Rich Tea Wellin wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 11:05 pmStray observation - but a lot of behaviour in ADHDers is geared towards dopamine hits. Do you think there’s a buzz you get out of the arguments, or the nice red notifications that someone has quoted you? I think I do, to an extent. My brain is bored so a quick to and fro on here gives me a little kick - all subconsciously of course, I don’t come here thinking about that.CEB wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 3:19 pm Thought I’d look back on this thread.
Bit of a weird one really - I did what was intended as a short break from alcohol back in the end of June, but just stuck with it and have now been off the booze for nearly four months.
Am getting most of the known benefits of stopping drinking, but interestingly (or not) it’s clear to me that I definitely had/have a tendency to self medicate with alcohol. Not to get pissed, but just that having a glass of wine or a beer would always just numb out distractions or aid with having a sense of proportion - usually if I’m on a rant, it’s stone cold sober, I’m naturally a lot more laid back just with that one beer that can take the edge off a mood or a sense of anxiety. Weird.
Anyway, the replacement is what I’m getting my head round - I think I still have the same predisposition to be argumentative, but while before I could sort of “switch” into a slightly less spiky version after I’d opened a bottle of wine, now I think I (mostly) can now notice when I’m getting into ADHD behaviour - whether it’s procrastinating or getting into a time sink - and usually make an executive decision to do something different.
Interested in whether any of the others who were looking into it got any further?
And perhaps alcohol fulfils the same thing. That little buzz a drink gives? Used to be putting a bet on for me but no longer.
More substantial answer - yes, but more complex. I don’t get a buzz out of arguing (I actually sort of hate it, believe it or not) but when I have a bee in my bonnet - and even when I don’t, to be honest - I am way more concerned with being right, than being liked. Not because I believe I’m inherently right, but because being “right” is what I am fixated on trying to get to.
Take the trans thread. I stand by every word I’ve posted on it about the subject (will concede that my tone at times isn’t winning friends, but see above) but the frustration I have about it is in how poorly understood the topic is by people who assume that their compassion means they’re right. I don’t mind disagreeing with people (obviously) but the fact that those who disagree can’t actually say “look, I understand what you’re saying, here’s how you’re wrong” means that there’s a kind of itch there, something that doesn’t sit right that can, occasionally be a fixation.
Arguments - whether about a big issue or a small thing - are kind of a side effect of trying to resolve something discordant, or jarring. In a way, that’s why I tend to either go into minute detail or turn up the heat - it’s like trying to get to the real substance of a thing to get it resolved.
(It’s also why, genuinely, if I’m proven wrong about something or substantively shown that there’s a valid argument against something, I tend to assimilate it and move on, it doesn’t register as “oh sh*t I was wrong” in that way