ADD & Loving It?! (Full PBS Documentary)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 янв 2022
  • Become a Patreon supporter and receive a commercial free copy of this video! www.patreon.com/RickGreenPatreon
    ADD & Loving It?! answers all your questions: What's the difference between ADHD and ADD? Is ADHD a real diagnosis? Can adults be diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder? What are the symptoms of ADHD? Do I have ADHD? Is there an ADHD test I can take? Do I have to take medication for ADHD?
    ADD & Loving It?! is widely considered the best program about ADHD and ADD ever made. A ground-breaking blend of humor, hope, and hard science that busts the myths and controversy disorder around Adult Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, this video has won accolades and gratitude from millions of viewers, transforming lives around the world.
    Join comedian Patrick McKenna (The Red Green Show, Traders) as he seeks a diagnosis for adult ADHD and discovers the facts from an impressive array of ADHD experts, some of whom have ADHD themselves.
    Along the way, Patrick reveals how his life as a husband and father are affected by ADHD, sharing candid stories as he and his wife Janis pursue his diagnosis.
    Co-starring and directed by fellow comedian Rick Green, (Bill on The Red Green Show) this program has liberated millions of people from shame, guilt, fear, and frustration. As one fan wrote, "Everything I thought I knew about ADHD was wrong! Thank you!"
    Funny, moving, and transformative, this fascinating documentary will hold you spellbound. Yes, even if you have ADHD! If you watch only one video about ADHD, this is the one!
    Want more? Support Rick Green via Patreon as he continues to make more videos / rickgreenpatreon You get access to exclusive previews, ad-free content, webinars, and chat rooms with an amazing community of like-minded folks.
    See also - rickwantstoknow.com/
    Copyright: Big Brain Productions Inc.
    Chapters:
    00:54 Attention Deficit Disorder, ADHD and ADD
    01:44 It's not all bad news
    03:20 Myths and misinformation
    04:52 Be careful who you tell
    05:33 Positive attributes
    06:54 What is ADHD / ADD?
    08:58 Genes involved
    09:20 How many people have ADHD / ADD?
    09:49 ADHD / ADD and Learning Disorders
    10:04 Busting Myths
    10:53 Is there one clear symptom?
    11:49 Why is a diagnosis important?
    13:20 Tests for ADHD / ADD
    13:40 What to look for
    15:16 DSM criteria for ADHD
    16:10 Common adult ADHD traits
    22:09 Diagnosing adult ADHD
    25:29 Does everyone have ADHD?
    26:03 Four aspects of focus
    28:36 What is it like to have ADHD?
    29:39 Why do people with ADHD like chaos?
    31:50 Do we behave this way on purpose?
    32:44 Is adult ADHD hard to spot?
    35:21 Self esteem and it's importance
    37:20 What happens after I've been diagnosed?
    39:02 Diagnosed. Now what?
    39:23 Five keys to success
    48:08 Medication
    54:31 Summary
    56:27 closing credits

Комментарии • 230

  • @kirara2516
    @kirara2516 2 года назад +70

    As someone who tries to live with ADHD, it can be both a blessing and a struggle. It's like a twin. It's got your back when you need it, but it annoys the crap out of you when you don't

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +13

      So true. One powerful phrase that still resonates with me every day is that it is 'situational.'

    • @lindalangeheine5787
      @lindalangeheine5787 7 дней назад

      @@rickgreen4131 I laughed so much! What great humor! Being fun and talking about everything under the sun in 2 minutes sounds about like my son and me. In Germany, they call it "von Hölzchen auf Stöckchen". Our conversations remind me of the Flipper pinball games.😵‍💫

  • @StevenKurtzKurtzPsychology
    @StevenKurtzKurtzPsychology 2 года назад +101

    What a treat it was for me to work with Rick and to participate as a professional in this documentary. It has stood the test of time because it is so spot on.

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +6

      Thanks for the kind words, Steven. You were the first interview we did and it was so interesting. We could have talked for days!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 Год назад +3

      Thanks Steven, it was wonderful to talk to you. You were one of the first experts we interviewed, along with Lenard Adler, and when you said that what you learned to do in medical school to treat ADHD, you would now consider malpractice, Ava and I both thought, "Okay, that goes in near the top!"

    • @billdickerson2228
      @billdickerson2228 Год назад +7

      Steven - I hope you actually see this. I have been in trouble and had trouble my whole life. In grade school it was so bad a psychologist was called in (this was the latter 1960s) he said it was because I was bored, my extreme IQ and all, I'd be impatient with those who couldn't keep up and so on. (my sons and my grandson live with it as well). I knew my mother was "different" Table covered with notes. We both talk 100 miles an hour non-stop. I was having trouble at work. My work was second to none and I solved problems few could solve - it was my "getting along". I was at the end of my rope. Then during IPTV Festival, I believe it was, I was flipped stations, bored as always, looking for something........ and I saw two of my favorite people from the Red Green show and they were being semi-serious. I came into the show a few minutes late and Patrick was with his wife, going through this list. And my jaw dropped - are they talking about Patrick, or ME? Good grief! That's me they are talking about! I sat down and finished the show. That was it - now I understood. Family doctor said no way, he'd KNOW if I was ADD/ADHD. I pleaded with him - just test me, please. He gave me the standard test on paper and left. He returned to "score" it and as he went down my responses I could hear him mumble words I won't repeat here. He sent me to the "behaviousal clinic" where after some deeper testing, I went for results and the ARNP turned to me and said "I have NO doubt you have ADHD". She asked if I wanted to know more. Heck yet. So off to a neuro-psychologist who gave me a battery of tests that should take "about 45 minutes".- an hour later, we were wrapping up. I went back for his diagnosis. SEVERE ADHD, social anxiety (he said likely caused when I was a kid dealing with this and bullying and so on), OCD, superior in math, science, puzzle solving and pattern recognition. The doc was thorough as heck.
      So my son sees me as Sheldon Cooper - and sent me a Flash t-shirt like Sheldon wore in BBT. He's got some parts of it (and depression) but has succeeded well at work (his high IQ helps there, the bosses love his ideas) and my grandson is in advanced classes, is a lightening bolt and talks 100 miles an hour.
      This show opened my eyes and led me to a whole new world - and and an understanding of myself, my kids, and my mother and grandfather. (also looking back - ADHD and depression)
      I can't thank you and Rick and Patrick enough. There's just no way to express it.
      Rats, looks like someone with ADHD wrote that!

    • @bricemiller2644
      @bricemiller2644 Год назад +1

      ​@@rickgreen4131 I was diagnosed in the 3rd grade was put on medication for a short amount of time and haven't been on meds for it in years

    • @larrybrown1627
      @larrybrown1627 7 месяцев назад

      Best part is interview that starts at 3:30 and as a fellow twice exceptional ADHD have an offer to help. At 3:48 psychiatrist says What I learned to do in graduate school to treat ADHD I would now consider malpractice. The CC word is wrong, it says "create ADHD". In terms of typing errors this one ranks up with with the US just dropped A bomb on Hiroshima, instead of Atomic, to anybody who is paying attention. Also way above my paygrade, but getting this released, or remade, on American TV would do wonders for ALL ADHD beneficiaries, and their misunderstood friends too. Comedian Larry Brown is not nearly as good as Rick Green.

  • @leet3298
    @leet3298 2 года назад +23

    I saw this documentary about 14 years ago, when I was 28, sitting in a hotel room alone, working my remote job that I was struggling to keep up with. Nearly every point and symptom applied to me and I felt like the show was talking directly to me. It ended up changing my life. I got diagnosed, medicated, and on the path to better understanding how my brain works. Thank you for posting this, I will be sharing it with people I think it would help.

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 Год назад +8

      That's why we posted it. Heck, that's why we made the documentary and why the network gave us the funding to do a proper job of it. And I suppose it's why so many experts were willing to talk to us.

    • @debbiedebbie9473
      @debbiedebbie9473 3 месяца назад +1

      Which medicine helped you ?

  • @gobbon
    @gobbon 2 года назад +60

    The world needs more Rick Green; someone who can put a human touch on tough subjects. He makes them accessible, less threatening and in the process, increases empathy to those dealing with them.

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +3

      Thank you. I think it's Patrick and Janis who bring the humanity to this. She's funnier than either of us! Two really amazing human beings.

    • @CoachAllen76x
      @CoachAllen76x 2 года назад +3

      Agreed! And it is so comprehensive, structured... and complete that I m taking notes all the way.

    • @To-mos
      @To-mos 2 года назад +2

      @@rickgreen4131 Keep your stick on the ice. :)

    • @NarniaHarvey
      @NarniaHarvey 2 года назад

      Thank you Rick for reminding me of the importance of laughing at myself, if we don't laugh, we cry. The ability to laugh at our selves makes the hard times easier to bare.

    • @billdickerson2228
      @billdickerson2228 Год назад +1

      For all I know, they may have saved me - for sure my career/job.

  • @Sugar3Glider
    @Sugar3Glider Год назад +12

    I described myself as "The cat that looks in every box, but doesn't sit in any one for long."

  • @MamguSian
    @MamguSian 2 года назад +26

    So glad this is now on RUclips where everybody can see it and get a better understanding of ADHD.

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +5

      Me too! It's why we made the program, to change lives and bust all the myths.

    • @DX-d
      @DX-d 8 месяцев назад

      @@rickgreen4131and promote medication for ADHD and undermine its side effects and make money off of that.

  • @candicemurray5830
    @candicemurray5830 2 года назад +42

    A "must see" video for anyone affected by adult ADHD. So glad it is now available for everyone to watch!!

  • @LedgerAndLace
    @LedgerAndLace 2 года назад +34

    That's the fastest 57 minute documentary I think I've ever seen! You're one of the only channels I don't have to speed up to at least 1.5 and sit with my finger on the FF button. I know so many people who can relate to having ADD or living with someone who has it. You've busted myths and destigmatized it, all while being hilariously entertaining. THANK YOU, Rick!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +8

      You are welcome! I'm impatient. When I'm teaching comedy writing I talk about editing, trimming, tightening... "If you can say the same joke in half the words, people will think you're twice as funny!"

    • @XXXkazeXXX
      @XXXkazeXXX 2 года назад +4

      Wait! Was it really almost an hour long? I could’ve sworn it was more like 20 minutes.

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +1

      @@XXXkazeXXX I know. I sit down to watch a few minutes and, well, it's like potato chips. One of the upsides of having a lousy memory is that so much of it is a surprise. "Oh, right, this part!" This may be the only program our of 700 episodes of radio and television that I've created that I can watch without cringing and thinking of ways to make it better.

  • @AttentionTalkVideo
    @AttentionTalkVideo 2 года назад +17

    This documentary was a game changer for the ADHD community.

  • @jess913
    @jess913 2 года назад +9

    This is great in many ways, but it floors me how much so many of these things focus almost entirely on the hyperactive type. I am inattentive, not hyperactive, and many of the the things they are saying about adults with ADHD are only relevant to hyperactive types. I have never been high energy and I always think about decisions for too long and am very indecisive. This is also true in Edward Hallowell’s books.

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад

      Yes, it does focus on the Hyperactive type because it was about Patrick getting diagnosed. (And I have that subtype as well.)

    • @heatherzwicker8031
      @heatherzwicker8031 Год назад +1

      So do I and my cats love it. They jump off me before I mention them needing to get up for me.

    • @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
      @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@rickgreen4131 OK Rick, time for a special program devoted to Inattentive ADHD! 😀 We need the public to understand us better... heck, we need to understand OURSELVES better!

    • @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
      @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane 11 месяцев назад +2

      @jess913 I agree with you... this is an awesome video, but definitely leans to the hyperactive type, which is strange as the title has ADD in it. I've never been high energy and research everything to death before I can make a decision. How wonderful it would be to see Rick and these ADHD specialists do a program for us! 😀

  • @samacuna1080
    @samacuna1080 2 года назад +24

    This documentary changed my life. I was watching it on PBS a few years ago to see if it would help me understand my daughter's struggles (I suspected she may have had ADD), when I realized it was talking about not just her but me as well. I was diagnosed shortly after and so were my three wonderful girls. Thank you for making this! You have helped me and my family truly discover who we are and talents/strengths we were not aware of and maybe most importantly our limitations.

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +6

      Oh, that's wonderful! Thank you for letting me know. I had a sense it was going to be popular, and a fear that it might be attacked or dismissed or scorned, but I had no idea how many lives it would change.

    • @samacuna1080
      @samacuna1080 2 года назад +1

      @@rickgreen4131 , thank you for responding! You are amazing!

  • @deepestbluesea_6351
    @deepestbluesea_6351 Год назад +4

    This is a great programme. I speak as someone diagnosed at the age of 57 - a diagnosis that explains my whole life. No exaggeration, no hyperbole. Including 35 years of misdiagnosis with recurring, treatment-resistant (i.e. inappropriately treated) depression.
    That diagnosis was a year and a half ago. I'm still trying to find my way out of where I was (lost and without a map), and to identify where I need to get to. There has been some progress on that last point just in the past month or two - diagnosis is, gradually, providing the previously missing map. Outwardly I had some success in life - a science PhD and a 20-year globe-trotting career I loved, doing field research in very exotic places, actually getting PAID to do stuff that had been a childhood fantasy since, errmm, childhood. The kind of career and work and adventures that might make others envious. But otherwise, life from my early teens onwards was one long, slow train wreck, albeit one that was probably not very apparent to passersby. At least *mostly* wasn't: Occasional asteroid-strike, extinction-level type disasters probably were prety obvious. Definitely were [holds head in hands]. Then, about 10 years ago, the wheels even came off the career. Which loss was, I now realise, largely down to the ADHD.
    Anyway, since diagnosis I've had 16 months of reading about ADHD, watching youtubers talking about ADHD (there are some really good ones, including but not limited to Rick Green) and for some obscure reason I've actively avoided watching this one until now. Actually no, I DO know why I've avoided watching it: "Loving" ADD? Nope. No way. That one's not for me.
    At least, that's what I thought, because I f**king hate ADD/ADHD. Yup. Hate it. Given my own experience living with undiagnosed with ADHD for 57 years, something that really pisses me off and, frankly, makes me feel, yet again, like a monumental failure, is someone saying 'I love my ADHD' or 'ADHD is my superpower', and similar stuff. Yeah, right. Pull the other one. Then f**k off.
    But this film,IMO, gets the balance right. Strongly recommended.
    One caveat (and this is one that I know isn't just me, it's a widespread concern about discussions of ADD/ADHD) is that the role of emotion, and specifically emotional dysregulation, in ADD/ADHD, and in wreaking ADHD havoc, doesn't get enough acknowledgement. A reliance on the DSM when describing the nature and impacts of ADHD to people who have to live with it (as oppposed to those who 'merely' have to diagnose it) leaves out a large part of the equation. OK, whinge over.
    Thank you Rick Green and PBS.

  • @candacetaylor2553
    @candacetaylor2553 2 года назад +18

    I've lost track of how many times I've seen this video, yet each time it never fails to make me chuckle, cry a little, drop my jaw at points, howl with laughter, and send up a gratitude prayer that Rick and Ava Green managed to put together a brilliant, and factually sound documentary that checks all the boxes for understanding ADHD.

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +3

      You are welcome, Candace. I have to say, even now, I'm still amazed at how briskly it moves, how much information is in there, and how many of the popular myths and misinformation we managed to bust.

  • @duanegordon7553
    @duanegordon7553 2 года назад +31

    Does anyone remember Rick and Ava Green's fantastic video, "ADD & Loving It?!" It was a TV show in Canada and the U.S. that ran for many years. It did miracles for raising awareness about adult ADHD at the time, and continues to be a fantastic resource for educating yourself, your friends, your and family. Watch it yourself... and share this with everyone you wish could understand adult ADHD.

  • @christianwright5813
    @christianwright5813 9 месяцев назад +4

    My family always had resistance to any of my mental health problems, they knew about my diagnosis but because I was labeled with ADD and not ADHD my family basically said that I don't have it that bad because I'm not physically hyperactive. They still acted as if I didn't have it at all.

  • @ADDCrusher
    @ADDCrusher 2 года назад +34

    This is the ORIGINAL #ADHD video that changed everything. I hope everyone will take the time to watch it and learn from it -- and SHARE IT!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +5

      Thank you sir! I now have a crush on ADDCrusher

  • @MRVere64
    @MRVere64 3 месяца назад +1

    WOW did I need to watch this. As a 59-year-old who has been struggling since I was 12 is school issues, work issues, and relationship issues, which I was told were everything from laziness to depression and so much more, this was very informational. Now I just need to find a doctor/group of doctors that will be willing to properly diagnose me. If anybody is still following this thread, pls reach out to me. I'd love to get input. Thanks

    • @RamaWick
      @RamaWick 3 месяца назад

      It never hurts to go and get a diagnosis. Make sure you go to a psychiatrist, not a counselor or a psychologist. If you need meds, I say “IF” you need them a psychiatrist is the brainiac when it comes to knowing which meds or not to prescribe. My family doctor has prescribed me some before, but he had no clue if they were the right meds for me or not, eventually if they didn’t work, which they didn’t, I had to go and see a psychiatrist.

  • @ALADDIN22091978
    @ALADDIN22091978 2 года назад +6

    I have dyspraxia, ADHD and Aspergers traits. It is the best documentary for people with ADHD/ ADD. It is detailed, funny , poignant and presented by people who have a big association with including people who have ADHD.
    It is the best introduction, for people who just learned he/she has ADHD recently.
    I had a nervous breakdown. I became better, once I learned from a therapist via ,my doctor’s surgery, I had ADHD in February 2020. It was probably, the worst possible time . I received, a diagnosis of ADHD ( combined presentation) in August 2020.
    I believe, it should be translated into different languages especially Arabic , Farsi etc !

  • @dt3509
    @dt3509 2 года назад +15

    This video is a classic! It really is a must-see for those dealing with ADHD, those living with someone with ADHD, as well as for those who treat persons with ADHD. Rick Green has done a fantastic and creative job, as usual, to educate and get the information out there for all to see. This is one of those timeless videos.

  • @isaacw1689
    @isaacw1689 2 года назад +14

    My psychiatrist is having me get evaluated for ADHD, I am more hopeful than I have been in my adult life that I can actually start treating the real issue.

  • @HCoons1975
    @HCoons1975 2 года назад +7

    I worked at a gas station on 9/11/01 in the US. It was.... busy. But I felt calm in the chaos.
    Thank you for sharing the video. I see a lot of myself, husband, and our kid in this video.

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +5

      Yes, as the experts say we can be calm in a crisis. But in crisis when it’s calm,

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +5

      I am calmer onstage in front of 500 people than sitting down to do paperwork.

  • @spacetobreatheacademy6305
    @spacetobreatheacademy6305 2 года назад +3

    I'm supposed to be doing some research for a blog post about email marketing now. Instead, I'm watching this....

  • @DianeOReillyADHD
    @DianeOReillyADHD 2 года назад +7

    Love, love love this documentary! It's like a fast and funny education on everything ADHD- without the boring bits! it's clever, funny, poignant and real, most of all it hits home and spreads clarity where there is usually confusion, misinformation, apathy and ignorance. It's a great one for anyone who loves someone who is ADHD to help you understand this stuff is very real or if you suspect you are ADHD yourself and the usual lists don't really resonate, then this will! It's real people, telling real stories that (if you are ADHD) you will be nodding and laughing and maybe crying a bit too. Enjoy! Thanks Rick and Ava for this work of love!

  • @Wildmanmercury
    @Wildmanmercury 8 месяцев назад +3

    They definitely focus more on males here too which goes to show how much progress we have made and have to go.

  • @PioLisieux
    @PioLisieux 2 года назад +8

    Awesome! Thanks Mr. Rick 😁
    .
    I had looked for this on RUclips a while ago but couldn't find it. Much appreciated👏👏👏

  • @catalinapazlanati6996
    @catalinapazlanati6996 2 года назад +3

    the fact that i watched this in 5 minute parts speaks volumes

  • @jakesandersonaudio
    @jakesandersonaudio 2 года назад +5

    oh wow!!! thanks Rick, Patrick and everyone who made this happen! this is really helpful and empowering when I was diagnosed with ADHD 8 years ago. I'm grateful I can share it so easily from RUclips now. Much appreciated !!

  • @GinaPeraADHDRollerCoaster
    @GinaPeraADHDRollerCoaster 2 года назад +12

    Should be required viewing for everyone affected by Adult ADHD! Great stuff! And entertaining, too!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +5

      Thanks. Going into production I decided to make a program that answered every question I when I was first diagnosed, and busted all the myths and misinformation that I thought were true.

    • @GinaPeraADHDRollerCoaster
      @GinaPeraADHDRollerCoaster 2 года назад +6

      @@rickgreen4131 Sounds very familiar! 😁

  • @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
    @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane 2 года назад +7

    Oh wow! So wonderful this is available for all to see! I bought the whole CD package after seeing this on PBS because it resonated with me so strongly! I had recently been diagnosed when I first saw this, and all I kept saying was, "yes!, that's me, that's me!" I was SO excited to finally feel HEARD. Having this available on RUclips is going to help so many people!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +2

      Thanks!! Yes. I want to reach as many people as possible. That’s why it’s so important for people to like, comment, and share this video with as many people as possible in these early days. A strong start tells RUclips that this deserves to be seen by more people and it gets more exposure. Otherwise it will just disappear among the millions of videos that are uploaded every week.

    • @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane
      @SweetStuffOnMonarchLane 2 года назад

      @Rick Green For sure Rick! I am going to be sending this TODAY to at least five people I can think of off the top of my head, and when I see comments on other videos or just talking to people about ADHD, I'm going to send them to this as well! This is the BEST video on ADHD because it helps explain what is so hard for all of us to explain. Thank you, thank you, a million times, THANK YOU!!! Patreon for life! 😀

  • @keithhaywardprime
    @keithhaywardprime 2 года назад +3

    Like I've said before.. please more of these from the old channel. The old channel is a giant part of pretty much saving my life. Thank you and keep up the great work. :)

  • @davidcronmiller
    @davidcronmiller Год назад +3

    This is such a great and informative show that needs to be played for public viewing more often . Thanks guys for all your hard work on this GREAT JOB !

  • @skintnomoney6000
    @skintnomoney6000 2 года назад +13

    A life changing documentary for sure! Thank you for putting this on RUclips

  • @physioflow7863
    @physioflow7863 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for this wonderful video! I am an adult who thinks they may have ADD and this was fun, clear and personable. I could relate and the experts were as clear as Patrick and his wife were open and humorous. Much gratitude!

  • @michellejackson1021
    @michellejackson1021 2 года назад +8

    Excellent information! Thanks for sharing.

  • @Chanie787878
    @Chanie787878 Год назад +2

    The title "ADHD" doesn't actually describe what the person experiences. It describes what other people see. Ask a kid with ADHD "what do you have trouble doing?" Help them figure out what their individual challenges are. Provide support and structure for tjose individual challenges and you'll improve the trajectory of the kid's life immeasurably!

  • @thesevenminutewriterwithde4280
    @thesevenminutewriterwithde4280 2 года назад +9

    Thank you Patrick and Rick- I learned a lot about this as I have had family members have it and I've not understood all the contradictions, you did it with such a great job with such a great sense of humour!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +4

      Thanks that’s wonderful. I tried to make a documentary that would contain everything I wish I had known when I was first diagnosed. It was tailored to answer every question, concern, and doubt I had.

  • @sharonwolf4019
    @sharonwolf4019 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much for posting this! So important!!!

  • @ElaineTaylorKlaus
    @ElaineTaylorKlaus 2 года назад +9

    Amazing to see this ground-breaking video available to all -- thank you so much for this incredible service!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +2

      You are welcome! We made it to change a few lives. Little did we know it's still doing that.

    • @ElaineTaylorKlaus
      @ElaineTaylorKlaus 2 года назад +3

      @@rickgreen4131 yeah -- a FEW :)!!! A few million!

  • @rebeccagrunfelder5417
    @rebeccagrunfelder5417 2 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for making this documentary. It is very informative & it is so important to get this information out to everyone & anyone - especially, those who know or love someone with ADHD.
    It is so hard to try & teach loved ones or important people in our lives about the way our brains work & why we do the things we do. Thank you for doing a great job in helping people to understand the daily & life struggles those living with ADHD go through (as well as their loved ones that are also gong through it being by their side)

    • @rebeccagrunfelder5417
      @rebeccagrunfelder5417 2 года назад

      I have ADHD, but I was mis-diagnosed (& over medicated) for having only depression for 20+ years. It is not easy to find a doctor who specializes & understands the struggles & impairments of ADHD.

  • @CoachAllen76x
    @CoachAllen76x 2 года назад +3

    Thanks Rick, Patrick and Janis for this video. It is so comprehensive, structured... and complete that I m taking notes all the way. I kind of only had the realization / suspicion a week before last Christmas and sealed by my work dismissal two weeks ago. Explains so much of the 'WHYs' in my life. Now comes the 'whats'... what to do next. It's a tough subject to break down but with Hyper Focus... Creativity... Innovation...Intuition and passion ta daaaa 🙌 Thank you and lotsa love ❤️ from Malaysia!!

  • @jillmurphy9726
    @jillmurphy9726 2 года назад +10

    Knocked this one outta the park. Finally! Understanding, strategies, supports and answers. Thank you!

  • @randyh3761
    @randyh3761 Год назад +1

    Appreciate this being shared!
    'Treatment can make you, "very functional"'
    sign me up!

  • @user-xr7zb1ze6x
    @user-xr7zb1ze6x 2 месяца назад +1

    This doco has decribed my life so accurately, its so well done. Rick Green is brilliant

  • @cherylsusman8238
    @cherylsusman8238 2 года назад +8

    Wonderful, heartfelt, funny, and poignant documentary for the ADHD community! Thank you!!

  • @debbiedebbie9473
    @debbiedebbie9473 3 месяца назад +1

    Please post the "UNOFFICIAL ADHD TEST " video. It's so good.❤
    Most books on ADD/ADHD are huge and technical and dry, and there's no way most people who have add/adhd will ever actually read it.
    Thank you for the video. I'm having trouble getting through it. 🙈💕

  • @canadianwhiskysmith6453
    @canadianwhiskysmith6453 2 года назад +1

    I remember watching this on TV several years ago. Have bookmarked it so I can rewatch!

  • @MsJazbren
    @MsJazbren 2 года назад +7

    3:19 " .... if you can pay attention long enough."
    *skips back 20 secs to catch what he said before that*

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +2

      HA HA! Takes on to know one.

    • @Globe_Tasters
      @Globe_Tasters 2 года назад +1

      “Can’t distinguish between background and foreground noises” - me, watching with captions on for that exact reason, lol

  • @adhdmarriage2190
    @adhdmarriage2190 2 года назад +8

    Have loved this film for a while. Great way to learn more about adult ADHD, have a bit of fun, and hear top experts talk about the real skinny on ADHD!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +4

      Yes. We tried to get a range of views. And between the 9 experts there are decades of experience with tens of thousands of people.

  • @homeworkshopengineering
    @homeworkshopengineering Год назад

    I was diagnosed a week ago and on Holiday looking forward to taking steps to change what I thought, were things everyone struggled with.
    I have had huge success with my passions but the essential and menial tasks have created chaos.
    I’m now realising I have been creating this roller coaster partly by my struggle to do those tasks but also, it creates the stimulation I crave to pull it back from the brink.
    Fantastic programme that really made sense.

  • @tayagreen7826
    @tayagreen7826 2 года назад +6

    Very informative! Thank you for sharing

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +1

      You're welcome! And feel free to share as well!

  • @LoveLightLifeLena
    @LoveLightLifeLena 2 года назад +3

    Thank you for this initiative to bring this important topic to greater awareness!

    • @RickWantsToKnow
      @RickWantsToKnow  Год назад +1

      You are welcome. Please, do share and like and comment. As you may know, this documentary changes the lives of people who have this mindset or who love someone who has it.

  • @pongop
    @pongop 2 года назад +5

    Wow, this is great! Thank you for uploading this video! It's so nice to watch the whole documentary since first learning about it a year or so ago. I had seen a few clips only. After discovering this channel about a year ago, I pretty quickly recognized Rick Green, and was very excited because I grew up watching the Red Green Show on PBS. But how did I just find out that Patrick McKenna was Harold Green the whole time?! That's so cool and makes sense why you did this documentary together. Great collaboration from great minds!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +3

      And the coproducer and editor was my wife Ava, who was the editor of 299 of the 300 episodes of The Red Green Show!

    • @pongop
      @pongop 2 года назад +2

      @@rickgreen4131 That's so awesome! I really appreciate both this documentary and the Red Green Show. Thank you Ava!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +2

      @@pongop Since the program is no longer running on PBS we're now relying on our Patrons to be able to produce new videos. If you want to support me go to Patreon.com and search for Rick Green! As a Patron you'll get the sneak preview of every new video, exclusive webinars, and access to safe, secure, Patron-only chat rooms. (It's a pretty great community.)

    • @pongop
      @pongop 2 года назад +1

      @@rickgreen4131 Thank you for the info! I just checked out the Patreon page and it looks pretty cool. Definitely something to consider supporting.

  • @Chanie787878
    @Chanie787878 Год назад +2

    7:50 As an adult you don't have as much energy as you did as a child. So you sit still, but the hyperactivity may be in a person's thought process.

  • @Firstthunder
    @Firstthunder 2 года назад +2

    So grateful to find this video and the truth of myself. This video is changing my life as I type.

  • @smokesletsgo2374
    @smokesletsgo2374 Год назад +3

    While ADD/ADHD is not fun for those who have it, I don't think the Red Green Show would have been the same without it

  • @exorsistje
    @exorsistje 2 года назад +6

    love it!!! This docu made me very happy :) ...with a (happy) tear now and then

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +6

      I am so glad. I still alternate between laughing and misting up. I can't tell you how many millions of lives this has changed. Tens of thousands of messages of gratitude.

  • @shivajamshidi7329
    @shivajamshidi7329 Год назад +2

    I watch this every day it keeps me motivated you guys are awesome :)

  • @Interplanetary_Dust
    @Interplanetary_Dust 2 года назад +3

    Thank you for putting this on-line! I was so bummed when it was taken off Amazon Prime in the US.

    • @RickWantsToKnow
      @RickWantsToKnow  Год назад +2

      Me too. All of our other videos will be back eventually as well.

  • @wendyhannan2454
    @wendyhannan2454 Год назад +1

    This is fantastic, it’s the best ADHD video I’ve seen. Congratulations to every one involved, I love it.

  • @stevenharlan8575
    @stevenharlan8575 Год назад +2

    The post it part was hilarious 😂.. exactly how my brain works(organized chaos)

  • @tmoo11
    @tmoo11 2 года назад +5

    Well done!

  • @AnuraUkulele
    @AnuraUkulele 23 дня назад

    I love how this video is designed to attract my fragmented attention span. It moves fast enough to keep me watching. Thanks for the info and the way you presented it too.

  • @sarina76667
    @sarina76667 2 года назад +4

    I have multiple copies of this dvd, but I’ve lent them out to family who need to learn more about ADD. But I watch it whenever I feel frustrated with myself. It makes me feel better. It reminds me that I can only do so much to control my symptoms and that more often than not conflict with other people can be resolved by teaching them how to communicate better with me. So many people see ignoring or overlooking something that bothers them as being the same as accommodating or accepting, but it’s not. It just causes resentment and makes them avoid interacting with the ADD person which leads to isolation. And this can go on for years when all they have to do is be direct and specific and be willing to discuss a reasonable solution to the problem. Most people think they have to be aggressive and authoritarian when they approach me, but that’s just going to make me scared of them. It never dawns on people that they can be direct and specific without being a jerk. Anyway enough of my tangent back to watching my comfort documentary.

  • @KoronisMediaRu
    @KoronisMediaRu Год назад +1

    Fabulous movie 😍🍿 thank you very much for the effort 😊 very helpful

  • @kirsika-maiutrik1936
    @kirsika-maiutrik1936 2 года назад +6

    Thank you for this! It is a great peace of work you've done there. I just didn't see you come over to my house, nor my brain.... how on earth did you know to make such an accurate documentary about my life😂😂😂

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +3

      Ha! Basically, it’s a case of “Been there, done that!”

    • @kirsika-maiutrik1936
      @kirsika-maiutrik1936 2 года назад +1

      @@rickgreen4131 true dat!😂

  • @AlstarPalmer
    @AlstarPalmer 2 года назад +1

    This is so informative. Thank You sooo much!

  • @robgaughan
    @robgaughan Год назад

    Seriously a great piece of work capturing the growing body of science behind a tough condition. 👍👍

  • @tiblanes
    @tiblanes Год назад

    “Thank you” seems an extremely inadequate expression of gratitude. This documentary WILL change my life for the better and hopefully that of others I love as well.

  • @Souprised_all
    @Souprised_all 5 месяцев назад

    I absolutely loved this documentary, even the shape of the documentary was like how the brain with add works, jump jump jumps. And knowing one can live with it exactly with this sense of humor.

  • @t.nysted4146
    @t.nysted4146 2 года назад +11

    Looking forward to see this - curious about the word 'treatment'.
    Seen it. First thoughts. I love my Diagnosis 3 years ago and I love the adhd super powers I have. As all super powers it comes with great responsibilities and require a lot of struggles to learn to master, but I know I can use it for good. Teaching 15-25yr olds in Denmark who all dropped out of schooling and work. So many of them are like me, with super powers but noone taught them they weren't villains in their stories. This documentary will very possibly help some of them on the good path. Thank you.

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +9

      It's a tricky term. There's certainly no cure. And most of us don't want to be 'cured,' so my focus has always been on managing the downside and building and developing potential strengths. I think you can look at many of symptoms, say hyper-focusing, as a strength or a problem depending on the situation and how you manage it.

    • @t.nysted4146
      @t.nysted4146 2 года назад +4

      @@rickgreen4131 Oh yeah. But I do think you nailed it. A positive narrative and better understanding of self and how we tend to clash with society is almost half a cure. Teaching society awareness and especially that our clashes aren't intentionally disruptive, and good faith that we can improve collectively is almost the other half.
      And then comes medication. Often a great stepping stone to learning better practices. I am at a point where I now somehow forget my second pill almost daily. I just helped a student for 2 1/2year pass examns - despite him not taking meds as they made him tired. We 'just' had to find other solutions, and he marvelled after years of hopelessness.
      My student, my colleagues and I learned a lot from your work and How to ADHD. So thanks.

    • @pongop
      @pongop 2 года назад +6

      Great comment! I do something similar in the US with 18-29 year old students. Learning about my potential ADHD and strategies has helped me become more understanding of students' diverse learning needs and different strategies to help. Keep doing what you're doing!

  • @123-yoyo3
    @123-yoyo3 2 года назад +6

    43:13 Thank you all. I've learned a lot 😊

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +2

      Wonderful. I have to admit, I learned a lot making the documentary. About ADHD and myself.

  • @God-of-our-own-understanding
    @God-of-our-own-understanding 4 месяца назад

    I genuinely enjoyed this video! I was crackin'-up throughout! 😂

  • @XXXkazeXXX
    @XXXkazeXXX 2 года назад +5

    Ugh. The lovely hyperfocus. I'm terrible at Swedish. I love my programming basics course. It just happens that the teacher teaching my Swedish course is just perfect for me and the level of the course is low enough for me to understand ~80%. I really wanted to do my programming exercises but no. My brain wanted to study Swedish. FOR FOUR FREAKING HOURS! I don't even have a class until Monday. Well, at least my homework is done.

  • @billdickerson2228
    @billdickerson2228 Год назад +1

    I retired from Iowa's Vocational Rehabilitation agency as an IT specialist, networking, security. Our agency had trained counselors who worked with people with disabilities of all sorts and types. I had occasion to travel to our other offices to get information on some network troubles. While getting ready to leave one of our remote offices, it was their quitting time and they were standing in the lobby talking and one of the counselors there started talking about a client - complaining, actually - saying the guy was always late, missed appointments, talked a lot, had trouble holding a job and went on and on and as I listened, I grew angry as he was describing an adult client with ADHD. It was all I could to do keep from walking up to him, giving him what for, then a left cross. I mean - a counselor? He must have had NO clue about the poor client and what he was living with.
    I have trouble myself with others like me because, as one college that tested personality types and other things told me - I gave 10 page explanations, but expected others to give me the whole scoop in 2 words or less. I was fuming the whole 4 hour drive back home. Luckily it was a state-owned car so I was super careful driving.
    Anyone working in that capacity needs to be EDUCATED on this. That's the thing - doctors, counselors, others - clueless.
    This video needs to be blasted across every TV network in the USA 7 nights a week for a month. Sadly, Canada, Australia and some other places are far far ahead of the USA in such matters. We're in the dark ages as far as mental health, ADHD is part of that.

  • @jenniferpolverari4575
    @jenniferpolverari4575 2 года назад +1

    Was just diagnosed this morning. Having difficulty focusing on this video. 🤣

  • @laabud
    @laabud 2 года назад +2

    Love this!! Will be sharing it! But were the typos in the captions put there on purpose...to annoy an ADD person??!!

  • @pwillis13
    @pwillis13 4 месяца назад

    The Red Green show is amazingly enjoyable with ADHD ❤

  • @johnprinsloo4428
    @johnprinsloo4428 Год назад +2

    Love this documentary and it is great that people are trying to drive more awareness to our superpower (disorder?) I was only diagnosed a few months ago at age 31... and I got so much resistance and backlash when I made my loved ones aware of my problem even when they struggled with me all my life and all the markers are there; I still get the 'BS, you dont have ADHD you just have to strengthen your willpower and stop being lazy and finish things your start... just focus!' ..... Suuuuuuure, thanks for trying to understand 0_o

  • @bricemiller2644
    @bricemiller2644 Год назад +1

    I love this video

  • @BlueMonkVR5953
    @BlueMonkVR5953 Год назад

    Seems odd that there were so many adds during a PBS documentary that originally had no commercials. But great information.

  • @sirslice
    @sirslice 2 года назад +6

    They guys (Rick & Patrick) "get it" because they have "it". Getting the true facts, about ADHD, out there is important. Getting that information "out there" in an entertaining package is called "ADHD and Loving It"!

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад +1

      Thanks! You should have been our publicist!

  • @wonderwend1
    @wonderwend1 Месяц назад

    Superb

  • @maryam7402
    @maryam7402 2 месяца назад

    I have bipolar and add.. I’m crying seeing this video .. 😢I tried adding other meds to help with my add..but it interacted with my bipolar meds.. and my doctor and I stopped trying..
    Years later.. I think I need to try again .. hopefully there are new meds that can help me .. I need a lot of help.. god bless all that are suffering with this.. ❤️🥰

  • @Mr.KellyMelvin
    @Mr.KellyMelvin 8 месяцев назад

    I had some adhd furniture in the room that I didn’t like or understand why it was there. Then the carpet that is Rick Green really tied the room together and that was a massive deal for me. Then in his videos,he mentioned this doc and I’ve been looking for it ever since. Then google was listening in on my conversation about it and sent it my way. Thanks Rick, Patrick, Janis and omnipresent advertising website…………..squirrel!

  • @smam60
    @smam60 7 месяцев назад +2

    Much of this documentary is describing ADHD, not ADD, so the title is a bit misleading. That said, what I have watched of it thus far has been fun and spot on for those with hyperactivity, and much of it spot on for those without. I will get back and finish it later. Maybe. Of course I likely will have started something else and forget about it. 😉Anyway - what was I saying? Oh yes - my brother has the hyperactive component but I fall into that category of girls who don't have the hyperactive part, and so it never occurred to me that I had ADD. Eight years ago, while trying to improve time management skills once again, I stumbled on an article about "Now and Not Now" thinking (a concept I have found that people without ADD just can't comprehend), that article led to other articles about ADD, and it was life changing. I finally stopped hating myself for my failures and mess ups. I finally stopped comparing myself to people who don't have it, and started using the techniques and mindsets that work for us. Huge difference! Since then I have refinanced my mortgage, completed home improvement projects to the 90% done point (100% may be too much to ask), and so much more. The sad thing is I did not understand what was going on until I was 53. If I had understood at 18 what I understand now, I know I would not have made some of the unfortunate mistakes I made that can't be undone. Thus, if I see anybody dissing the teenage girl who is ditzy but smart, messy, running late, impulsive etc I will be on my soapbox in a flash. I can't go back and undo mistakes in my life, but I WILL be an advocate for the next generation.

  • @madeinengland1212
    @madeinengland1212 Год назад +1

    A lot of progress can be made by total acceptance of emotions and not running away from uncomfortable feelings

  • @speculative
    @speculative Год назад

    What is the questionnaire they are using at the start of the program?

  • @dominiknistl6046
    @dominiknistl6046 2 года назад

    we want add & mastering it too!!!

  • @gypsypath1
    @gypsypath1 2 года назад +4

    Everyone’s burning question: Are those post-it’s actual size? Follow-up question: Where can we get them?

  • @MsLisa551
    @MsLisa551 Год назад +1

    Boy... i could tell you some stories. A lot of them make me laugh.
    Being married to someone for 23 years that didn't enjoy my Adhd didn't help. Getting divorced helped me though. I'm learning to accept myself for who I am. I like what I see. Yes ,, I'm on medication and I feel content with the changes.

  • @gotobassmsn
    @gotobassmsn 2 года назад +5

    You didn't fail school. School failed you, because they failed to give you the help you needed to learn to be able to learn what the school was teaching. For it was easier for the educators to say you failed school instead of saying school failed you because they didn't want to deal with one child out of a few hundred or even a thousand that has ADHD/ASD. So in reality the school fails whenever one student gets D's and F's. But they pass it off as the the child is to stupid for school, so the child failed. When in reality, in some cases the student had a higher IQ the teacher (s), they just have a different way of learning than 95%of the students in the class. And when I went to school they knew nothing about ADHD/ASD. They just passed out off as a very low IQ, so low infact, that they thought you couldn't learn anything. When infact they, are learning that that 's not true. They children with ADHD/ ASPERGERS have a very high IQ.

  • @alittlepieceofearth
    @alittlepieceofearth 2 года назад +6

    I feel seen.

  • @gypsypath1
    @gypsypath1 2 года назад +1

    “What’s the the difference between ADD and ADHD?”
    “Um. H.” 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @The_Vanished
    @The_Vanished Год назад +1

    The only interaction from my childhood was just intense rage about everything. My father just blamed us for everything and drove my brother to an early death six years ago. I put all my effort into growing myself and my career but still would loose control at times. Doctors say dopamine is the pleasure chemical but is not true. Dopamine helps us with motor control and coordination, which is what I feel like I had a major deficit in. Considering that's what ended up happening too many times and talk too much etc, it could help if mental health professionals actually considered reality rather than just automatically saying everyone is depressed and stop being so extreme, everything isn't so bad you're just catastrophizing. And they just never allow anyone to really convey how harsh their reality can be. Being 40 and now realizing the damage that I had to deal with is difficult and struggle every day. It also needs a better name and the abuse that the adults with undiagnosed ADHD do should be discussed rather than swept under the rug.
    The abuse of undiagnosed ADHD adults is why fox news tells the abusers ADHD doesn't exist. Just like my parents they just are a rubber stamp to undermine the country and keep everyone under totalitarian control. Fear and anger will keep those in control without anyone being able to figure it out. Shuts down the minds of the adults and keeps them unable to gain higher level understanding and see the real picture of who is causing the problems instead of abusing children because of the child having ADHD and not getting any medical help. Then blaming their children for the parents problems in life. Then the children can't even have their own opinions in life.
    Maybe that's a lot but from my experience it's all true, obviously my parents have ADHD and are controlled by the fear on news, blame the younger generation and continue to elect officials based on lies and those officials perpetuate gun violence and terrible values all while telling the abusive adults they will go to heaven and are the best 'christians' that ever lived.

  • @Sugar3Glider
    @Sugar3Glider Год назад +2

    "I feel like a bank robber would take better care of my money than I do..."
    Report > Reason for your Report > I'm in this video, and I feel attacked.

  • @pjackson8322
    @pjackson8322 Год назад

    I tried Adderall. It gave me a glimpse of what the 100 voices are calmed down and I could focus more than I ever could. But the "spark" did get dulled down. So now I know what focus looks like. I'm off the meds and lean into the feeling of that focus by staying productive, a perspective I wouldn't have had without the trial of meds. So I recommend to at least try it under drs supervision to see how it helps you.

  • @davidcronmiller
    @davidcronmiller Год назад

    I hope to meet you guys in public some day !

  • @InAuOb
    @InAuOb 4 месяца назад

    It should ASC - Attention Surplus Condition. So much attention there's enough to spread around.

  • @Fefe559
    @Fefe559 Год назад

    WHY CAN'T I FIND MARCH OF THE ADHD PENGUINS ANYMORE?? LITERALLY MY FAVOURITE THING EVER on INTERNET. PERFECT DESCRIPTION OF ADD AND ITS GONE???!! WTF!!! Pissed right now!!

  • @mothbythesea
    @mothbythesea 2 года назад +3

    Oh my god the gun story!!!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣☠☠☠☠

    • @rickgreen4131
      @rickgreen4131 2 года назад

      I believe it was a toy gun. Hmm.... I should ask him.