I appreciate you keeping content flowing in this community! That said, this study is from 2012, so the conclusions may be somewhat out of date.
I realize that I was complaining without offering anything useful. Here is a more recent article that addresses a similar topic:
This is pretty long. I’m definitely gonna come back to it very soon though
No I won’t. I’ll mean to. But I won’t.
As someone with adhd reading this at 4 in the morning because he can’t go back to sleep, i find this information personally assaulting
I might feel attacked, but it’s not 4am yet. Been up for >20hrs, so there’s that, though. 😵💫
Friendly PSA to try raising the head of your bed if you have any kind of sleep issues. Literally just stick a couch cushion or some old clothes under the head of the mattress to raise it a little. It costs nothing to try
If you have mild sleep apnea or acid reflux this can work wonders for you
Where did you learn about this?
That wouldn’t surprise me. I have always been a night owl and maybe slightly non-24. I can get up early, but a single late night will destroy my schedule as my body reverts to that and takes days or weeks to recover.
So, there’s hope? 😅
Plural of anecdote isn’t anecdata, but I have both ADHD & impaired sleep.
Is this correlation and causation tho?
Like, a lot of people with ADHD take stimulant medication.
Why is it so hard to get into peoples heads that one of the most common symptoms of ADHD is abnormal reaction to stimulants?
I remember when I used to pull all-nighters, I came to think of caffeine as a trap. If I was on 18+hrs of no sleep, 1 energy drink and I’d be passe out in 10 minutes.
The thing that convinced me my ADHD diagnosis was correct was taking my prescription stimulant and then taking a nap. See also coffee: I’ve found no correlation between my last cup of the day and when I get to sleep. I’m also incapable of drinking enough coffee to make me jittery, not even when my office had an all-you-can-drink Keurig stand.
A common misnomer about adhd brains is that they’re wired, but really they’re actually super tired brains, trying desperately to wake themselves up by flooding adrenalin and cortisol in place of desperately and dangerously low dopamine, (which is actually the petrol that gets you around, not just a carrot at the end of the ride). So when a super tired brain that’s overly flooded with adrenalin, gets enough stimulus to produce enough dopamine, it let’s go of the adrenaline, mops it all up and can finally rest. Think of those nights you tried to stay awake with teenage friends and caffeinated yourself silly and everyone got all loud and weird. That, but all the time.
“What do you mean you just were awake for 22 hours and haven’t had Ballz, Red Bull or a fucking coffee?”
Because my brain is already running a marathon lol
Lol, I just left another comment saying how when I pulled all-nighters back in school, energy drinks in particular were a trap that would knock me the fuck out if I’d had no sleep.
Plural of anecdote isn’t anecdata
I love this. Thank you.
You shouldn’t love this. It is a statement informed by a misunderstanding of epistemology and the philosophy of science.
Can you explain what you mean? Because I think we’re reading a very different meaning into it.
I read it as clever wordplay to acknowledge that one’s anecdote is not the same as data (by putting “data” in place of “dote” in ‘anecdote’ due to the similar sound). Considering that “argument from anecdote” is literally considered a type of fallacy, highlighting that one’s own experience is not scientifically rigorous enough to be considered data seems to be in alignment with general thinking on the matter.
Then again I’ve just learned that in 2020 the OED actually published “anecdata” literally as a facetious/disparaging plural of “anecdote,” so perhaps that’s why you take issue with the quote?