Please share far & wide! #TheGreatAwakening
Plandemic 3: The Great Awakening
— PLANDEMIC (@Plandemic3Movie) June 8, 2023
Join our mission at https://t.co/S5wgH6ydfL
Please share far & wide! #TheGreatAwakening pic.twitter.com/LWpMuXO2ul
Please share far & wide! #TheGreatAwakening
Plandemic 3: The Great Awakening
— PLANDEMIC (@Plandemic3Movie) June 8, 2023
Join our mission at https://t.co/S5wgH6ydfL
Please share far & wide! #TheGreatAwakening pic.twitter.com/LWpMuXO2ul
[please share]
Healthy S.W.A.T.Police Officer Steven Ordonia Suicidal After J and J then Pfizer "Booster" Injuries. Pensacola, Florida, police lieutenant, U.S. Air Force veteran at 62, forced to retire from activities, mostly confined to home, unable to drive a car. SKIP TO 11:47 MIN THIRD HIGHEST SIDE EFFECT PFIZER SHOT IS...GETTING COVID!!!
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The Vaccine Safety Research Foundation (VSRF) reviews the latest news and hosts special guests each Thursday at 7pm EST on the VSRF Weekly Update with Founder Steve Kirsch. Register: https://www.VacSafety.org
The VSRF’s mission is to advance COVID-19 vaccine safety through scientific research, public education, and advocacy, and to support the vaccine injured.
You can support their work through tax-deductible donations:
https://www.vacsafety.org/donate
Or to text-to-donate, text LIBERTY to 53555
Original Odysee Video:
https://odysee.com/@VSRF:d/Support-The-VSRF:5
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Steve Kirsch On Substack
https://stevekirsch.substack.com/
Exactly, not a fucking word 😡
— Forever TRUMP2024 🇺🇸 (@AnnaApp91838450) April 26, 2023
Jan 6th was set up by corrupt
PELOSI/FBI/Ran by FBI Ray Epps
RELEASE THE PRISONERS 🙏
RELEASE THE VIDEO'S 🙌 https://t.co/fJ9ZngohOA pic.twitter.com/AjdauEK4d3
THEY HATED TUCKER!!! pic.twitter.com/UWL2Y4Rj1q
— il Donaldo Trumpo (@PapiTrumpo) April 26, 2023
Here I question Randy Weingarten: not a doctor, not a mother, and not a teacher. Nothing but a political activist.
She destroyed our children's education with her unscientific guidelines to the CDC that forced our kids to stay home. pic.twitter.com/2vzDNvZxok— Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene🇺🇸 (@RepMTG) April 26, 2023
by The Light Program
Sometimes attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and attention deficit disorder (ADD) are used interchangeably in a modern speech to describe an individual that is easily distracted and not always known to finish tasks. And while these are elements of the two, they are far from entailing the entirety of these mental health conditions.
Nor are they the same. While a diagnosis of ADD includes poor working memory, inattention and distractedness, ADHD takes these symptoms one step further with additional tendencies of hyperactivity and impulsivity.
ADHD is actually an umbrella term for a neurological and psychological disorder that impacts one’s attention span and causes hyperactivity and impulsivity. There is no clear answer for what causes ADHD, but research shows that ADHD does have a genetic component, as children born to parents with ADHD are 50 percent more susceptible to developing the disorder themselves.
There are different types of ADHD depending on which tendencies the individual shows, including:
It is more common for children (anywhere between the ages of 3 and 12) to display signs of ADHD, as they have yet to learn methods of self-control and awareness in regards to ADHD, but untreated ADHD can continue through teenage years into adulthood. Symptoms may range anywhere from mild to moderate to severe at any stage in life.
Depending on the diagnosis of the type of ADHD, certain symptoms may be more present than others. Additionally, symptoms of ADHD in teens will manifest differently than in very young children or older adults. Generally speaking, though, common symptoms include:
Those with hyperactivity/impulsivity are more likely to show more activity-based symptoms (like interrupting or moving constantly), whereas symptoms like forgetfulness might be more present in someone who struggles with inattention.
While the signs of ADHD might become apparent to a child or teen’s parents, it’s important to seek out a formal diagnosis of ADHD from a mental health professional who can then guide you toward the proper treatment methods for managing ADHD in a way that best benefits your children, or even yourself.
Those who struggle with ADHD have a hard time managing their sense of time, including hindsight and thinking toward the future, which is why they may fail to consider the consequences of their actions or learn from past behaviors. A lack of sense of time also impedes their ability to plan.
Oftentimes, these individuals are stereotyped as unmotivated or careless, but this is far from the truth. Their brains are just wired differently. Looking at ADHD not just as an attention disorder, but one of executive functioning and self-regulation can allow us to better and more deeply understand their struggles and help us set them up for success.
When treatment is sought for ADHD, your therapist is likely to offer personalized treatment plans that include strategies for effectively coping with ADHD, such as:
Additionally, take time to reflect for yourself or your child on the ways in which you can best set yourself/them up for success. Reflect on the environment where productivity is highest and foster it.
Sometimes it may feel like overcoming ADHD on your own is not feasible, no matter what strategies and routines you put into place. It may be beneficial to consider treating ADHD with the help of a therapist who not only knows how to diagnose ADHD but can guide you towards the proper skills and coping mechanisms known to effectively treat ADHD.