| It's quite interesting, but I believe that procrastination and burnout are rather obvious signs of ADHD and if you experience this you should verify this. I'm a huge mental health advocate and I've been such for years (I worked with a lot of psychiatrists and psychologists when doing deep interpersonal training for business purposes and I built a lot of trust toward field) and I've been working constantly with therapists, have friends who are psychiatrists etc. Yet no one, at any point suggested this might be ADHD because: - ADHD has a lot of bad press (as something that is result of bad parenthood - which is false, that's genetics) - ADHD in adults is somewhat new (where I live there all the meds are prescription only for children with note that they shouldn't be used for adults) - ADHD adults are either successful (because they overcame hardships and are perceived as very interesting people in general) so they don't seek help or very miserable (dropping jobs, partners etc.) - they can't afford diagnosis and treatment - ADHD in women is severely underdiagnosed (because it's attributed to hormonal mood swings) - ADHD is often used as a joke, so people treat it as joke - ADHD often gives symptoms that might be diagnosed as substance addiction, bi-polar personality, neuroticism, anger issues etc., people treat this for years and it doesn't help - If you get in the wrong basket it's really hard to get out of it (I was working with different set of issues) And that was for more then a decade. I decided to diagnose myself with specialist only after lately I couldn't focus on anything absolutely at all. I had weeks were I didn't do anything I really wanted - that wasn't normal and I went to a huge stretch to find out what that was. |
My guess is that procrastination and burnout are signs that work in our society is just not a good fit for our mental needs (see also immense popularity of video games, which provide "fake work" that is closer to what we need). I suspect there were no procrastination, burnout, ADHD and other mental afflictions among hunters-gatherers.