Something Shiny: ADHD!

Check out the collection of fidgets Team Shiny loves! 

Isabelle and David reflect upon what it was like to experience the Eye to Eye Young Leader's Organizing Institute Conference--in a nutshell, for David, figuring out 20 some odd years ago that his learning style was valuable, and then reclaiming hope after great loss, and for Isabelle, just this past year, feeling like she discovered her home planet in a conference room in Denver. Covering bits about medications, creating neurodivergent-friendly spaces, and masking, David and Isabelle go deep, and also discuss how there should be a "leave no trace" pact between a chair's fabric and your leg.
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Isabelle updates David that she’s been on stimulant meds (in extended release form), but would crash at the end of the day, and so her prescriber gave her an immediate release form she could use to help the end of day transitions (bedtime). They are going through schedule puberty as they transition to the kids being in school again but also not being in school yet and she just wants the discomfort to be over. She forgot to take her booster dose today, and it is so obvious to her, she is noticing just how much textures and sensations get to her. David names that it’s almost as if she didn’t have an accommodation to avoid distraction and wasn’t aware how many physical distractions would push through. She is so itchy and uncomfortable and so distracted by physical distractions. This comes up with the right variables. Just a few weeks ago, it was really humid, and David was like “I’m not wearing a shirt or pants” and it was just too much and he didn’t want to sit on certain fabrics, doesn’t want to sit on something that peels off, why can’t we just hold each and just leave each other as we found each other. Then there are other chairs that leave a butt print and so he gets up and wipes the seat off as he gets up. David and Isabelle went to the Eye to Eye Young Leader's Organizing Institute, where train their mentors and gear them up for the coming school year. They attended the portion of the institute designed for allies and former mentors of the program. Isabelle noticed that she found her way to where she needed to go on her first try, which has never happened at a conference before. It felt like reconnected with friends-in-waiting or long lost cousins. There were ample snacks and beverages. It just felt delightful and moving. David describes how this place has a different feeling to it because our nervous system operates differently. We didn’t have to get anxious to get where they needed to go. It’s this place where we see accommodations everywhere. We get to see both of it. There is no shame in this group of people to spin a fidget spinner, draw, or doodle, and people didn’t have to sit in nothingness. And the reason is mattered is that there so many things you normally have to think about, the anxiety level is so high, and halfway through the lecture, all Isabelle wants is a snack, and all she thinks about is the bar that she can’t get out of her bag, and then she is opening the notebook, the whole thing is hyper vigilance around how she is presenting. This was like instant unmasking, she didn't have to anxiously ask someone where to go. It’s incredible when the task isn’t being quiet, but the task is participation. You can eat crinkly snacks! David thinks about culture that we really have, that is a part of being neurodivergent. Any person who has to excuse why they’re running late, having an accommodation in school, not wanting to play scrabble—this is a cultural piece, when we see these things as a part of our culture, not our difference, and have them attended to, we feel safer. Oh my goodness, not having to fight for every moment to pay attention, gives us a lot more energy in a lot of ways. Isabelle names that where she has previously felt it were in places or spaces she would co-create. She has felt this before when visiting Poland, where her parents and family are from, and she’d have this sense of home. But this was the first time she had the feeling in a room of other people having the feeling. It’s like finding her home planet. Where has this been? I’m so happy it’s here! What is this feeling? This is the part of knowing you’re all of a sudden part of a group, you’re part of a group this world wasn’t built for, and you have to do it our way. And when you see hundreds of people not asking permission and not getting in trouble. People were attending to the task with incredible precision, and it’s an honor to watch these young people making the world we’re going to live in. David went the first time 20 years ago, and it’s the first time in his life someone made his learning style feel valuable. In his grad school program, one of his classmates was like “hey, you’re talking about ADHD, any interest in starting a program where they take college students with LDs and match them up with middle school students and seeing what happens?” And he gets ready for an interview with David Flink. He was interested in hearing his story but not in an exploitive way. It felt really holding, we’d love to have you be a mentor, come out to Brown university, we’ll teach you how to be a mentor. He’s at the OI, and David Flink and Marcus Soutra (Eye to Eye co-founders) are standing at the easel with Marcus and dream boarding stuff. Grady (if you hear this, David misses you and you changed his life!) was bouncing a racketball, and David looked around, waiting for him to get in trouble, and he looked around and no one cared. And they’re playing catch with this racketball and bouncing it off and playing this elaborate game during this presentation. At the same time we’re playing with these racketballs, obviously distracted. Marcus - “does anyone know how to spell benign?” This question usually makes David go small, and the room goes quiet and goes crickets. “All right then” he writes “B” and the number “9.” David realizes: "It’s not that we’re not paying attention because we're bouncing a ball; we're answering all the questions."  He wasn’t trying to hide, and he didn't get 'caught' and noticed he started to shake off the 'just about to be caught doing the thing I’m not supposed to be doing' feeling. He does 20 years with this, traveling around. And then a short while ago, one of the people closest to David, died. The moment he found out his brother was dying, David was talking with Jennifer Kane, saying “I’m done.” He never thought he would see anyone again. This reminded him to have hope in people, and people will surprise you. It started with 27 people sitting around the table, and now there’s levels of things and sophistication with apps and fidgets. Coming back and being amazed about how incredible this is. It’s like coming face to face with a dragon, but finding out it’s friendly, and then having it shrink to a size of a pea and living in your heart. 

To learn more about Eye to Eye, visit www.eyetoeyenational.org 
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Cover Art by: Sol Vázquez
Technical Support by: Bobby Richards
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Here's a nifty little promo code for those who either delayed gratification or who let this episode run through to the end because they were busy vacuuming.

What is Something Shiny: ADHD!?

How many times have you tried to understand ADHD...and were left feeling more misunderstood? We get it and we're here to help you build a shiny new relationship with ADHD. We are two therapists (David Kessler & Isabelle Richards) who not only work with people with ADHD, but we also have ADHD ourselves and have been where you are. Every other week on Something Shiny, you'll hear (real) vulnerable conversations, truth bombs from the world of psychology, and have WHOA moments that leave you feeling seen, understood, and...dare we say...knowing you are something shiny, just as you are.

Hello, I'm Isabelle. She her.

Hers. And I'm David. He him

his. And we're two therapists with ADHD

who sit down to have some chats about ADHD.

We can't promise we'll stay on topic or be

professional or even remotely mature, but

we can promise that you'll end up looking at you or your

loved one's beautiful neurodivergent

brain in a shiny new way. This is not a

therapy session. This is something

Shiny!

I love it.

Do you like it?

That's amazing. And can this just be the

intro? You saying that and me freaking out about how amazing it is?

Yeah, that

could be our first intro.

So without further ado, welcome to Something

Shiny.

I'm David.

In this episode, David and I

debrief what it was like to attend

the Young Leaders Organizing

Institute of Eye to Eye.

What does that all mean? First off, check out the show notes.

for all the good links and for more info. But

in a nutshell, you maybe remember David

mentioning this organization on and off. It is

a deep part of his origin

story. so big recommend going back

to his, origin story episode.

But in a nutshell, Eye to Eye is a national

organization. It's been around 20 plus

years, and its mission is to

improve the lives of neurodiverse young

people. And it engages

neurodiverse young people and

their allies, literally forming a movement to

make a more equitable and inclusive society.

And the oi. As it's dubbed

the Organizing Institute. it brings

together these student leaders.

From all of Idai's programs so that.

They can learn, train, connect, and

get ramped up for the new school year. This

is the first in what we're so

excited to share, a big series.

Of incredible,

recordings that all kind.

Of connect somehow to this

conference and our experience

with neurodivergent

culture. So excited to share this episode with

you and stay tuned for more. And of course,

before we go there, well, we'll hit

up some super fun tangents.

That's how we roll. That's how we roll.

We got to be under sometimes, so,

full disclosure,

I have been on my Adderall now,

my extended release Adderall, for, like, a month or

two, and it's, like,

noticeable. And then my,

prescriber because I would

kind of crash at the end of the day, and I felt like I

was really the two times

I most needed are mornings and then, like, bedtime,

essentially, where there's lots of moving parts

and transitions or, like, pickup from school

on. But I also

do benefit from it at work. I benefit from it

everywhere. It's pretty obvious now that I've been on it a while how much I

benefit from it. So I just started taking,

the extended release, and then I do a second

immediate release dose,

like, midday.

A booster.

A booster. And it's so cool. And I

totally forgot it today

just because life happened, right? Because we're adjusting

to, our kid being in kindergarten and

pickups are different. Timing of everything is different. But our other

kid is not starting their school yet. It's a whole thing.

It feels like the puberty of our schedule time

right now. This is puberty. We're going through schedule

puberty. And I just want

the discomfort to be done

with. And I want the beautiful butterfly of us on

the other side of knowing our schedule to

be done. But that would happen till the end of the month. But

anyway, I say all this to say

I realized two things. One is that

I am extremely

sensitive to textures that I

didn't even realize that on Adderall. I was

not noticing clothing

or sensations as

much. Does that make any sense at all? Am I

crazy? M. It's real.

This whole afternoon, I mean, it was so

itchy, but I wanted to

I've never felt so uncomfortable. It was like the

sensation just felt amplified.

It's almost as if you didn't have,

an accommodation to avoid distraction and you were noticing

how many physical distractions you were just kind of pushing through,

which is like a total narrative for the ADHD

population.

Okay, cool.

Because I'm feeling it even now, right? Like, you see

me and I'm like itching, and I'm uncomfortable, and I

just want this temperature, and it's like

I'm so distracted by my physical

sensations. I'm not used to this feeling.

Oh, it's so real. And I think there have to be the

right variables to bring that out. It was just a few

weeks ago. It was, like, ridiculously hot and stupid

humid. I mean, like, 87%

humidity. The moment where the real feel is,

like, 20 degrees above where it actually is.

I went into kicked open the door

of my house, and I was just m.

I'm not wearing a shirt and.

I'm not wearing pants.

And I went to the bedroom and came back with

basketball shorts, and that was it. And there was nothing I was

not going to change for the life of me that day. And

I didn't want to sit on certain fabrics

because it was like it's breathing on me. I don't want something that's going

to breathe back, and I don't want to feel like I have

to peel myself off it when I finish. Why can't something just

have an agreement to be there and hold me, and I

hold it. We leave each other, same as we found each

other.

Yes.

Why can't there be a leave no trace policy

with my thighs and my

lower back as I sit in this chair?

I'm just sitting on your chair. Why do you got

to snap my layer of

skin off? No.

and then there was the other chairs that whisper

inappropriate things to everyone else. And what I mean by that is

you sit down on the chair, you get up, and your butt is in

that chair. All the fibers are going in the one Direction.

Your butt was in it.

And you would see my butt and it's like I'm used

to. Now I get up and wipe the seat. As I get

up, I've shaken the Etcher Sketch like

no one's looking at my bum.

No.

Couch. You can't fool

me again. You can't fool me twice. Couch.

Not twice, maybe

twice.

Okay, I

got to ask you because we're talking about textures, we're talking about medicine.

And this is an important part of my week

in our lives, is that we get to sit down and talk about this.

But for a

while we've been talking about going

out, seeing what the culture looks like in different

places What the culture feels like in different ways.

By culture, by the way, you mean like neurodivergent

culture?

Culture?

Oh, yeah.

Like everything we talk about on something shiny is

neurodivergent culture, if you think about it. M. It's

things that we're all going to be like, oh my God, yes.

I don't want to hear one person say, you won't be able to take a spell

chucker with you, or all that kind of stuff. All those little

things that make us all grown.

Or like five more minutes. Grown like all these

cultural little parts. And

we went to go see this program,

Eye to Eye.

They have this thing called the Organizing Institute that they have once

a year. And this organizing

Institute they use to train their mentors that are going to

go out and work with kids throughout the year.

Right?

HM.

But they set up this program for

these mentors with all the

accommodations you could need, And no corrective

behavior. And so

you and I went to this conference I've been

a number of times before, right?

Yes.

What was it like for you to come

to?

Oh my gosh. Okay, so first off, just

to elaborate a little more because I'm

imagining even just to help remind myself.

So the part we, or at

least I was able to be connected to was

the part that then invited former

mentors and allies

and everyone kind of connected to

the mission of the organization.

Right. Like coming in and,

getting even extra training on top of the

mentors and stuff that were doing it. And

I mean, it was just like the weirdest thing. First off,

literally, this was the first thing walking and

it was held in the beautiful University of

Denver campus. It was so gorgeous. But it was just

in this one huge building. But

walking in there was a giant sign

with arrows saying where to go. And then you walk

in and there's another sign with arrows saying where to go. And then you

take like two more steps and there's another sign with arrows telling you where to

go. And at every possible moment where you would

glance in some different direction, you would find

more data about where you need to go.

david and I mean, I walked in. I think the first thing

I said is, this is the first time I've ever been to a

conference and found my way. We're supposed to

go the first time. What?

It just made me realize I've been to so many

conferences and I never go where I'm supposed

to. I continually get lost. I'm always

late. It's so confusing to me. I'm always like,

why do they put the print on the doors in

these tiny letters? Like, I don't know where anything

is. so first off, that was

huge. It just felt like someone thought of it,

right? and then you walk in a

room and I don't know how to explain it. It just kind of felt

like everyone was already maybe not like

close family, that, you know, a lot, but

everyone kind of already felt like they were just like a

friend in waiting or

extended family, like cousins. I didn't know I had

kind of vibe. it just sort of felt like that everyone's

talking in line, people are making like

it was just delightful. It was delightful.

And it was so moving

and emotional and everything.

But anyway, that's just like so first impression,

delight. And then of course, just overjoyed and

over the moon to see you and Robin. And then

also, just also the,

had they had ample food and

snacks. The snacks, everybody I

cannot get over. I want to live that

snack life all the time. Why don't I live that snack

life all the time? Every single room, so many

snacks. Sweet and savory varieties,

varieties of drinks and gatorade. Like

everywhere, everywhere you went, there was water.

It was delightful. It was delightful.

It was a moment.

And I think one of the things about being in a place like this

is your nervous system feels

different because there are very different

dances happening. For instance,

I'm used to needing to find my room. I get there kind of

early. I'm never sure if I'm going to find it. I'm walking kind of quick because I want to

make sure I get to the right place and get there in time. And then when I get to the room, I

got to calm down, I got to breathe, I got to stop

sweating, let my heart rate slow down. Like, I got

to feel better because I just rushed to find this right

room versus this experience here where

we just walked to the place we need to be.

Where we need to be, exactly. Didn't have to

get anxious of, where am I going to go? There was no nervous system

spiking to try to get us there.

And it's this place where we see

not only like there are accommodations everywhere, this

organization, I does a great job with accommodations and

teaching kids to advocate. So we get to see both of

it. And I think, I don't know if you notice it. But there was

no shame around this group of people to pick up

a.

Fidget spinner or fold

spinners everywhere,

draw.

Or doodle or make a friendship bracelet in the middle of a

conversation. These were accommodations that were built

everywhere. People didn't have to sit in nothingness. which I thought was just

great.

Yes. No, that's exactly right. The way

you described it, that is the feeling. It's like the reason it

mattered is that all the

things that normally would be the thing

I'm actually

managing through with a ton of anxiety

in my end, or,

almost like forcing myself to not think about, like,

legit. I think that's why I pointed those things out, right? Because

you're so right. My heart rate, usually at a conference is

extremely elevated. I am super

anxious. I am absolutely ahead of

time. And then still somehow running late.

I'm getting into the room and I'm sitting down, and it's like

halfway through the lecture or the presentation that my body

is relatively calm. But as soon as I'm in the room, all

I want is a snack. And the whole time I'm like,

can I get the bar, the energy bar out of

my bag? No, it's going to make noise. I can't make noise. I can't make

noise. I can't make noise. And then that's just going through my head for the

first 15 minutes. And then I'm desperately

opening the tiny teeny little notebook they give you. And I'm

like, I don't think I can draw, but I really want

to. The whole thing is just

constant hyper vigilance around

how I am presenting. I think it's like constant

masking. And you're so right. This was like

instant unmasking, because

I immediately felt like I didn't have to stop and

get anxious about asking someone about where to go. I felt like

someone was like, you got this? And I'm like, yeah, I do

got this. Thanks for all the extra giant lettered

signs and big arrows.

Yes.

and then, yeah, with the snacks, it was almost like

permission is what it felt like with the fidgets everywhere.

And there were clean Xboxes everywhere too, because, gosh,

that always happens to me. I always need to blow my nose or cough or

whatever. All the body needs

that would constantly be on

my mind is like, oh, I can't reveal

them. It just was permission.

Just seeing it there, just seeing it out

inside. Note all the snacks. The thing I didn't say all the

snacks were in crinkly packaging. Did you

notice this? And I loved it. And I was like, this is

permission. This is also not like the thing you often see at a

conference where it's like, take this muffin, this crumbly muffin,

and just, like, silently choke it down.

Well, I think it's incredible when the task isn't being

quiet.

Exactly.

When the task is participation.

Yes.

That is encouraged by the organization. That's an

incredible thing to feel. And that difference is just so

amazing. it makes me, in this very

distilled way, think about culture.

The culture that we really have that

is a part of being neurodivergent, and

that any person

getting an accommodation in a school, any person having

to talk to excuse why they're late, any

person not wanting to spell in front of other

people. People that don't want to play

Scrabble. I heart you. I get it.

This is a cultural piece. And I think

when we can see these feelings as part of our

culture but not part of our deficiencies,

all of a sudden we can feel the difference when they're attended

to.

Yeah.

We can feel like we belong in a place

or it feels safer all of a sudden.

And not that we need to have safe spaces everywhere because it's

impossible, but oh my God, all of a

sudden, not having to fight for every moment to

pay attention gives me a lot more energy in a lot

of other places.

Exactly. Yes. Okay. So

my feeling about it was

I guess because it felt like it

was so much was thought of and

taken care of on that front right.

On that kind of both sensory

and I don't know the words for

it, but it just felt like exactly what you're

saying.

the thing I want to name is, for me, it was an exceptional and I

got so emotional, and I still will get emotional as I think about it.

It was such an exceptional experience.

I genuinely have never felt anything like it.

I really haven't. And the places where I have felt

it have been places where I have been authorized or maybe

even tasked with creating the environment.

So it's not that I deprive myself of those

things when I have authority or ability to do

that. I think about all the therapy offices I've

ever been a part of or had a chance to make a

playroom for or

decorate my own office. That is what my

office would feel like. I would have snacks

always out. I would have or, places. It was

against policy. I'd find a way.

I'd always have tea. There's just like a constant

way that I think it's something

that I guess the weird

feeling for me. And I imagine this is not dissimilar

to I don't see like,

I'm a child of immigrants and I sometimes feel this it's like a weird

comparison. But I feel this way sometimes when I go visit

Poland where my parents are from.

But it's also not where I grew up, it's where all my other

family grew up. But, the feeling I get when I go there

is this, like it's this odd

familiarity and I don't have to

explain certain things or I feel

just a certain sense of

ease that I don't know I'm missing

when I'm not in that vibe. Right. Because I

was raised primarily around other Polish

immigrant families. Right. So

something about that feels a lot like home.

And then also just hearing that language spoken. There's a lot

to it, but that's sort of what it felt like. But

again, I only go there every couple of years, if not

every half a decade, right? So it's

also something I've gotten so used to at having to

hold within myself and never really share.

And I think that's the thing that makes me

so emotional is I don't know that I've ever had that

feeling synced up to a room

of other people having the feeling at the same

time, right? Does that make sense? I'd visit my family

and I'd be like, well, I'm the one having that feeling. But they're all

living here. They don't feel it.

But this was me in a room where I'm simultaneously

resonating off of all the other humans, also

going, I think I just found my home planet

a little bit. And then

I just felt moved. I don't remember a

time, literally since maybe the early

postpartum days where I

was so like, the tears, even as I say it, are

just like my body just

felt so big. It felt

all the feels. It felt warm and

fuzzy and sad and mad. And

all the feelings that come, I think, from being like, where

has this been?

It's all of it, right? It's like, Where has this been? I needed

this. And then on the other hand, it's like, I'm so happy it's here.

And on the other hand, oh, no, it's going to be over soon. And

all of it that

surprised me. I don't know that I expected that at all,

but I've talked a lot. Does that make sense?

It's this part around I mean, if I get really

technical, I think this is the part around intersectionality.

I think this is a part of knowing all of a sudden, you're

part of a group. You're not alone.

You're part of a group that this world wasn't built

for. and we have to do it our way.

And when you see hundreds of other

people doing it a little bit differently and not asking

permission and not getting in

trouble exactly. Not making

problems. It wasn't like

everyone go draw a tree in the corner and one person's, like, playing

with fingerprints, like just making smiley faces. No, people

were doing the trees. People were

attending to the task with incredible detail.

and it was an honor

to watch these young adults forge

a world that a lot of people are going to live in.

Yeah. Oh, I miss it. Ah, does

this happen to you?

So now can I flip the question to you, David? Like, having

done this, so many, like, M,

what was your vibe? Do you remember what it felt like the first

time you felt it? And then, what do you feel?

What happens to you after you leave too, because that feels

like a whole thing.

This is so hard. This is so hard. I think I

can answer so many parts of it. I think the first

time I went was, oh

my gosh, 15,

1617 years ago, a while ago, a

few years back. But it was a

while ago. And, it was the

first time in my life someone had made

my learning style feel valuable.

And I was in a grad school class and I was like, and

I'm being the bombastic ADHD dude. And I'm

like, blah, blah, blah. I'm sure I talked about ADHD or

something, right?

And then after class, one of my classmates was like,

hey,

the hurried whisper. And I was like, yeah,

you were talking about ADHD and stuff. Do you have any interest

in starting a program around

here that works with high schools or college students

with learning disabilities? And they match them up with middle school students with learning

disabilities and they do art projects together and feel good? And

I was like, this exists. I'd love to be

part of it.

HM?

And she goes, oh, you're just going to have to talk to this guy, David

Flink. He'll give you an interview.

Mhm?

And I was like, oh, I got an interview. And

then I'm doing my whole, like, I'm going to kill this interview. What do I

do? How do I get ready for this interview? All right, I'm going to talk about

all these things that I studied or what I'm going to do

the interview. I won't go through it like verbatim just

because that's a private, really important moment that I got

with David Flink. And it was important, but it

was very quickly when I learned speaking

about my learning differences, my

neurodivergence,

that's what he was interested in and not in

an exploitive way. Yeah,

and I've been used to that, like, oh, you got

a learning difference over there. Come over here, we're going to help

you. Quotient? I don't know. I don't know why my

voice went.

You know what you sounded? You sounded like a stage manager from like,

Newsies or something. Like, we're going to exploit the kids

and make them do an act. I don't know.

We're going to make them do things.

Yes.

But it felt really holding. And it was this

conversation where it's like, well, I'd love to have you be a

mentor. And we have this thing, come on out to

Brown University and we'll put you through this

training. We'll teach you how to be a mentor. And I was like,

Sounds great. And

fast forward life to the summer in between

one grad year to the next grad year when I'm going to this

oi, I land. There's

like 27 people at this time

sitting like crisscross applesauce in

a half moon circle around an easel.

And David and Marcus are standing front

easel with markers, like

dreamboarding stuff. And we're just shouting out ideas, and they're

trying to write the ideas on the board. And

while this is happening, Grady, if you hear this, please

know I miss your face and you've helped my life. Thank you,

Grady. Grady is sitting there with this little racquetball and

he's bouncing it.

There's this rhythm to the way he's hitting,

like and I just remember going like,

man, he's bouncing a ball. And I

remember thinking, like, you're not supposed to bounce a ball. He's going to get in trouble.

And then I looked around and no one

cared.

and then all of a sudden.

I was like, I want to bounce a ball. And then I was

like, hey, Grady, do you have another

ball? And he went, no, but here. And passed it

right to me. And I went, oh, back to him. And then

we're playing catch with this racquetball. And then we're playing catch, like,

bounce it off the wall to the other person. Bounce it off the wall to the other person,

then back to each other. And then how many bounces can you have

before it hits the other person without it going flat? how little

bounces can you get? So the whole time we're in this

presentation, we are playing with these racquetballs

At the same time we're playing with these racquetballs. Obviously

distracted, marcus is trying to write the

word benign on the easel M

and stops and goes,

does anyone know how to spell benign?

And that question right when someone goes, does anyone know how

to spell? Like, I have learned to become as small as

humanly possible in that moment because I don't want to be the one

that says, like, no, I don't know how to spell it. We need to find someone else. Because

that's the answer. Impermanent, right? Like, I don't know how to

spell that thing. Well, he's like, you didn't know how

to spell benign? And the room was like crickets

people blinking. And they're like, no. And everyone's like,

no, I don't know how to spell benign. And he went, well, all

right then. And just wrote the letter B and the

number nine. And we kept going, that's

so amazing. I'm like, this

makes sense to me. No problem.

And then it hits me. He's asking a

question. Grady's answering, like, I

don't know how to spell, but I'm answering it's not that we're not

paying attention because we're bouncing the ball. All of a sudden,

I didn't feel like I was in trouble or trying to hide

in a classroom setting for the first time.

even if I was on task in school, I would be

like, there's something that I'm unaware of

that I should have been doing that someone's going to call my attention

to.

Exactly.

I'm just about to be caught. I'm about to be caught doing

the thing I'm not supposed to be doing I didn't even know I wasn't supposed to

be doing.

So in this oi. I learned so much.

So much. And I took so much from that experience

and poured it into the counseling studying that I was doing to

be therapist. Because, Marcus and David

were like, ten years ahead of the movement

when I first met them. They are still ten

years ahead of the movement in terms of what they're actually

doing. And they would deny that. They're

like, no. And we listen to the kids, and the kids help direct us, and

the young adults help direct us. And they're right, and they do,

but they are right. And so

fast forward, I get super involved. I start traveling

around, giving talks about ADHD and how to

come together and neurodivergence and all this stuff.

And then a short while ago,

one of the closest people in my life, my brother,

died. And his death

was nothing short of

horrific and it required a

lot of attention.

And so the moment I found out

he was dying,

I remember talking with Jennifer Cain, shortly after this,

but I remember talking with people, saying, I'm

done, I'm not going anywhere.

I saw myself wanting to visit my brother

every couple of weeks, every three weeks. And that was going to take

my whole time and everything was going to go towards that. And if they ever

needed me, I didn't want to be in Brown

or Denver or San Francisco or Reno. I just wanted

to be around home.

And so when he was sick and when I call everyone, I

actually thought I would never get to see anyone ever

again. And so this

trip out with you,

it just reminded me what

I know to be true about people,

that it's important to have hope in people

and people will surprise you.

And, here I go

from starting with 27 people, like, sitting around

have circles that now there's

audiobooks being sent out to workshop

tables that have fidget spinners and iPhones

that they're communicating to the app so they could all share questions, but

no one has to raise their hand. The levels of things

that they were doing and how sophisticated they are

now. Not saying they weren't sophisticated back then,

but where they are now. It kind of feels like that day

where you leave your small town and you're like,

bye everyone, I'll see you in a few years. And then

I go have a real scoop of ice cream in a big city. I'm

like, oh my God, I can't wait to tell everyone. And I go back home

and everyone's grown up and home has spaceships

now.

It's amazing.

And so coming back and being amazed

by how incredible they are, how incredible their mentors

are right now, how incredible their alumni is, like, their

resources, the keynote speaker,

don't spoiler.

but it was such an incredible experience. And

for me, I knew you

hadn't seen anything like this before.

It's pretty obvious.

No one has.

Yeah, no one has.

And there's this look

that I've seen so many people have in

so many times that I've been to the Oi and the only

way I m can't make this face authentically so

I'm not going to try to make it. I'll just say the things

it's like you saw a

dragon for the first time, It was nice,

it shrunk to the size of a pea and

went into your heart.

That is totally what it is.

It's a happy pea heart dragon.

There's a shock bit of like this can't be

real life, mhm?

Very much so. Very much so. Like walking just

walking around going what? Is this for

real?

Thank you so much for listening. If you ever have that thought where you

think, hey, I'm nothing. Stop. Remember you're

something something's shiny that's right.

Just as you are. If you like what you heard and

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listening and.

We'Ll see you in two weeks.