ADHD Success Stories
Welcome back! If you have yet to sign up for our RSS feed perhaps it's because you don't know what the heck that EVEN means! Watch this small video to see the cool things you can do with "RSS" or if you prefer reading, check out this article and let our feed be the first on your list! Trust me, if you visit more than 2 websites on a regular basis, RSS will make your life easier!
- Michael Phelps breaks the world record in gold metal Olympic swimming.
- Einstein discovers fundamental laws of time & relativity.
- Walt Disney creates a world of imagination where hundreds of thousands of people learn to dream
All examples of deficits? Hardly! In fact, each of these men, though they struggled at times with ADD/ADHD, had an extraordinary amount of attention to devote to those things in which they excelled. When each found his sweet spot he rose to the top in his field, to be loved, respected and remembered by many.
Do you have ADD/ADHD? How do YOU thrive in the day to day? What’s the thing that makes focusing for you a non-issue? Tell us how you’ve triumphed in the midst of ADD/ADHD! Speak to us of YOUR success!
We’ll feature a story or two as they come in & each feature will win one of several prizes that help promote ADHD Awareness.
To submit your story, simply make a comment below! If you have a mic or webcam you can also leave audio and video posts!
See Also: Our ADD/ADHD Awareness Week Winners






[...] feel free to check out the individual stories of ADD/ADHD found on this website and contribute if you have [...]
Pingback by ADD/ADHD Overview | Another Daily Dose — September 15, 2008 @ 11:48 am
As a Mother of children with ADHD, I know that when the kids were diagnosed and on meds, it was like a weight was taken off my shoulders. I just thought that I was a rotten Mom and the kids were just out of control. It is nice to know that after listening to all the negative things about meds, if you live with a ADHD child, the meds are an answer to your prayers. It does not make you a bad Mom or person if you use the medications for you children. Your children are bright and very creative. Good luck to you that are living in the midst of what can be a living hell. I know the tears that I shed because I felt so worthless as a Mother. Keep up and win the battle!
Comment by Jinny — September 16, 2008 @ 6:03 pm
I was diagnosed in my early 30s. I wish I’d known earlier. I have pretty severe ADD, I’m dropped out of school and spent most of my life being told that I should try harder because I was obviously smart and “could do better” (a quote on just about every school report I ever received). After school I spent several years bouncing from menial job to menial job.
Very long and involved story shortened: At 23 I was given a computer and found I had a natural affinity for them. I started my career in computers at 24 and set myself a goal of becoming Chief Technology Officer of a company within 10 years. I was promoted CTO of a very successful internet company 4 months before my 34th birthday – my 4th promotion in that job.
So, for the benefit of parents struggling with their ADHD/ADD child: Very scattered high school drop out who was good at very little but reading science fiction and playing rock guitar – held a string of menial jobs (I think close to 20 over a 6 year period) – discovered computers and now a very successful executive (also have a stable home life)
ADD allows me to, to steal a phrase, ‘think different’. While my peers and subordinates have a tendency to think linearly I notice that I can make all kinds of intuitive leaps and connect seemingly unrelated information into new configurations to find solutions. There are some ways in which I excel, in IQ testing there are areas I rate above genius level. Of course, in other areas I’ve been known to leave one shoe on a bookshelf and another in the fridge instead of putting them on the shoe rack – so I guess it balances out. ADD isn’t about not having any focus, it’s about not always being able to choose where that focus is – it also allows for hyper-focus. Most of my success, other than the being really good at the stuff I’m interested in, is the ability to shut my body down so I can tackle an interesting problem. It’s almost like a zen state – nothing exists in the universe except the problem or task. I’ve worked around the clock in the blink of an eye, or realize that I havent moved in 18 hours and desperately need to focus on biological issues.
ADD is only a handicap in the eyes of those who assume that life requires us all to behave the same way and think the same way. Yes, it’s painful when you’re younger because you know you don’t quite fit in and the way everyone else does things makes very little sense (parents: your ADD child can’t clean his room because it’s not messy to them. Plus it’s impossible to put something away that has multiple contexts simultaneously – it lives in many places, so leaving it on the floor where I can find it when I need it is the best solution – this also drives executive assistants crazy later in life when shifted to a ‘office looks like a tornado came through it’, which is quite fun).
From what I’ve observed by nearly any measure I have a lot more fun with my life than most people around me, and I wouldn’t change who I am for the world.
Comment by boomboomlaboom — September 19, 2008 @ 4:39 am
ADHD Awareness Week! (Focus On ADHD?)
Your Blog post sums up what I think is going on with ADHD. It is misunderstood or poorly understood by most of us.
I think it is a shame that the medical and psychological professions have placed, “There is no cure.” into the diagnostic definitions of almost all developmental problems (including ADHD). In effect, they are saying that their professions and their research studies are so wonderful that if they cannot figure out what this is and how to fix it, “There is no cure.” The reality is they are simply looking in the wrong place for the answers.
I’ve been working in the field of brain function and behavior for 30 years. I have been specializing in developmental problems for the last 7 years. I think I have a glimmer of what is going on for developmental problems (yes, even ADHD).
The problem is not the behaviors. Behaviors are symptoms of the problem. The problem is that the developmental process has gotten stuck. It needs to be un-stuck. The developmental process needs to be re-engaged and encouraged to catch-up. The developmental process needs to be put back on track.
I think that the meds for ADHD are a god-send for parents and teachers. It helps the children with ADHD become manageable so that teachers and parents can get a rest. But clearly, these meds do not fix the basic problems.
Figuring out what derailed the developmental process, eliminating that from interference with the developmental process, and encouraging the developmental process forward is the only thing I have found which works well with almost all forms of developmental problems.
In our work we regularly, normally, and predictability get the developmental process back on track and children are able to catch up with their peers. As they do this their symptoms go away. And, yes, this works for those with ADHD.
Our work is not medical or psychological. It is like a fusion of Rachael Ray and Dance-Dance-Revolution. The problem in our modern cultures is that we lost a lot of our childhood activities and our natural environment in which we evolved.
From our experience, the developmental process gets derailed by our children’s reactions to un-natural things in the child’s environment. And, we have lost the childhood games and activities which encouraged the developmental process naturally. When we identify those things to which the child is reacting and eliminate them from the child’s environment, the developmental process jump-starts itself. It starts moving forward.
Only recently has the scientific community started to ‘research’ the role of environmental factors in developmental problems. Most of the experts in the fields of developmental problems have yet to believe anything except, “There is no cure.”
Rodger Bailey, MS
developmentaldiscovery.com has a free Developmental Checklist
Comment by Rodger Bailey — September 19, 2008 @ 6:43 am
I recently treated a 40 year old man with ADHD.
He responded so well and so quickly to relatively low dose Strattera (I don’t have any financial conection to this company) that he lost his desire to drink alcohol socially on the weekends. Apparently there was a connection between the stress of having ADHD and the desire to lessen this stress at weeks end with alcohol.
He is now able to work essentially without distraction and his relatonship with his spouse and children has vastly improved. No side effects to speak of.
A clear case of a little medication making a large difference in quality of life.
Jason L Cohen, MD
Freehold, NJ
JasonCohenMD.com
Comment by JASONLCOHENMD — September 19, 2008 @ 8:21 am
I was recently diagnosed at the age of 36; although I had joked about it for years, I was finally ready to speak with a Doctor and see if what I’d privately wondered was true. After the battery of tests, when I asked if I had ADD the Doctor chuckled and said “Oh my, you certainly do.”
Having a name for things I had considered personality flaws makes things less hurtful. I deal with varying levels of poor impulse control, an inability to keep track of things, and an overall difficulty with time management.
Please don’t misunderstand – knowing that it is ADD doesn’t make the behaviors okay – but I now have a plan of attack on how I can minimize these things and how I can set up a scaffold of routine that helps me overcome these issues. With counceling and medication, I can finally feel normal.
I’m struggling to find a medicaton that works for the ADD (to go hand-in-hand with the councelling) but everything I have tried tends to make me anxious. Most medicatons are basically uppers, and they have a variety of side effects. As such, I have found that you need to shop around.
My biggest fear was that the medication would change my basic personality – it would change my “me-ness” which I did not feel was acceptable. What it has actually done is shown me how easy the rest of the world really has it, as far as orginization and time management.
I can remember things, I can work in a linear fashion, and I can finish projects that I begin …. all things that I thought I was not capable of. It has left my creativity and sense of humor untouched – my personality is a vibrant and engaging as it always has been. I’m just less of a tremendous flake than I have been.
This will always be a battle for me – ther is no getting around it. But at least I have a plan, a way to actually figure things out, and a means of keeping things under control. ADD is a bugger…. it touches everything you do, everyone you know, and there’s no willpower on Earth that can simply overcome it. It takes time, energy, professionals, and (in my case) medication… but the results are worth it.
Comment by Maggie — September 19, 2008 @ 10:28 am
Maggie
Thanks for the story! You really nailed it on the head. My life has been quite similar…as far as feeling like a huge flake goes.
I hate that my family and friends know that if I need to be anywhere they have to tell me a completely different time to meet so that I am on time. I get distracted so easily and it seems like no one understands what that is like. At the same time though, I can understand where they are coming from….how frustrating it must be for them!
I am just grateful that people can see through the flaws of my ADD personality and still accept me for who I am trying to be!
Comment by Jess — September 19, 2008 @ 11:58 am
When I was growing up I couldn’t understand why it seemed that I was always in trouble. My sister never seemed to be in as much trouble as me. My mother and father were very frustrated that I didn’t do better in school, especially after they had me tested and found out that I had a very high IQ.
I liked school, I just didn’t have the patience to sit through class and give it my undivided attention. I usually found ways to divert my attention (and that of the class). I remember one time I thought it would be funny to unplug the projector in the middle of a film. It was funny, for about 30 seconds until the film broke when it was plugged back in!
As a young person I never seemed to stay at a job for more than two years, often less. I would either quit for “something better” or because I didn’t like the boss, the job, the co-workers. Okay “normal” people do that too but they are usually at a company longer. I also had a problem staying in one place. I would move from one home to another or to another city. I seemed to always like the change.
My first entrepreneurial venture was a second hand clothing store. It was in the mid 80’s so the trend hadn’t quite caught on yet, so it was a struggle. When the owner of the store location sold his property I wasn’t able to find a comparable location for the price. But it was fun “playing shop” and I definitely felt more like myself running the show.
I have had a couple of other business endeavors and, like most entrepreneurs, some went well and some didn’t. Then I fell in love with the internet! Me, the girl you probably would have thought least likely to use a computer in high school. I started playing around with websites and someone asked me to build a site for them. The next thing I knew I was being paid to build websites.
I was then offered an opportunity to turn this part time hobby into a full business when I was approached by a gentleman who wanted to help me financially. I left yet another job, opened an office and hired a couple of people to help out.
Nine years later I sold the business after having moved up in space to a 3000 sq ft building and having a staff of 12. I was nominated for the 40 Under 40, Small Business of the Year twice and The Best Place to Work twice. Now I am an internet marketing consultant with clients spread all across the United States.
Having ADD does make things challenging from time to time. When I had my company there would be days I just could not work because of the distractions out my window made it too difficult to focus. I finally moved myself to a back office in the building with no windows.
I’ve always have a struggle staying focused for long periods of time so now I take frequent breaks when working on something that takes more than an hour. Sometimes the impulsivity takes over and I make rash decisions, although that has calmed with age.
At this point in my life I think I have it pretty great. I am able to travel as part of my consulting business. I have the flexibility to work the hours that suit me best and I can work from anywhere on the globe. A client even flew me out to Baja Mexico last December.
I am asked to do speaking engagements and that is very enjoyable to me, and I teach college courses on business and internet from time to time. I am also about to finish my second degree (I already have a degree in Business and close to a Masters in Management, a new degree in Psychology) Life is great and I wouldn’t change me a bit!
While I never fit into the corporate mold, being an entrepreneur has really worked well for me.
Comment by Teajai — September 19, 2008 @ 4:22 pm
For those with ADD/ADHD and those that work with them I would like to mention that Neurofeedback Therapy can help. You can overcome your symptoms, often completely and even get off medication. If you have not heard of this modality you can search on- line for information and providers.
I have a 16-year-old client that reports after 3 sessions of neurofeedback therapy he was able to study chemistry for three hours straight the night before a test. He maintained concentration during the test the next day. He completed two papers days faster than prior to neurofeedback and now can pay attention in class.
While this is wonderful progress, it does take some time for the brain to learn and remember. This is permanent learning, kind of like getting braces on your teeth. You have beautiful teeth when you are done. You can have a more attentive beautiful brain with neurofeedback therapy.
I just wanted to get the word out that there is a permanent solution to a life of ADD/ADHD.
Comment by Karen A, Longino, RN — September 19, 2008 @ 4:28 pm
I am daily aware of my ADD/ADHD—to be specific on something that really is not that at all, let’s go with ADHD—and since this is awareness week (though I was not made aware of it being awareness week until today, Friday of the week in which I was to be aware and possibly celebrated for possession of the plight) I figure why not lend my supposed talents to describing the success, or at least the potential for success, that exists within me.
Diagnosed at the age of 4 during the ‘hyperactive’ craze of the early 1980s (pre-ADHD definition), this Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder is not something that I have ever been able to touch or feel, but something I am only able to notice or pinpoint after the fact. Incidents or pseudo-moments of aloofness or rushes to judgment (the ever-popular ‘impulsive behavior’) happen on the regular, my checks and balances not in effect really unless under the influence of any of the popular control drugs on the market (RITALIN: off-and-on from kindergarten through early college; CONCERTA: summer and fall 2006). I suffer from genuine moments, let’s say deficits, of physically being there for events unfolding around me, of which I have no or minimal recollection.
I start useless fights with my girlfriend over the minutia of detail, something that she said randomly that I dwell upon. This something is usually the fifth sentence, third-seventeenth words of that sentence in a paragraph of speech that is tangential in nature. I am stuck in the rut of focusing on that, dwelling on that, fearing that which was said on the random. Then, a hummingbird whispers to a worm that it is about to have for dinner some two miles away and I snap out of the deficit in question.
This however is not to be about the toils, it is a song to the triumphs, here goes. Against some odds, I am the owner of a Bachelor of Sciences in Speech/Communication, Broadcasting. Following graduation I worked for a few years as a Sports Journalist with two separate newspapers. Suffering the squirrellys at the hands of my ADHD nature, I decided I was not climbing the ladder quickly enough, not making enough money and hopped into the mortgage sales game.
For a little while I made good money. The market fell apart and I had not the patience nor the coin to ride out the adjustment period necessary to succeed in these realms again and found that I had to leave the business.
Having built up some debt over the years, I found it necessary to work two full time jobs to the tune of 80 hours a week to get me on my feet again and to blast away debt. After six months of rocking that schedule, I was made an offer by one of my then two employers that pays me 90% of my income that I made over the two posts and am able to spend and save a little bit with each pay.
I work for an alarm security that runs its own central station (dispatch center that receives home/business alarm panel signals (usually false alarms) and notifies the proper authorities and contacts associated with individual accounts). I am a manager who has been assigned the task to bring the central station up to full/higher functionality. I am told the job, once the revamp is completed, will turn into a sales/dealer support/account specialist type of position.
Some would deem this as a success. I, ever the dreamer, see it as a small victory in what could be a lifelong war to be able to spend my working hours somehow fulfilled. This goes something to the effect of, ‘Yea. Now I know I can keep a job that I am not terribly enthused about.’ I remain unfulfilled.
Fulfillment for me work-wise would be putting my creative mind to use, through writing, through think-tanking, through entertaining, through making folks laugh—all through my odd ways and –isms that are direct results of the skewered way I see the world and interactions therein as a result of the supposed chemical imbalance in my brain that the pundits have come to call ADHD.
Dissatisfied with the current job situation, I constantly seek creative projects that will allow me the balance and justification to keep my current job in tact, for reasons other than just keeping the bills paid and money in my pocket. I have acted in two independent films, have a stand-up comic routine ready for the unveiling (which once unveiled will no doubt score me the chance to step in and help Lorne Michaels with making Saturday Night Live relevant again) and six separate ideas for novels/screenplays that suffer false starts or long pauses (when any of the other active ideas need to be written on for three days and then be put aside for one of the others).
The most shining golden sunny creative ‘side’ project I have going on right now is a promising start to a freelance writing career. I have written web content for an artist and a couple of non-profits and am currently assembling newsletters and annuals reports for entities providing genuine benefits for humankind. An entrepreneurial direction with a focus on being able to share with folk seems to be the ideal direction for my defining my own success.
Is the bar that measures success for those who suffer from ADHD set lower than that of the rest of the functional world? I think so. Using that measure, I have exceeded the expectations of society and therefore can be deemed a success.
Comment by Dave Foster — September 19, 2008 @ 4:54 pm
I heard from Lisa Shichijo today who informed me that Ty Pennington, celebrity designer and host of ABC’s Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, who was diagnosed with ADHD as a child and has been vocal about his ADHD for several years now.
Ty apparently has a very moving success story detailing his struggles with ADHD as a child and eventually dropping out of his first year of college, to finally seeking diagnosis and treatment for his ADHD and becoming one of the most well-known and well-loved TV personalities. He has been a spokesperson to help raise awareness about ADHD for several years now and, in honor of ADHD Awareness Week
“As an adult with ADHD, I know how important it is to be able to focus and get work done each day. After I was diagnosed and started treatment for my ADHD symptoms, I was able to hold steady jobs in the construction and graphic design businesses, which ultimately led to me hosting ABC’s Extreme Makeover: Home Edition.
I know, firsthand, the importance of understanding and treating ADHD. I believe if I’d been diagnosed and treated earlier, I would have struggled less as a child,”
Check out Ty’s interview with ABC News here: http://abcnews.go.com/video/playerIndex?id=5428757
Spread the word, talk to those you know. Let’s see if we can’t get to Ty share his great story with Another Daily Dose! A video blog would be a great contribution & inspiration to this new community! What a great example of succeeding with ADHD!
Comment by King Arthur — September 19, 2008 @ 6:20 pm
I was diagnosed with ADD at the age of 9. I lived in a really small town in Texas at the time and because the education system in the public schools was really bad, my mom decided to home school all of her children. I remember having a really hard time focusing on my studies every day. There were so many other things I wanted to be doing instead of studying: like riding our motorcycles in the backyard, feeding the orphan goats with bottles of powdered milk, or making sure my dolls had their seminary classes every morning. It got so bad that I, on multiple occasions, would find my mom sobbing in the bathroom discouraged from my disobedience. It wasn’t that I had no desire to learn, but rather that I didn’t know how to learn with such a small attention span. Not only that, but her constant nagging and forceful attitude with getting my studies done, was only making me angry; especially since I had more important things, or at least seemed more important to me, on my mind. I lost all willingness to fully engage myself in what she felt I needed to be doing. It slowly started to affect my attitude and the way I treated her.
My poor mother struggled day after day with me until she couldn’t handle it. She wasn’t sure how to deal with my stubbornness and get me to cooperate in anything. Finally she broke. One day we had a really hard morning–my mother and my attention span–and she sent me to my room at 9, or so, and told me I couldn’t come out until I had changed my attitude. I resented her for it because of my pride/strong will (which I sometimes think is just one of my character flaws from being the bratty youngest child in my family and not my ADD) and would not budge in changing because I was so angry with her. I did not understand as to what the real problem was. I laid in my bed all day and cried until I went to sleep that night. The only thing I remember eating that day was some hot sauce from Taco Bell that was sitting on my window sill, which I had been so excited to grab handfuls of out of the bins the day before when we went to town for lunch.
My mother had been talking to some of the women in the small town. One of the women had a similar situation with her son and introduced the possibility that it was ADD/ADHD that I was dealing with. In conversing, she mentioned that Ritalin had made a world of difference in her son. The next day, after my mom’s breaking moment and my long confused day of crying in my bedroom, she woke me up and told me to get ready for the day. She was going to take me into town to the doctor in hopes to find a cure for my bad behavior. I was fine with going to the doctor since it meant I would not have to do my studying which I now resented because of how we were communicating with each other. Needless to say, I came home with a bottle of pills and a happy mother full of hope.
I took the medication for about two years. It really did help me in a lot of ways, but I stopped taking them when I moved to Washington and my parents enrolled us in public school. I feel that for some reason I did better in public school because I had more people/distractions around me to divert my attention, but at the same time because it was new and frightening (due to the fact that I had never set foot in a public school before) it forced me find new ways to focus. I still did struggle day-to-day with my ADD but I have also been able to figure out how to somewhat channel my ADD and use it to my advantage.
It is funny how people call it a disorder because I do not find it to be one in the least. There are so many advantages to having ADD/ADHD. I have discovered that individuals with ADD/ADHD are able to find a few select things to really excel in whereas “normal” people have a little knowledge in a lot of areas, but not to the extent that someone with ADD/ADHD has in those few select ones.
I also find that people with ADD/ADHD tend to be more ambitious. I am not sure if this because they hold a lot of enthusiasm for the things they do excel in or because of the amount of daydreaming that goes on in their heads. This is another aspect of ADD that I have dealt with frequently. I find myself staring at walls for long periods of time daydreaming of ridiculous things. My dad has ADD as well. A few years after I was diagnosed with ADD, I was rummaging through his stuff from when he was a kid. I came across his report cards and in EVERY single report card the teacher left the comment “Sam needs to stop daydreaming in class”. It has been interesting to watch his behavior and find the similarities that we have in our ADD.
Though I have suffered from the disadvantages to dealing with ADD/ADHD, I am grateful to have it for the advantages that come with it.
Comment by Amber Shimp — September 20, 2008 @ 1:37 pm
I couldn’t resist telling story of my daughter Carol. She was born with spina bifida and has always been a wheelchair user. So a good part of her childhood was spent dealing with mobility issues.
Carol was very bright but did not do well in school. Finally dropped out of high school and got her GED. She went on to college and did well because she was into sports and didn’t have to do much on the academic level.
She went to the University of Illinois which is the only University in U.S. with a wheelchair varsity team. She won many national races and participated in the Paralympics in Barcelona, Spain, in 1992, and won a gold medal in track.
She married and worked as a vet tech and loved animals. But she wasn’t organized in her life and felt something really missing, felt depressed. It was after she was diagnosed with ADHD and got help that she really began to live a full life.
When she and I talk about those times, she reflects that her real difficulty in life was the ADHD and not the birth defect. That is how profound and real attentional issues can be.
Happily she found neurofeedback as a therapy and, through use of EEG and computer technology, she was able to retrain her brain to a much more alert, focused and organized state. It was really amazing how effective it was.
Now she even writes thank-you notes and can study for hours effectively. She is in her second year of acupuncture school and is learning hundreds of Chinese herbs and loving it. Never could she have accomplished this without the neurofeedback. The whole training series took about 4 months and she’s never regressed.
Carol’s Mom
Comment by Nancy — September 22, 2008 @ 11:04 am
I would like to acknowledge the integral role and contributions of my mother, Fredrica Selss, who volunteered so much of her personal time with CH.A.D.D. (Children and Adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder) of Nassau County (Long Island). Fredrica was an elementary school art teacher in Bay Shore, NY, for more than 30 years and today, is now happily retired in Lake Worth, Fla., with my father, Fredric (yes, I know, ironic, similar names!).
CH.A.D.D., nationally, is the leading non-profit organization serving individuals with AD/HD and their families, with more than 16,000 members in 200 local chapters throughout the country. In 1994, after my younger brother was diagnosed with ADD, my mother began to volunteer for CH.A.D.D. of Nassau County, a chapter organization with approximately 300 member families. It is a group that provides education for the parents and teachers of children with AD/HD, as well as for adults with it.
For almost a decade my mother volunteered tirelessly, and in many capacities, including co-president and vice president. She was also the group’s publicity chairman, which entailed writing and publishing the CH.A.D.D. of Nassau County newsletter. Fredy, as her friends call her, also was a support group leader, and was on the Telephone Squad. And in her “spare time,” my mother also led seminars in her school district for educators to provide a better understanding of the children with learning disabilities and AD/HD in their classrooms.
Today, my mother is enjoying an active retirement, but still keeping busy in her community with various charitable organizations. She is now a dedicated volunteer with Hadassah, which supports the Hadassah Hospital in Israel, including stem cell and cancer research. During the last three years, she has been the donor chairman and organized this year’s annual donor lunch. Fredrica recently joined ORT America and plans to become very involved with this organization and support their efforts to fund educational and vocational initiatives in America, Israel, Latin America and other countries around the world. As an educator, this is an organization she truly believes can “change the world by giving young people the power that comes with knowledge.”
Her work doesn’t stop there! She is also involved with the Women’s Club of Valencia Shores, which raises money for a local battered and abused woman’s center; The Valencia Shores Cancer Research Organization, which raises money to support the Sylvester Cancer Research Center; and the National Council of Jewish Woman, which supports many local community service projects. She has also helped raise money for The Jewish National Fund and Young Judea.
Comment by Jason — September 22, 2008 @ 2:48 pm
[...] ADHD Success Stories [...]
Pingback by Our ADD/ADHD Success Story Winners | Another Daily Dose — October 1, 2008 @ 2:02 pm
I just wrote a blog post about how we’re coping with ADD here: http://wrongshoes.com/?p=548
Comment by wrongshoes — October 3, 2008 @ 5:24 pm