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reshared this

in reply to Sarah Brown

Before medication I had about one minor accident per year where I bumped something while parking or smaller stuff like speeding because I didn't notice the sign.

That immediately stopped alltogether. For about 5 years now: Zero accidents and no tickets while driving medicated.

One night my son fell out of his bed and hit his chin on something he build from lego, receiving a big laceration. Usually we clamp those ourselves but that one was too big for us, so I put him in my car and drove to the hospital at 3am. Unmedicated. I rushed over at least one red light, probably two. I was the only car out there that night so nothing happened. But I was shocked anyway.

The doctor saw the laceration and said "Well, I would not clamp that one either, this needs stitches for sure!" so we did the right thing. 😅

Next time this happens I'll take one Medikinet for the road...

in reply to Momo

@Momo Interesting how we’re both experiencing this differently!
@Momo
in reply to Sarah Brown

this is very different to my experience because without meds I sometimes just forgot to look before changing lanes or something and with meds I’m way more structured and thus safer. I’m safe enough without them, but definitely safer with.
in reply to marlies

@marlies It is cool how we're responding differently to this. @Zoë O'Connell started Elvanse at the same time I did and she's reporting a similar experience to mine.

Perhaps my subconscious is trustworthy, but it is freaking me out that I'm not constantly scanning ... everything, automatically.

in reply to Sarah Brown

@zoe yeah I think without meds I had a tendency to scan without always actually perceiving? Like, overcompensating/dealing with the overload by subconsciously discarding too much input. It’s hard to explain.
in reply to marlies

@marlies @Zoë O'Connell I have suspected for some time that driving activates my hyperfocus (and I do like doing it a lot). Maybe that’s why I’m noticing this.
in reply to Sarah Brown

@marlies @zoe a friend with quite debilitating ADHD talks about driving activating hyper focus for her. Not sure if meds changed that for her, she often ends up unmedicated due to NHS fuckery.