I think good?
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    Nae, I am that I am, and they that level
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    At my abuses reckon up their own:
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    I may be straight,
    though they themselves be bevel;
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    By their rank thoughts
    my deeds must not be shown;
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    Unless this general evil
    they all maintain,
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    All men are bad,
    and in their badness reign.
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    In sonnet 121 Shakespeare
    condemns hypocrisy.
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    He implores us not to let
    others' false adulterate eyes
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    condemn us for something
    that they believe us to be.
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    He begs you not to let the selfish,
    negative comments of others
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    hinder the just pleasures owed to you.
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    A hierarchy of frailer spies
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    have asked me to conform
    to society's means.
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    I purpose the opposite.
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    I purpose let society conform to me.
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    And I implore you to do the same.
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    I'll leave you with something
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    that Robin Williams, a poster child for us
    in the ADHD community,
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    (Laughter)
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    once said, "We are all only given
    a little spark of madness.
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    You mustn't lose it."
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    Thank you!
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    (Applause) (Cheers)
Title:
ADHD as a difference in cognition, not a disorder | Stephen Tonti | TEDxCMU
Description:

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

Stephen is a Senior Directing major at Carnegie Mellon. To learn more and follow his blog "Caffeine, Nicotine, and ADHD: a guide to maintaining sanity."

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
13:37

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