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The
Human Brain The areas of the brain that are
affected by mental
disorders
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E-mail
your letter to the editor | |
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ANDREW
KAUFMAN/CONTACT PRESS IMAGES FOR
TIME |
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Life on
Medication |
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"I Am a
Different Person" |
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By Jessi
Castro |
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Posted Sunday, Oct. 26,
2003 I've had ADHD for 10 years now. I was diagnosed
with it in kindergarten. Truthfully, I don't remember every
detail of my life before ADHD, but there are some things I
can't help remembering. For example, in kindergarten I was
sent to the "time-out chair" about two or three times daily.
The reason? I would say things that would hurt the other kids.
Why did I say these mean things? Because I'd never think about
what I was going to say or the consequences. Another thing
I'll never forget is how antsy and talkative I was. Every day
after lunch, there was a competition to see whose table was
quietest. Of course, I could never stop talking or moving, so
my table was always last.
I have taken two medications to treat my ADHD. From first
through fifth grade, I took Ritalin, which was not very good
for me. Ritalin took away my appetite completely, so I lost
dramatic amounts of weight. My teachers had to inspect my
lunch to see if I ate it! Now I take Adderall. It has worked
for me, but it has taken so long to find the right dosage.
I guess you could say my life changed a good deal after the
treatment, because I had a lot more focus. But to tell you the
truth, I could not see the difference until the seventh grade.
By then, I was a straight-A student because of it. I may be
naturally smart, but I never could have applied myself as much
without it. Nowadays, I know when I need my medicine because
it lets me perform to my full ability.
Recently I've become aware of the side effects of my
medicine, which are a problem. I am a totally different person
on it than off it. This is called emotional lability. While on
the medicine in school, I rarely ask my friends what there is
to do on the weekend. At lunch, I literally sit at the table
without saying a word, and because of that, I have lost a
whole bunch of friends. I drift from table to table, but I
don't have one true group that I belong to. This gets me
depressed at times. But when I am off my medicine, I am this
outgoing, spontaneous, hilarious person. When I go to parties,
I do not take my medicine, and I go absolutely wild. I will
dance the entire night, walk up to anyone and start talking.
People who know me say, "Jessi, you're so different at parties
and outside of school." Truly, they are right. I do not like
suffering from emotional lability, and it sometimes makes me
cry.
It also affects how I am with my family. When I am off my
medication, I am hysterically funny with my parents and a lot
more imaginative in playing with my younger sister and
brother. But I also have a shorter temper, which leads to
conflicts with my sister. We make each other cry. So my
condition and treatment have definitely affected my family,
for good and bad.
Feeling different from other kids has never been an issue
for me. I just see myself as someone who has to have medicine
to concentrate better. I will tell my friends straight off
that I am ADHD; if they don't like that, well, then too bad.
In eighth grade, we were given nicknames ("most likely's,"
actually) and mine was Miss Hyper! It didn't bother me. I
think it showed my classmates are cool with it. My teachers
are very accepting of my condition, but I find it difficult
when a teacher does not know I am allowed extra time on tests.
I used to feel guilty about getting extra time, but now I
accept it because I know I need it.
I'll never know what the future holds for me, but I do
expect to remain on the medication, because I want to. I enjoy
how I can focus and apply myself. Maybe my parents want me to
stay on it as well, but it's not their choice. It is my
choice. And from now on, it will always be my choice.
Jessi Castro, a high school sophomore in Miami, is an
honor student and plays soccer
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