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Living With ADD: A Workbook for Adults With Attention Deficit Disorder

Living With ADD: A Workbook for Adults With Attention Deficit Disorder

List Price: $18.95
Your Price: $12.89
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Catch-22
Review: 1. I can't finish the projects I start because I have ADD.
2. I realize I can't go on like this.
3. I make reading this book and finishing the exercises my new project.
4. goto 1.

Don't waste your money see a doctor.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Catch-22
Review: 1. I can't finish the projects I start because I have ADD.
2. I realize I can't go on like this.
3. I make reading this book and finishing the exercises my new project.
4. goto 1.

Don't waste your money see a doctor.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good Resource
Review: A MD suggested that I might have adult ADD. I complained of having some of the symptoms - I become bored easily, have a hard time with repetitive tasks, like to start things more than finish them. I had never considered ADD before, and thought it would help to read more about it.

So, 160 pages later, I now know I don't have have ADD. This alone was worth the read. As a bonus, the workbook had exercises that addressed the behaviors I told the doctor about. I particularly like a "weekly plan" worksheet that breaks out an entire week into hour increments - from 7:00 am through 10:00 pm. The exercise is to fill this out once a week, including transportation times and preparation and clean-up times for everything that needs to get done that week. Here I learned I underestimated the amount of time things took, so I ran out of time during the preparation or the clean up. Also, I did not factor in recreational time, so would chisel these out of times I was doing things I didn't like. Not that I had ADD. Ah. I also liked a mood moniter chart they provided, that tracks to see if there is a pattern between a mood, the time of day, the day of the week, the person you are with, and/or the task you are performing. This one is easier than I just made it sound, and has been really enlightening.

In a nutshell, if you think you have some of the symptoms of ADD, you will be better informed and will have received practical advice by the end of the workbook. The writing is good and moves along smoothly.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: sloppy and vague
Review: After I read Driven to Distraction, I was recommended this book. But the writing is very sloppy, including lots of little mistakes (repeated questions etc), bad logic, and incredibly broad feel good brush strokes with which you'd have a tough time finding someone who is not ADD. Statistics are thrown around casually from different sources but with no footnotes or endnotes defining how those statistics were derived.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Practical Help for ADD-ults and Others
Review: I count myself lucky for having stumbled across this helpful title a couple of months ago. This highly readable book can benefit anyone who has ever struggled with his or her own behavior patterns --and who hasn't? Many of the problems encountered by people with ADD are non-specific and afflict a large percentage of "non-ADD" people as well, even if to a lesser degree. For this reason, "Living with ADD" deserves a closer look from a wider audience. Such headings as "Conquering the Internal Critic" --"Handling Criticism from Others" --"Ten Fallacies of Thinking" including catastrophizing, personalizing, and polarized thinking address most of us whether or not we fit into the diagnostic boundaries of ADD. The eminently practical advice given by the authors is offered in short paragraphs that even most ADD readers will find manageable; more imporantly yet, the advice is do-able!
Since ADD (and Life) are not monolithic conditions, you may be able to skip an occasional exercise that does not apply to you, but rest assured: the moment you turn the page, the authors will be looking you straight in the eye again. Clearly Roberts and Jansen know whereof they speak. Their PHDs notwithstanding, they have succeeded in communicating their insights without getting tangled in academic jargon. I thank them.

Rating: 0 stars
Summary: Understanding ADD and the Adult
Review: Interactive exercises help readers deal with problems arising from ADD. Includes strategies for handling common problems and ways to compensate

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great for Self discovery
Review: This is an excellent workbook for ADDers.
It helps you to analyze your behaviors, thoughts, and feelings in different situations; understand why your behaving/feeling the way you do; how to cultivate change; and why the change is important and beneficial to you.
I can't express enough my delight in this book, 12 chapters: 3 informative and 9 subjects of potential challenge in an ADDer's day to day life. Especially for recently diagnosed adult college students such as myself.
A must read!!!


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