Shalom shalom
ADHD in adults is a very huge issue today.
In the past it was assumed that teens grow out of ADHD.
We now have a generation of Adults that find it so difficult to go through the responsibilities of day to day life.
David is a 35 year old husband and father of 3.
David is not one of those people that work well in
"normal" jobs as much as he may want to.
David finds it difficult to juggle his work life home life and social
life as each seems to be on his NUMER 1 PRIORITY
LIST
David has a passion and a gift for carpentry, however he has never been
able to make a successful living out of
it...... he has
tried numerous times.
David loves his wife very much , but it seems that
she always tells him about his communication problems
David wants to spend more quality time with his kids, but just doesn't
find the time, with so many REAL
responsibilities
David Social circle used to be large and alive,
Yet he finds it becoming less and less over the years
David At age 35 felt buried under a life of despondency depression it
just seemed that life was always a pace ahead of him.
David Today is 38 and has learnt to understand and
accept how he functions in the world David time
management skills are greater than he imagined
and he does them his way David now has time for his children ,
his wife, his friends and even his
hobby of carpentry which may develop into his
career......successfully
David has a list of tools and skills he can use when he
finds himself overwhelmed or falling back to his default position.
David Is happy, light and excited about himself and
his life as he feels he is now on the pulse of life.
ADHDiversity understands ADHD our methods are
designed by people with ADHD for people with ADHD.
ADHDiversity works with each individual person as
an individual person, creating programs that are
designed for the exact needs of the client
At ADHDiversity we teach you to make ADHD your greatest asset
Gilad Spitalnik
ADHDiversity Practitioner and family Life Coach
Cell 052 467 2886
Email: gilad@adhdiversity.com
adhdiversity@gmail.com <mailto:adhdiversity@gmail.com>
ADHDiversity Tip of the week: When you ask a question to a child,
teen and in some cases an adult who has ADHD, understand the following
They Fist have to process the question and then process the answer.
When asking a person who does not have ADHD a question,
As you ask the question
they process it. Have patience with these kids and adults
and the results will blow your mind.
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