Discovering ADHD explained so many things about my life that
it was, in the truest sense of the word, an epiphany. It was as though a light
had been turned in my life illuminating things that had long frustrated and
mystified me. It explained my constant state of activity, even to the toe
tapping that I do when trying to sit still and the tics that have always been a
part of me; the fact that I can pretty much burn energy just sitting down; my
distractedness that for years drove my poor wife to distraction herself; and my occasional laser-like focus which, at time, made me oblivious to the world around me when
reading, or during surgery. All this, and much more. I was finding out who I
truly was.
Many individuals with ADHD who successfully navigate the early academic
years to make it to medical school become surgeons. The specialty is ideal for
those, like me, who do best with tasks that are both cerebral and physical. It
is more than just liking to work with one’s hands; it is a total absorption in
any task that interests one. Give me something that truly occupies my attention
and you can set off fireworks around me and I won’t notice.
Having ADHD means that I am easily distracted. A humorous but true
ADHDism is “They say I have ADHD but I
think they are full of…..oh, look at the kitty!”. It is absolutely true. I
am also very disorganized. I start things multiple things but rarely finish any
one thing (right now I am simultaneously writing two articles; it took me 10
years to finish writing my book). I procrastinate. Yes, I know everyone
procrastinates at times but I am an elite level procrastinator. I have elevated
this to an art form. I could go on and on.
In the context of trying to train for something as complex
and demanding as an ironman triathlon while simultaneously engaged in a busy
clinical practice and trying to fulfill the myriad other obligations that are
simply a part of life, ADHD becomes, not a gorilla, but King Kong. Planning,
organizing, and budgeting my time, while absolutely critical to this task, are
also the things I do worst. This will probably be, after medical school and my
surgical residencies, the hardest thing I have ever done. More on ADHD at some
later time.
296 days to go to the Ironman. That sounds like a pretty
reasonable time frame to train. It is 42 weeks, which doesn’t sound like so
long, which means that I have to make each of the next 42 weeks count toward
getting me ready. The good news is that the right knee seems fine. I did
another run this week and no problems whatsoever. I have no idea what in the
world causes that pain. The other good news is that I am getting back into the
swing of a regular workout schedule. The bad news is that the ADHD is kicking
in big time with disorganization and procrastination in putting together a
plan. I just haven’t put together a training schedule in any real sense and
this will have to be done.
Training summary:
Swimming- none, back in the pool next week, though
Running-
1/5- 3.5
mile run. Felt sluggish but still average 8:34/mi. Right knee felt fine
Bike-
1/1- 8.66
mile fun ride with family at 13.5 mph average
Next week, the training begins in earnest. ………..
I love this! I want to share it with my class. It's a more realistic and positive perspective than what society has labelled as ADHD.
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