momothefiddler wrote:Count Arioch the 28th wrote:Bah, my depression has become bad enough that I'm missing work. I guess I should get medicated. I don't like depression meds, they make me put on weight and make me sleepy. I've been doing very well about watching my diet lately and been losing weight, sucks that I have to take pills that reverse that to function...
I feel that. I have to choose bipolar meds
or treating my adhd and chronic pain, and the one that makes me not try to kill myself wins, of course. Best of luck

Yeah, dieting is hard. It feels like the world is always trying its best to throw appetizing (but terribly unhealthy) food at you. That taking ridiculously long to get noticeable results. Having it thwarted because of meds sucks. Best of luck to you too momo.
Laertes wrote:Full support to you, rad. I had the same sort of thing when I was younger and it's horrible, especially the feeling of helplessness of watching myself as I ended up not working.
The two things that help the most are sleep and exercise. Unfortunately they're also the two hardest things to do.
The website Captain Awkward has a lot of excellent advice on this sort of thing.
After my last post, I just slept for a seven or eight hours, went running for the first time in ages, ate some cereal and then spent roughly nine hours (excluding 5 minute and 15 minute breaks) working and submitted something incomplete but substantial considerably late, before sleeping some more once I got home. The professor wasn't exactly happy with it, but I think I rolled some decent bluff checks and managed to be somewhat convincing in feigning illness. Apparently some others hadn't done it at all so I think my odds of passing this course are looking good thanks to the whole bell curve thing. The sleep and exercise feel like they've really helped, and I'll try to keep that up in the future.
MisterDee wrote:My personal life hack for this is the to-do list - to which I've added a little tweak. I also put some leisure activities on it (like "play a five-year stretch on Europa Universalis IV")
It's a little more motivating working through the list when there's stuff that isn't work or tasks on it, and I usually manage to actually do most of the boring stuff before hitting the fun stuff because my brain wants to keep the list interesting and engaging.
For long projects, I also think it's important to put some granularity in your list - either break down your assignment into specific tasks, or if you can't put "work an hour on the assignment" on the list five times instead of just "do the assignment".
I saw your post a while back and did that. In the end I've got a whole bunch of 25 minute work sessions crossed out in front of me. I think it helped a lot.
Maj wrote:You're welcome. In Ess' case, they also asked a lot of questions about his behavior as a child. I asked his mom to write about it and send it to me. The assessment was not enough on its own, but given the info from his mom and the fact his son has ADHD (genetic component), the docs were pretty confident in their diagnosis.
Best of luck to you. At the very minimum, maybe you can find a way to get some sleep.

I don't normally have trouble sleeping (unless occasional excessive procrastination counts). I was freaking out over this at the time.
But I will schedule an appointment for a check up. If I've got ADHD or some other disorder probably best to find out ASAP. Thanks.
From now on I'll try to spend more time studying daily (and sleep and exercise). However, I've had moments like this before where I went "That's it, I'm turning my life around", only to regress after a while. This time I've got some concrete info (sleep and exercise), and getting a checkup, but any tips on keeping up with it?