PokeVideoPlayer v0.9-rev1 - licensed under gpl3-or-later
Views : 83,024
Genre: Comedy
Uploaded At Feb 16, 2023 ^^
warning: returnyoutubedislikes may not be accurate, this is just an estiment ehe :3
Rating : 4.774 (412/6,873 LTDR)
94.34% of the users lieked the video!!
5.66% of the users dislieked the video!!
User score: 91.51- Overwhelmingly Positive
RYD date created : 2023-09-04T13:30:01.79996Z
See in json
Top Comments of this video!! :3
Kind of makes me think when they told my mother she had Congestive Heart Failure. She's in her 90s, and when she heard she had heart failure it was scary and upsetting. She assumed if she had this horribly named disease, she was going to die pretty fast. She stopped eating. It took almost two months after she started meds for her to feel better and start eating really well again. She is still going strong. Some things just need new and better names especially when a young person is getting a diagnosis that can become a label. ❤
111 |
🤣❤ Love to you all. I've had ADD growing up. Needed extra time for assignments and sometimes difficulty with immediate memory. I met with teachers after school to help me with progress points in my assignments. I'm also very creative too; I like to sketch, sing, improv, and explore pretty places like nature and seeing animals. One more thing that helped me, was the concept of "chunking"...breaking down things I do into smaller manageable parts. I learned this from the idea "Baby Steps" in the movie "What About Bob". It helped me in school. I also have really good recall of my childhood and remember fun trivia like cartoons from the 80's. God bless you all, and thank you for sharing tips and about your life with ADD too. I love listening to your fun creative music over and over. Agape!
4 |
I was diagnosed at 49 (2019) and with autism too, my son was diagnosed at 2 with PDD NOS and other sensory issues. I knew he had ADHD because my brother was diagnosed at 8 and my son was a lot like him. Then my son was diagnosed adult ADHD and autism at 19.
All my cousins on my mother's side have ADHD and autism and all his (my side of the family) cousins male and female have ADHD and autism as well.
It's just who i am and seeing as I never knew I learned to cope, adapt and live. Sure a lot of masking was involved for social skills and once I was diagnosed, that all went out the window, thankfully a lot of fake people ran not walked out of my life when I was no longer the biddable neurotypical they wanted me to me.
I'm much more interesting with my neurodivergent self in full bloom! The scatterbrain stuff can be annoying but overall I love who I am at 53, quirks and all!
3 |
My kid's ADHD + the gift of extra time homeschooling gives her = she's becoming an incredible artist who is learning animation. Sure, she's not great at math and has terrible handwriting, but she can write incredible stories and her art skills are years ahead of her age. Yeah, she may not move out at 18, or 24, or even later, but she's going to find or create work that fills her passion and be happy in life. So, ADHD can be a good thing.
Plus, she gave me this incredible birthday card she created. I mean, it was hand drawn but looks like a photo. She wrote the sweetest note I think I've ever received from anyone in it. This child is so deep. I'm really glad to have an ADHD kid. The challenges I've experienced are worth it.
|
@carynpinkston1939
1 year ago
My favorite suggestion I've seen for a new name so far is VAST (Variable Attention Stimulus Trait).
247 |