Nothing | Doing

It’s been awhile since I posted an update, so here one is. After several years of reading, participating in online support groups and re-evaluating my personal history, it seems highly probable that I have ADHD. I have adjusted my expectations and strategies accordingly.

A chalk drawing on a greenboard of a silhouetted head with many curving and looping arrows coming out of it in all directionsThat is, I set procrastination to offset impulsivity, sneak up on tasks without letting myself know so as not to awaken overwhelm, and various other tips and tricks, workarounds and reframes, that are helpful. Somewhat. Not as helpful as family support, well-informed friends and/or expert healthcare would probably be, but one works with what one has.

Between Seasonal Affective Disorder (which is not, despite the name, limited to a specific season) and ADHD, it’s still a daily struggle to get things done. This impacts just about everything in my life – income, relationships, health, home.

Plus, all this new self-conception is taking place against a backdrop of highly unsettled times. Denial, and the deepened retrenchment into dysfunctional behaviors that it brings, are everywhere I look. While I uncover answers to “why am I like this?,” answers to the larger question, “why are humans like that?,” are harder to come by.

With zero safety net, and a high risk of developing a hereditary condition I have thus far avoided should I contract even a “mild” case of COVID, I’m still masking and avoiding shared indoor environments. Happily, I live where this is accepted without comment or harassment. But it further limits my already limited life.

The thing is, I don’t necessarily experience these limitations as a restriction. In many ways, I live as most people lived only a century or two ago, rarely leaving a well-known local environment.

Many people still do live that way, and there’s something to be said for it. I haven’t owned a car in decades, as I wait – and wait, and wait – for an EV I can afford. So I was accustomed to a limited range of travel long before getting on a bus became a serious risk to my health. I wish my small range was rural rather than suburban, and there weren’t SO. MANY. NEIGHBORS. SO. CLOSE. But accepting that, as I must, there are still a lot of flowers and beautiful clouds and a surprising amount of wildlife where I live.

When I had a car, it felt like a shell. I passed through environments without touching them, or being touched by them. Some days I miss that of course, when the weather is rude or my heart is bruised. But lacking the shell imposes a sort of involuntary mindfulness. I wish for filters when the yard services descend, with their ear-racking, fumacious motors. But then again, when my neighbors pop out of their morning doors into their morning cars, intent upon not spilling their morning coffee and keeping to their morning schedule, never noticing the wild turkey on the lawn next door or the rare luminescence in the sky above, I’m thankful for my wide open brain.

So, my journey continues, as journeys do, and just when I think I know where I’m going, I find myself somewhere else. But home, age has taught me, is inside of you. So that’s OK.

A large old tree stands next to a dirt road that curves into a fog bank

The Nature of Words

Since I didn’t discover I was an HSP until I was over 50, I’ve got a lot of personal backstory that I’ve never revisited through the lens of personality type. Sometimes things drop suddenly from the overflowing attic of my past to unveil themselves in a new light.

The Words of Nature

Certain writers evoke transcendent experiences of the natural world. In my 20s, when I was introduced to Mary Oliver’s poetry, I began to think of them as nature ecstatics. Strangely, this is not necessarily what others noticed about their writing, but as for me, I could relate.

Mary Oliver wasn’t my first nature ecstatic – the first was probably Sara Teasdale. An author gave me a book of her poems for children when I was in elementary school. Soon after, I encountered Lucy Maude Montgomery (best known for her prose, but definitely a nature ecstatic). I found Yeats’ Lake Isle of Innisfree when I was in high school. Somehow, I made it all the way to my 30s before I heard of Rumi.

Green barley stalks with uplifting seed pods outlined against the rising sun

Much later, I came to understand I was an HSP. It didn’t take long to notice that all of my favorite, nature ecstatic poets were decidedly HSP-ish too. Or, as L.M. Montgomery would call them, kindred spirits.  Continue reading

The Up Side of Reactivity

About 10 years ago I worked for a recruiter who stratified job candidates into “rockstars” and “b-players.” As I processed their resumés, I soon learned that distinction was more about appearances than skills.

But a polished persona wasn’t the only unwritten qualification. It was my responsibility to send out postcards to applicants’ references, asking them to rate their ex-employee on a laundry list of characteristics. “Stress resilience” was on that list. The moment I read it, I knew I’d found words for just what it was that I didn’t have much of.

Fast-forward 9 years, which I spent trying (not very successfully) to hide that “deficit” from bosses. Then I discovered I was an HSP. Continue reading