-
29 votes
-
Alzheimer’s blood test catches 90% of early dementia cases, study finds
38 votes -
The brain makes a lot of waste. Now scientists think they know where it goes (in mice).
20 votes -
Duty to Warn's John Gartner breaks down Donald Trump's cognitive decline
32 votes -
Root cause of Alzheimer's may be fat buildup in brain cells, research suggests
22 votes -
The vanishing family: They all have a 50-50 chance of inheriting a cruel genetic mutation — which means disappearing into dementia in middle age
29 votes -
The most frustrating thing about ADHD for me is
...When I can't complete a task right now but instead have to wait for some reason. For example: When I have to complete a task list for school, and would love to just blitz through it all, but...
...When I can't complete a task right now but instead have to wait for some reason. For example:
-
When I have to complete a task list for school, and would love to just blitz through it all, but have to wait on someone else to fill out some form. Then I get it in an email a day or two later, but have already completely forgotten about the list and things I should do, because something else took over my mind. And I put it off because I have other things to do. Then the deadline comes and goes, and I'm sitting there thinking "Well shit, if I could have done it immediately then it would have been fine."
-
I ask my kids for things they want at the store. I know I need to add it to the grocery list app immediately or I won't remember it, but I'm driving them to camp and can't use my phone. By the time I've dropped them off, I forgot already. Then they're upset with me because I forgot their things, and I'm upset with me because I forgot their things.
All these little things that just add up to make life a little more frustrating and annoying.
Anyone else with ADHD, have any tips to overcome these? Frustrations of your own to vent? How do you explain to others that it isn't you being careless or lazy, but instead it's your brain working against itself?
44 votes -
-
Vitamin D supplementation and incident dementia: Effects of sex, APOE, and baseline cognitive status
7 votes -
European Commission contacted Swedish authorities after it emerged they were planning to deport a 74-year-old British woman with severe Alzheimers
4 votes -
Millions of Alzheimer’s patients have been given hope after a new drug has been shown to slow memory decline by 27% over eighteen months. It's the biggest breakthrough in a generation.
8 votes -
TikTok is changing the way we talk about ADHD—for better and worse
2 votes -
Two decades of Alzheimer's research may be based on deliberate fraud
31 votes -
Is your smartphone ruining your memory? A special report on the rise of ‘digital amnesia’
12 votes -
How mental health became a social media minefield
13 votes -
Japan’s elderly online shoppers are running into trouble
7 votes -
In a Colombian family’s dementia, a journey through race and history
3 votes -
Thirty essential ideas you should know about ADHD
7 votes -
Younger longer - With greater longevity, the quest to avoid the infirmities of aging is more urgent than ever
7 votes -
Getting diagnosed with ADHD at 25 changed everything
12 votes -
One of the best drug candidates for Alzheimer's, aducanumab, just failed to demonstrate efficacy
5 votes -
Her time: Debra Koosed was diagnosed with dementia at sixty-five. That’s when she decided she no longer wanted to live.
5 votes -
Not all sleep is equal when it comes to cleaning the brain
16 votes -
The comforting fictions of dementia care
8 votes