Super humans | ADHD Information

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GOOD POINT!

I've stressed to many peeps that for every one trait a person lacks in, something else is stronger, or heightened. Perhaps it isn't a disorder at all.

Here's my theory- We must not object to the fact that a person who is not focused on a certain lesson or teaching at any point in time, is still thinking, learning,discovering, or becoming familiar with imagination, a new idea, or new aspects of several partially unpioneered horizons by which he/she is observed by an educator as "spacing out" -
for it is the physical absence we lack and inner knowlege we possess of the existence of space (not outerspace) in which we have not fully come to understand - as is the human mind that only the INNER self can internally pioneer, without the use of the doctor, the scalpel, or the machine. Hope that wasn't too deep. But that is the way I feel about it.

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Heres somthing i found at http://www.healthyplace.com/Communities/ADD/Site/index.htm

and after you read it my theory will follow.

The Hunters and the Farmers

Not too long ago, the typical traits of a person with ADHD were actually advantageous. People relied often on specific skills needed to bring home meat for the nourishment of the family. These skills are still valued today in hunter gatherer societies around the world. Fleetness of foot and strong on sprinting (though short on marathon running), ability to change course instantly, ability to make snap decisions, creativity in plotting the path of capture, ingenuity in devising traps, the ability to monitor the whole situation with global thinking skills, all contribute to a successful hunt. Successful hunters also have an extraordinary ability to hyper focus on the task at hand for hours on end if it is extremely important or interesting. This is often a surprising fact for people who do not understand the full range of ADHD-like behaviors.

Imagine the type of individual who would have first explored and then settled this country long ago. It was not only a strength but a necessity to makeindependent decisions using survival skills in the wilds. Driven by curiosity about an evolving world, a need for physical activity and large muscle activity, and an "every man for himself" mentality, the hunter type flourished.

After the industrial revolution, the traditional classroom setting became all important to produce workers for factories with production lines, prepared for repetitive work. Suddenly, the need for novelty, individuality, creativity, spontaneous movement and quick problem solving often became secondary to orderliness and repetitive tasks.

Ponder just a moment the following question . Where in today's society could someone such as Benjamin Franklin suddenly appear and feel perfectly at home? I would say he would feel right at home in many of our school classrooms. While there are fine schools working to make education relevant to what a child will need as an adult there are many more that teach the way our fathers and their fathers learned. The child sits in the seat and faces a teacher who stands at the front of the room and teaches in a lecture style of teaching, then they often proceed to rote work or worksheets.

With public education aimed straight for the 50th percentile, many children who have ADHD have a need for specialized and novel instruction. We often see them struggling to survive in a world too often devoted to repetitive worksheets, sitting still in a seat, listening to a teacher lecturing at the front of the room. Most people can learn in this environment to the extent they can produce the work expected of them. However, when the emphasis is on rote learning the child with ADHD is often further hampered by short term memory problems and has difficulty attending to tasks that lack novelty. He or she also frequently lacks the social skills that might get him out of a jam gracefully.

The farmer type, who is not bothered by repetitive work or lack of novelty often manages just fine and comes out of the system with a decent education unless they also have a disability that hampers learning the traditional way. There are many farmer type children who also fall off the assembly line because they learn differently. However, they are usually viewed more patiently and positively because they do not lack the social skills or have the impulsive behaviors of a child with ADHD.

The hunter type is wise to be very selective about the field of work he or she chooses. Hunters often choose fields such as airline pilots, policemen, investigators, trial lawyers, advertising executives, entrepreneurs, artists, actors, and musicians. They are wise to go into professions that offer novelty, changing surroundings, lots of movement, a variety of activities, and that offer a challenge. They should make use of their tremendous energy and creativity. There is a strong correlation between ADHD and creativity.

Because their attention wanders easily, hunters can often see a problem from several different directions and arrive at new, unique conclusions. It is not unusual for such people to have a number of careers, sometimes simultaneously.After giving a talk on ADHD, one gentleman approached me and thanked me. He said he had always felt guilty about changing jobs, but after owning a successful business for quite awhile he felttied down and bored. After hearing my reference to Mr. Hartmann's book, he decided on-the-spot (surprising? :-) to consult a therapist and work out what he really wanted to do next in the way of work.

It is important for hunters not to measure themselves by the standards of a farmer society but by their individual strengths. It is also important to choose a profession that showcases those strengths. While hunters need to realize they live in a farmer society there are numerous opportunities for them to succeed. It is important to weigh the strengths and weaknesses and decide where the best fit will be in terms of fulfillment and success.

Many hunters team up with a farmer in work or in a marriage. They seem to know instinctively that they can draw on the great executive functions farmers tend to have to help them stay on task and organized. We on call them to be coaches.

Hunters are often risk takers. Mr. Hartmann talks about the difference between linear problem solving and random problem solving. A vertical problem solver who finds a door that is stuck is likely to bang harder and harder on it, eventually kicking it in if necessary. The random problem solver is more likely to look for other ways, such as trying other doors or windows. The hunter would fall into the later category.

This theory of hunters and farmers is no means meant to put down or belittle the farmer temperament. Farmers are superior at organizing, staying on track, performing all the tasks the hunter is weak at performing. They have important strengths necessary for many fields of endeavor. I think of certain wildly successful trial lawyers who have teams of farmers doing the meticulous research and footwork so necessary in such a field. At the same time, farmers need to recognize the tremendous strengths of the hunter, and value them from early childhood for their potential. They must teach them they way they learn, with methods which have been proven successful for children with ADHD. These strategies are also excellent for all children

 

Famous Hunters

The following individuals all exhibited the characteristics of a good hunter. They were global thinkers, sought novelty, were risk takers, and were easily bored by repetitive tasks. They showed incredible energy and flexibility and were not afraid to stand out from the crowd. Their bursts of creativity will live on forever, and you hunters reading this will instantly identify with them.

A number of them also appear to have had learning disabilities. Of the first three listed, Edison's mother, recognizing her son just learned differently, home schooled him; Einstein flunked math in the sixth grade; Mozart was lousy at personal relationships. Yet who dwells on the human frailties when turning on an electric lamp, studying the theory of relativity, or listening to music that will live forever?

Hunters can celebrate their unique capacity for independent thinking and creativity, and learn to walk around their weaknesses. In the end, hopefully you will even chuckle at them and realize they are a part of what makes that person one of a kind, unique and beautiful. Below are just a few that would no doubt fit the profile of a hunter.

Thomas Edison Albert Einstein Amadeus Mozart Henry Ford Benjamin Franklin Thomas Jefferson Leonardo da Vinci Albert Switzer Samuel Adams Sir Francis Drake Christopher Columbus Abraham Lincoln Winston Churchill Alexander Graham Bell Galileo

My resources only listed famous men hunters from the past

However, I've come up with some possible women hunters.

Queen Elizabeth I Queen Isabella of Spain Amelia Erhart Carrie Nation Eleanor Roosevelt Florence Nightingale Great Characteristics of ADHD

creative

artistic

a sprinter

intuitive

empathetic

visionary

inventive

sensitive

original

loving

exuberant

My theory: I think that humanity....whats the easiest way to describe this....think of it like an ant colony you got your soilder ants and your worker ants and at a better look, with apes, gorillors you got your normal ones then you got you big strong silver backs. Prehaps ADD is supposed to happen in humanitys evoloution were like the soilder ants and silverbacks of society.

I have heard that before - thank you for finding something official looking - I so believe that - We are the "survivors" - the tough nuts and the warriors.

I have always believed that.

Amen!

good point....if there was no such thing as add traits then christopher colombus would be stuck in a f**king room reading a history or maths book lol

I don't know if colombus was adhd but he took on an adventure.

Sometimes I wonder what would happen if we were invaded, hit by an A-bomb, something that destroyed much of the population and the government. Like a TV sci-fi movie. Who would survive? Who would the others rely on? You wouldn't need the scientists so much until you started rebuilding...doctors, of course, but I suspect many doctors are ADHD (to be able to handle snap decisions in the midst of chaos). Or just a group trapped in the desert or on a deserted island or whatever. The ADHD people would stand a chance and they would carry others through it with them. ADHD people survive and can stand alone much better than the "normals". But we can't forget through all of this that we must teach our children to focus. The "super-human" part is innate for them and the normals can't learn that but the ADHD child can learn to focus and thereby have all of the best of all types of people. Only then are they really "super-human".

I am attending Georgia Tech, an insitution that will MAKE you learn it their way. I loved your article and will try to hold that in the back of my mind, defending against the theft of my soul! Anyone who goes to Tech knows what I am talking about. It definitely appears that we are the "natural born leaders" you hear about. We led our peers in preschool. We excel at snap decision-making. Though we need others to back us with the mundane work that must be done, we take the lead. Thank you for finding that article!