Den 17. juli 2011 kl. 21.59 skrev Godfrey DiGiorgi:

> On Sat, Jul 16, 2011 at 7:10 AM, Ann Sanfedele <ann...@nyc.rr.com> wrote:
>> right on... unfortunately!
>> Had to share
>> 
>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oHBG3ABUJU
> 
> Um, I've been meaning to watch this one since last week ... Just got to it. 
> ;-)
> 
> Yeah, distraction and detours all day are a constant threat to getting
> things done. But then there are days when you just don't care ...


Yep, I recognize that one, but just to see the positive side of it my youngest 
was investigated for ADHD (and during the interviews they almost gave me the 
same diagnosis), but they found that he was simply a lot more intelligent than 
the rest of the children. He never needed to concentrate, so he never learned 
it. There are statistics indicating a correlation between (wrong) ADHD 
diagnosis and IQ. Give him a task he likes he can concentrate for hours, which 
is much better than giving him medication to make him more "normal".

Seriously there is a lot of discussions about too medications for things that 
are simply normal deviations in human behavior.  Sometimes my wife think my 
distractions are charming, sometimes not (and sometimes she is worse), but I 
hope they donĀ“t try to slow me down with medication. :-)

DagT
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