1. Fish oil (EPA should be higher than DHA) [1][3][4] 2. Zinc[1] 3. Lithium (has severe side effects, but seems to be effective)[1] 4. Meditation/Mindfulness & Yoga[2]
References: [1] https://www.webmd.com/vitamins/condition-1021/attention+deficit-hyperactivity+disorder+(adhd) [2] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18025249/ [3] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4321799/ [4] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4175558/
Disclaimer: use your own brain first! Or if you can, listen to your therapist. Again, this is aimed for people who have no access to professional help. I am not an expert in scientific literature.
As someone who was finally diagnosed by two different neuropsychs (involved days of testing) at 22 it's something I'll regret the rest of my life. Basically, the fact that my parents just thought ADD was a "fake disorder" and struggled through a majority of high school / college.
Frankly, I've also found significant benefits micro-dosing a liquid psilocybin mushroom extract a few days a week.
Please talk to a psych if you think you might have ADHD!
Okay, to summarize, here are the list of things that might help when you are unable to get medicated or therapy:
1. Supplements: Omega-3, Zinc, Lithium (has severe side effects, but it works) 2. Mindfulness: Meditation/Yoga 3. Routines (according to HN answers)
Here is the list of things that I personally (!) think that might help:
4. Digital organization: Johnny File System, PARA Method
Here is the list of things I am personally (!) unsure about:
5. Offline organization/planning: Bullet Journaling 6. General organization: minimalism? Decluttering?
The list of things that need also attention:
7. Social skills & interpreting social cues correctly 8. Interpersonal skills & soft skills (manners?) 9. Effective "crutches" for things like impulsivity
Some more ideas that might help or not - these are rather experimental:
10. Fasting (for mood improvement?): https://www.hal.inserm.fr/file/index/docid/789122/filename/F...
And remember: use your own brain first don't trust anyone so easily! :) (Except your therapist/doctor, if you have access to one.)
Final note: we need a Scott Meyers type of book for "Effective ADHD".
What works: - Enough sleep + naps - Sport - Walking - White noise to cancel out distractions - Logging almost everything which happens during a work day in a work journal - Having checklists/templates - Setup work days - Setup free days - Recurring todos for day of week - Coherent breathing works better for me than meditation
I use the insight timer app which has nice analytics and you can see everyone around the world and your city meditating with you, which is a nice social feature.