Posts Tagged: attention deficit disorder

“My First Protest?”

So, a couple of days ago, I wrote about my exceedingly timid attempt at standing with those who actively oppose racism. I mentioned various fears—close proximity to others with the danger of contracting covid-19, violence, and such.

The thing that I actually should  have feared, I didn’t even consider: my attention deficit disorder.

Well, I’m not being entirely fair to myself. I did factor in my a.d.d. somewhat. I had initially planned to go to one of the protests in Cincinnati. It was at 4:00 p.m. However, knowing my proclivity for getting times, locations, and everything else scrambled, I checked again. Good thing! That was the time and place for the protest a week earlier! I felt that I had dodged a bullet, even if it was a rubber one.

So, knowing my tendency to get lost and be late, I left about forty-five minutes earlier than I needed to. I needed to allow for getting lost and finding a parking space. The parking space was no problem, but I did miss my exit, which likely cost me ten minutes. Still, I arrived half-an-hour earlier than the start time for the protest, 2:00 p.m.

Or so I thought. There were only a few people at the place where the protestors were supposed to assemble, and those few people said they were late. The protest march had started at 1:00. “No, I’m pretty sure the time was 2:00 p.m.,” I said. I checked my smart phone again, and sure enough, the time was 2:00 p.m. However, my heart sank into my tennis shoes when I realized that 2:00 p.m. was the concluding time of the protest. I wasn’t half-an-hour early. I was an-hour-and-a-half late!

I had a tremendous struggle with my inner voices at this point. They were wanting to call me some very unflattering names that involve words that I don’t normally use. I don’t think I entirely silenced those voices, but I did the best I could.

I found out from some young people at Tower Park which way the protestors had marched (toward the police station). I began walking in that direction. Perhaps I would at least encounter some of the protestors walking back to their cars at the starting location.

But even with my smart phone, I got lost. Apparently Mademoiselle Google thought I wanted to go to the Cincinnati Police headquarters, rather than the Fort Thomas police station. When I realized the error of my ways, it was already a little past 2:00. I retraced my steps to my car. The condemning voices in my head got louder. In order to shut them up, I tried to think somewhat logically. Well, I didn’t do a good job with this protest at all. What could I do? So, I made a mental list.

  • I could give myself a little credit for having the courage to attempt this.
  • There will be other protests. I could plan to attend one of them. Hopefully, I’ll get the time right next time.
  • I am a reader and a thinker. Why not commit myself to reading books and articles (and listening to podcasts) that will help me to learn more about race relations in America?
  • I am a writer. I can make some fumbling attempts at helping to change things for the better by my writing.
  • What institutions that help improve attitudes toward and treatment of minorities might I help support financially?

As I walked along, I began to feel a little better about my ineffective debut as a protestor. I did encounter some folks coming back from protesting at the police station. I told them of my own ineptitude, and asked them how it went. “It was good!” they replied. “There were probably two-hundred-and-fifty people there, and it was peaceful.”

So, my first attempt at protesting was anything but dramatic. But most beginnings are pretty pathetic. Mine was, perhaps, more pathetic than is common. Maybe the important thing for me to remember is that it was a beginning. Now, I need to continue.

“Interrupted by God”

He has the right to interrupt your life. He is Lord. When you accepted Him as Lord, you gave Him the right to help Himself to your life anytime He wants.” (Henry Blackaby)

The above us a quote in a fine little book that our church is using for a Bible study. That quote was a burning bush for me. “I must turn aside and see why this saying is blazing, but not consumed,” I said to myself.

But here is the problem: I don’t like being interrupted. Oh, I am perfectly willing to interrupt myself. I do it all the time, blaming it on attention deficit disorder. But to allow someone else to interrupt?? No, I can’t have that!

And yet, when I stop to think about it, being interrupted by God could be a very good thing. God might be interrupting something really stupid and wrong that I was about to say or do. Or God might be interrupting something not quite so good, in order to direct me to something that is better.

In any case, God is God and I am not. I forget this quite often. Why? Because I want to forget, that’s why!

Classic Christian theology holds that God interrupted His own self, in order to come on a rescue mission to this planet. Jesus was God’s interruption of God’s own self. The cross was the most radical aspect of this interruption, besides the resurrection.

If God could interrupt himself, perhaps I could be a little more understanding of his interruptions of me.

Help yourself to me, Lord!

“Learning to Heel”

“And this is love: that we walk in obedience to his commands. As you have heard from the beginning, his command is that you walk in love” (2 John 6).

I am having a terribly difficult time learning to heel! I should explain.

My frustration with our little dog Laylah has caused me to examine myself. When we go for walks, as we often do these days, Laylah has a tendency to get out in front of me, even when I keep her on a short leash. This would not be a problem, except for the fact that Ms. Laylah has inherited a terrible weakness from her male adopted pet parent: She has attention deficit disorder.  This malady is also known as, “Squirrel! Syndrome.” If my furry little girl sees a squirrel or a bird, or another dog, or blowing leaf or piece of paper, she is off to the races. And she is very fast.

If she cuts to the right side, she threatens to break her own neck, or at least give herself a sore neck. If she cuts to the left side, across my direction of locomotion, she threatens to break my neck, by causing me to have a bad fall. So, teaching her to heel is kind of important, for both her sake and mine.

So, this morning I asked myself why it is so difficult for her to learn to heel. She’s a smart little thing, like my wife, her adopted mamma. The problem is that Laylah is only smart when she decides to be. “Why can’t you learn this?” I said to Laylah, rather reproachfully this morning. She looked at me with fearful humility, and, for two or three seconds, she stayed back. However, before I could say, “Thanks for letting me lead,” she wasn’t—letting me lead, that is.

So, I tried to think like a canine. I don’t know if I succeeded, or that God spoke though me to Laylah. But I do know that God spoke through Laylah to me.

For one thing, Laylah just gets distracted. I’m not so sure that ADD is the proper name for the disorder.  Perhaps it should be called Attention Distraction Disorder. ADD people and dogs don’t have a deficit of attention. We just find ourselves distracted from where we need to direct our attention. And let’s face it. Focusing on obedience isn’t the easiest thing to do, no matter what species we are.

Maybe Laylah’s priorities get messed up. The immediate gratification of chasing a squirrel or a blowing leaf seems so much more important than whatever this hulking giant on the end of her leash wants her to do. Of course, dogs do not have a corner on the immediate gratification market.

But the basic problem is that Laylah wants to be the alpha dog. She may only weigh 7 ½ pounds, but that doesn’t keep her from wanting to be the big dog.

Now, I don’t think that I need to spend a lot of time unpacking these lessons for you and me. We speak of following God or Jesus. That is certainly an appropriate way of speaking. However, sometimes we get distracted, and forget who is on the other end of the leash.

And then there’s the problem of immediate gratification. In fact, I think it is so common that we should turn this expression into a blend word—“immediafication”!

However, the most serious problem is our desire to be the ALPHA DOG. The all caps are not an accident. This is a problem because, no matter what fine people we may be, we all make lousy gods. When we don’t follow God/Jesus, when we try to run ahead, we get ourselves into a mess in a hurry. Unfortunately (or is it so unfortunate, really?), God moves very slowly, and we are very quick. In fact, we are entirely too quick.

Learning to heel is not easy, but it is tremendously important. Perhaps I owe Laylah an apology. I’m sure that I need to ask God to forgive me. And no doubt I need to set a better example for my dog and for my two-legged friends as well.

“Intention Deficit Disorder”

” In the second place, many people are deterred from seriously attempting Christian chastity because they think (before trying) that it is impossible. But when a thing has to be attempted, one must never think about possibility or impossibility. Faced with an optional question in an examination paper, one considers whether one can do it or not: faced with a compulsory question, one must do the best one can. You may get some marks for a very imperfect answer: you will certainly get none for leaving the question alone. Not only in examinations but in war, in mountain climbing, in learning to skate, or swim, or ride a bicycle, even in fastening a stiff collar with cold fingers, people quite often do what seemed impossible before they did it. It is wonderful what you can do when you have to.” (C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity. Lewis is especially discussing the determination to live a sexually pure life, but his words may be applied to many other human endeavors as well.)

I have been diagnosed as having Attention Deficit Disorder.  I wonder if I also have Intention Deficit Disorder.

You’ve never heard of Intention Deficit Disorder, you say?  Me too neither.

I am reading a very old book by William Law, A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy Life.  He says many good, helpful things.  I suspect that the book could be boiled down to one succinct statement: Intend to honor God in all areas of your life, and you will.

He makes an important point.  Intention does matter.  What we truly, deeply, consistently intend to do, we most likely will do.

On the other hand, there is a difference between intention, and I-was-aiming-to-ism.  There is an expression which is especially common in the hills where I grew up: “I was aimin’ to.”

“I was aimin’ to do this,” and “I was aimin’ to do that,” and so on.  The expression is generally followed by something that we did not, in fact, do.  Years ago, a friend of mine got tired of her husband saying that he had aimed to do something.  She said, “When are you going to pull the trigger?!”  They are divorced now. Apparently, he never pulled the trigger.

Have I pulled the trigger when it comes to loving and serving God?  The question answers itself.  No, I take William Law’s point about the great importance of intention, but I don’t do anything with Law’s point.  Who will save me from this deficit of intentionality?!?

A Catholic friend of mine said to me, many years ago, “Sometimes I think you Protestants make too much of intentionality.  There are times when you have to simply do things.  And they work because you do them.”

Yes!  In my twelve-step meetings, we always conclude with the words, “Keep coming back.  It works if you work it, and give a lot of love.”  True that!

So, how do I do something about my tendency to intend, coupled with my tendency to do nothing?  This morning before Vigils, as I was thinking about what Law wrote, and about my Intention Deficit Disorder, I was having half-a-cup of coffee in the dining room.  I noticed a verse of Scripture on the table in front of me.  It was 1 John 4:10: “In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.”

The following verses go on to speak of our need to love one another, and that is very important.  But for the moment, I’m going to cling to verse 10. The fact is that I don’t always (often?) have a pure intention to love and serve God.  But love is, first and foremost, about God’s love for me and for us.  It is not about my love or our love first.  We can only risk loving (and love is a risk), when we know that we are already loved.  Love was God’s intention.  And God has pulled the trigger.

“There’s a Lion on the Loose!”

I was diagnosed with attention deficit disorder at the young age of fifty-two.  My wife’s response was, “This explains a lot!”

That may be true.  A.D.D. is a real thing and a real explanation.  However, as with anything else, A.D.D. can be used as an excuse.   When anything—even something real—is used as an excuse, it becomes unreal and evil.

So, recognizing that I am more prone than the average bear to have difficulty paying attention does not give me a free pass.  Quite the contrary!  It means that I need to spend more emotional energy seeking to focus on what I need/deeply want to do.

The same thing may be said about me that was said by one wise commentator about the lazy person and the lion in Proverbs 22:13.  “The sluggard says, ‘There is a lion outside; I will be killed in the streets!’”  Christine Roy Yoder comments on this verse,

No excuse is too absurd for the lazy.  One pictures the sluggard curled up inside (e.g., 19:15, 24; 26:14-15) and pointing outside, stammering about an imaginary lion wandering the streets (cf. 26:13).   . . .  [T]he verb räcaH  (“to kill”) is typically used for a homicide that particularly offends the community, such as the killing of an innocent citizen . . . .  The sluggard’s unprecedented use of the verb to describe an animal attack and, implicitly, to characterize himself as innocent lends further ridiculousness to the claim.  (Christine Roy Yoder, Proverbs, Abingdon Old Testament Commentaries (Nashville: Abingdon, 2009), 226.)

Whether I am struggling with A.D.D. or laziness (and I do struggle with both), or with anything else, the underlying principle is the same: No excuses allowed! Perhaps the A.D.D. and laziness are not the most serious problem anyway.  Perhaps it’s the excuses that are fatal.  The excuses are the lion, and they will devour my dreams, my time, my very life.

But how can I recognized an excuse, you ask?  One simple rule of thumb is this: If I am having to spend very much time explaining why something is right, either to myself or to someone else, it isn’t an explanation.  It’s an excuse.

So, I think I’ll declare a new holiday: No Excuse Day.  It is a floating holiday, and will be observed only on days that begin with the letter “T”: Tuesdays, Thursdays, Tomorrow, and Today.

“ON THE MAKING OF LISTS”

I like to make lists.

Of course, as with everything else that I enjoy, I tend to overdo it at times.  Sometimes, my lists become a disease, multiplying like a fast-moving virus.  I import the expectations of others, in addition to my own excessive self-demands.

However, the fact that a thing can become demonic doesn’t mean that it wasn’t once angelic.  The Bible seems to indicate that the demons are actually fallen angels.  Whether or not demons can ever be rehabilitated, I don’t know.  But I think that lists can be.

So, what do lists do for me?

Well, for one thing, they keep my attention-deficit-mind a little more focused.  I don’t want to oversell this, but lists do help me—provided, of course, that I can remember where I put the list and remember to look at it every once in a while.

Also, there is a satisfaction that comes from checking off, one-by-one, the items on my lists.  It is a pretty cheap form of entertainment, but it entertains me nevertheless.  Years ago, I heard someone speak of “the satisfaction of a bill marked PAID.”  There is a similar satisfaction that is the fruit of an item on the list that is checked off.

Of course, a TO-DO list is no substitute for having worthwhile goals in the first place.  And these goals must themselves flow from a commitment to good, solid values that not only serve me well, but also serve other people, our planet, and God.  A list populated with trivia is still trivial, even if I check it all off.

However, it is precisely at the point of my values and goals that I find the greatest benefit to lists.  Here is how this works for me: Lists often make me ask difficult questions that I don’t really want to ask.  Lists invite me to ask such questions as  these:

  • Do the items on this list reflect my best values and goals?
  • Does doing this item and crossing it off my list make me a better person?
  • Do the things on this list have a shot at helping to make other people better?
  • Does what I’m doing benefit the planet?
  • Does this list and the items on it make God look as good as God is?
  • If the answer to any of the above questions is “No” or “I don’t know,” why am I doing this stuff?

And then, I can ask two more questions:

  • What can I take off the list to make room for the things that do matter?
  • What do I need to add to the list?

I am comforted a bit in my list-making by the fact that God apparently likes lists as well.  There are of course, various lists in the Bible: lists of sacrifices, lists of holy days, and so on.  One of the most famous lists is the Ten Commandments.  It is always good to remind myself that I must not murder anyone today.  (I think that, by extension, this might include not assassinating anyone’s reputation.)

The most famous list of the New Testament actually quotes and puts together two commandments from the Old Testament.  Jesus was asked what was the greatest commandment.  Jesus did not answer with one commandment.  Instead, he made a list of two: Love God and love your neighbor as yourself.  Perhaps my individual lists would be improved if I remembered this two-item list.

“On Making Oatmeal and a Mess”

So, I put oatmeal on the stove this morning.  However, I realized that I had a little time before it cooked, so I went out to get the trash cans and recycling bin, and set them beside the garage.

Then I walked back in the house, and there was my server’s apron on the counter right beside the door.  “Oh, I should go ahead and put this in my car,” I said to myself.

While I was in the garage, I decided to put my bike in the trunk, and . . . well, you can see where this is going, can’t you?

By the time I remembered the oatmeal, it was nice and creamy—or, at least, it was creamy on top.  On the bottom of the saucepan was a substance that was roughly the color and consistency of tartar on teeth that have not been cleaned for five years.

Attention Deficit Disorder is such an interesting disease!  Sometimes, I think it should be called A.E.D: “Attention Excess Disorder.”  I try to pay attention to too much.

Some recent studies have suggested that “multitasking” is not really possible.  I know it isn’t possible for me.  I try to pack too much living into life, and end up with a saucepan that is not easy to clean.

I am a big fan of M*A*S*H reruns.  I can’t say that I like Charles Emerson Winchester III (who is as pompous as his name suggests), but I do think he occasionally makes a good point.  Early in his tenure at the 4077, Winchester said, “I do one thing, I do it very well, and then I move on.”

The Apostle Paul, a person who accomplished a lot, said something similar about his desire to know Christ.  “Brethren, I do not regard myself as having laid hold of it yet; but one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and reaching forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:13-14).

When you’re running a race, you don’t have more than one goal.  What race are you running?  Don’t try to do too many other things and let your oatmeal burn!

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