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Story and photo by Emmjay
I caught myself today. Caught myself self-sabotaging.
It went like this:
- Woke up at 4:40. Head full of ideas about how to write a killer application for a job I really want to win.
- Lie there thinking because my get up time is 5:00.
- Check cats, let in George, who’s not interested in food and just wants a hello pat.
- Put on kettle for a green tea. Brew.
- Take medications.
- Decide to put off exercise for half an hour.
- Tidy up kitchen bench while tea is brewing.
- Notice motorcycle magazine – open it and read interesting stuff.
- Realise that I’m off track.
Put down mag – remembering to enter Barry Sheen race day in phone – March next year.
Take tea to office, intending to complete the killer job application.
Desk is a mess and my new daily routine note is in there somewhere. I need it so I go looking for that paper. An identical one has a few notes I made to help FM out with a proposal for a project.
I reckon it’s a really good piece of thinking – re-usable, but I want to throw it out as part of cleaning up the messy desk. I decide to type it into my computer and use it as a template.
I turn on the computer. It opens up Email – major distraction – I notice new Email from FM forwarding the picture of the first snow from Linda and Steve in Scotland. Under that’s a picture Email from Eastern Markets of Elena Dawson’s new collection – a favourite.
I realise that I’m off track again and decide to return to clean up the desk – and want to shut down the PC but I’ve also bought a new CD from the kitchen bench clean up, which is a calming and gentle piece of guitar and violin music-perfect for desk cleaning, so I can’t shut down the PC just yet and anyway, I’ll need it in a minute or two to complete the killer job application.
Then I realise just how random my morning has been so far and it’s only 5:30, so I decide to write all this mess down.
It’s 5:50 now and I’m hoping that the medications cut in soon, because I’ve started to yawn and I’m uncertain about what to do next. I think I’ll put the CD on quietly to avoid waking FM, and return to the desk clean up to find my schedule, but I think I heard the cats meowing and that means that I need to feed them to get them to shut up. So I might as well feed the dog and the fish and the tadpoles at the same time.
Then I remember that the fish food is running out and make a mental note to pick some up on the way to the poetry bash at the Basement this afternoon. Malcolm Turnbull is supposed to do a reading. That should be interesting. Then I recall my conversation with FM about whether all this sweetness and light around Turnbull is publicity for a forthcoming Liberal Party leadership spill.
It’s 6:00 now – I’d better feed the animals. The first flight of the day rips past the front of the house.
I feed the animals, and as I’m in the kitchen and there’s a fair bit of ironing, I decide to do some to keep the pile under control and Tim the Cabin Boy is coming home early today. So less clutter is good and then I’m reminded that we have to rescue his school clothes from his wardrobe in case the renovations have gotten dust in there.
While ironing, I start to fee a bit hungry, so I decide to make some toast. But the chopping board needs a clean and while I do that I’d better hand wash the cut glass tumblers.
I do that, put the bread in the toaster and think that I’d like some juice too and I go to the fridge. While I’m doing that, I get out the vitamins. The toast is ready and I pour a drink quickly because I don’t want the toast to get cold – or the juice to get warm.
Right. Ready for breakfast. I might as well read yesterday’s paper on the iPad while I eat. I become engrossed in the paper and I notice that an hour and a half have gone by. It’s time to get FM a cup of tea. I wonder whether she might want a piece of toast or whether the big bread hit might make her feel uncomfortable. Maybe she might prefer muesli- in which case I need to cut up some fruit. While doing that I should cut some for the birds and feed them too.
But maybe FM might prefer some eggs. I decide to just do tea and ask her. But since I have the fruit out, I decide to try and fit in a bird feed while the jug boils for the tea. By this time I think a cup of coffee for me is in order and I put on the espresso machine to warm up, make FM’s tea and take it upstairs.
I hope she’s had a good night and is feeling OK. She IS! And she’s keen to go to the beach for a swim.
I start to change into my swimmers and pack the towels and other stuff.
Exercise is good for me too and she really wants me to come with her. But the beach trip is a 2 hour event minimum, or more if we have coffee in a favourite cafe after the exercise. So there’s a conflict in my mind. I need the exercise, but I have so much more to do. And there’s a complication. The weather has started to turn and it looks like it might rain. We’re not sure whether we should go.
Maybe we should just walk the dog instead. So we change back into not beach clothes. FM notices that the dog has a problem with her ears. This is not uncommon. Maybe a bit of ear mite. FM gets out the treatment and notices that the rinse and bug killer is pretty old. So I phone the vet, who’s surgery is on the way of the planned walk but the vet is not yet open, so FM treats the dog’s ears anyway. We’ll call again later.
Figuring that the dog should probably take it easy today, we decide to not take her for a walk.
I want to visit my Mom in the nursing home and I usually buy her some flowers on the way and also get some for FM. We decide to go our separate ways. I have lots of time and FM will go and see the sale at Paddington and I will head off out west to Hammondville.
But FM hasn’t had breakfast and I haven’t had coffee so we decide to drop into our friends’ cafe – Silverbean in Enmore. We enjoy a muffin and coffee and FM drops me at home.
She reminds me that Tim the Cabin Boy is coming home tomorrow and we need to vacuum the builder’s dust so Tim won’t walk it through the whole house. I also need to tidy up the front bedroom so he has somewhere to sleep while the ceiling is out of his room.
I have lots of time and I get stuck into this work and make serious progress. FM who has returned from Paddington interrupts me. Two hours have passed by, but the job’s done. She’s impressed.
Shower, change, collect Mom’s perfume (I always try to remember to take it and put a little on her wrists each time I visit). She used to love French perfume, but when I left it in her room, it disappeared – twice, so it has to live at our place.
I drive to the start of the M5, but there’s a long line of traffic at the entrance, so I cut out and go through Bardwell Park and get back onto the motorway after the tunnel. There’s a lot of traffic, but it’s moving well. I pull into the small village shops at Hammondville to buy Mom’s flowers and order some for FM to pick up on the way home. It’s stinking hot and humid and flowers wouldn’t survive waiting in a hot car while I see Mom.
When I get to the nursing home, Mom’s sleeping in her reclining chair and although the carers say that I should wake her, because she gets a huge amount of sleep anyway and I’ve come so far, I hate to do that, mainly because I struggle with the reality that it’s nearly impossible to communicate with her. She has a few words, and seems to hear me, but she speaks so softly and in such tiny fragments that I often cannot understand – then she drifts off, motionless and stares into the middle distance.
I decide to wait and take a break. I go across the road to the local cafe and have my second cup of coffee and a slice of banana bread by way of lunch. I go back to the nursing home and decide to just put a little perfume on Mom’s neck while she sleeps, but she wakes up and takes some time to figure out what’s going on. She still recognises me, I think, but she doesn’t speak.
I stroke her hair and hold her hand. She can’t move much – part of the dementia is that her brain cannot control the muscles and they tend to contract, so she adopts a pose that reminds me of the foetal position. Ironic, isn’t it. That’s how we start and that’s how we finish – folded up like origami.
About an hour of idle chat – me putting my ear close to her mouth to catch her standard questions about whether she’s well, whether I’m well, where she is, what’s she doing here, when can she go home… and around and around and around.
I always make some lame excuse that it’s time to leave to do the shopping for the week or whatever.
I discover that I do not have the car keys in my pocket. Have I dropped them in the nursing home ? Maybe they’re in the car ignition still. No. Well, that leaves the cafe. It’s afternoon now and they shut early. Rush over. “Are these your keys, mate ?” Thankfully they are.
I always phone FM as I’m leaving the nursing home. I check the phone and she’s tried to call me a couple of times, but I missed the calls. I usually feel pretty sad after visiting Mom and FM is a great support. She doesn’t answer. It goes to voicemail.
I drive home on Canterbury road because the motorway was a parking lot going into the city. If anything Canterbury road is even more depressing than Parramatta road.
When I get home, FM is excited about the new Paris fashions in the Paddington sale.
It’s still incredibly hot and humid. She suggests a cool shower and a change.
And she gives me a cuddle.
We go off to Leichhardt, and enjoy a lovely light meal and a glass of wine at Tuscany. The waiters know us and are always funny and kind.
We do the grocery shopping, drop off at Gelatissimo on the way home, unload the car and unpack the groceries, watch a little TV and crash out.
The next morning it starts all over. The front end of the day looks like Ground Hog Day again.
Now it’s 7:15 and I’m back at my cluttered desk. The green tea has run out. I haven’t put the music CD on yet and I still haven’t found my written down schedule that’s supposed to help me put some structure into my day.
I edit this piece again.
… and around and around and around ….. And now it’s 8:15. Up for three hours and nothing’s done …
This story is about adult AD/HD. It is a very real mental condition that makes day-to-day life a lot more difficult than it is for neurotypical (normal) people. AD/HD can be a schooling nightmare, a career wrecker, a personal finance destroyer, a marriage wrecker and often has strong links to depression.
AD/HD can often be eased with the right treatment (usually counselling therapy, behavioural modification – especially developing practices like making and using lists – and sometimes medication can help).
The support of an understanding and loving partner is invaluable.
If this story looks a lot like your day and if that worries you, see your GP and get checked out.

The first flight of the day rips past the front of the house. Love that. 🙂
Love the article. It’s so disciplined. The only personal essay as compelling as it and useful I’ve read was an article published in an Auckland daily circa 1990 about the effects on the writer of cigarette smoking and copious consumption of pharamceutical additives, the decision he made to get shot of the lot, his experiences of doing that alone in a borrowed house in an isolated country town, but down the road from a corner store, the sweats, the flashbacks…
Therese, if you were in any way not yourself we wouldn’t have the old ramshackle pub. Y’r blood’s worth bottlin’.
🙂
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Thank you, our dear ‘Shoe. Very kind.
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I have become rather fond of believing that acceptance of failures and disappointments is the way to move forward. The obsession with success and becoming number 1 and a winner is the problem and not the answer. Some years ago “self motivation workshops”; were all the go, especially in the US were people queued up to pay$100.- to do a 2 hour course on becoming successful and a winner.
Some white suited clown would prance up and down the stage ; “do you want to be a winner and a success”, he would shout at the audience? “Yes, we do,” thundered back the wildly aroused audience, brought to their feet in wanting to winners, en masse..
A few years after, this multi million dollar Self motivation Workshop business folded owing millions all over the country. The liquidators found a couple of white suits in a carton box.
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‘Not now, later on’, says Gerard when I suggest he’s do something that needs doing, like now…
I’m the opposite I love to get the unpleasant thing out of the way: like now!
I remember doing a public speaking course, the usual extempore speeches and and Five-Minute-Prepared ones…Whatever, I always put my hand up to be the first…I did not need to be nervous, and whilst I was speaking, no one was listening, They were all fretting about THEIR turn… 🙂
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Very clever ploy dearest H.
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I agree. A very clever ploy – and do the adjudicators give you credit for courage and get bored and tired by the time they get to those paralysed by fear at the end of the session ? I suspect so, H 🙂
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That is a desk to be proud of Therese. Bet you know where everything is too. Mind you I reckon mine currently could give you a run for its money. Much to think about here.
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Algy, I like to think I do know where everything is. But I am a master self-bullshitter and it takes sometimes ages for me to discover that my expectations about the whereabouts of item X … are misplaced – just like the item itself.
I do have some fairly rigid routines for the placement of key objects – like keys. Nothing worse than being unable to get Tim the Cabin Boy to school on time because I can’t quite locate the car keys. Worse – is the missing client contact details – FM wants to kill me. But she has to get in the line of would-be assassins – after me 🙂
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Seems all normal for many blokes. I can’t stand an untidy desk. Mine is always darn near perfect even when I am doing say three different jobs. Still, knowing there are things to do is far better than being totally oblivious to them.
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In case you are horrified at how smarty pants tidy I am – there is a secret. I have a huge desk bought at a bargain price and the kind you cannot get anywhere anymore. An old accountant’s desk with a glass top. All timber, weighs a ton. Has shelves, drawers and cupboards. It is amazing. And… as we are open plan I cannot leave it in a mess (not that I ever would). The other secret is that I cannot work in a mess so everything has its place and increasingly I store information on the computer. We have a huge library of real books and when I pluck one out I get the info and then put it back pretty promptly.
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So you don’t have two novels, a cryptic crossword, and a copy of ‘The Monthly’ next to the bed? (Plus a 4 D-cell maglite, with which to greet intruders)?
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No, because they are in the bathroom – the logical place of course ! (I think I mentioned my bathroom library to Helvi ages ago). I don’t read in bed any more because there is usually a bloke there either watching cricket or a foreign movie or he has already spread the papers out all over the bed and there is a dog there too !
Still I was out on the front verandah last night with my lcd torch chatting to the electricity guys who turned up, finally, at 10 pm to fix the blown transformer in the paddock next door. We had no power, no tele, no cooling, no nothing until 11 pm. They came back to check all was right and the poor blokes had masses of brown beetles inside their clothes and then we were all doing the beetles wiggle.
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Ah, there are no blokes watching cricket, here, so the bedroom is OK for reading. We don’t buy papers (all of the news is on-line), but the dog has taken up rsidence in our room on these hot days. Fergus wraps himself around the toilet in the ensuite, we assume because it is cool.
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It isn’t that bloody hard. It just looks like it might be ! Make a start by getting them into alpha. order in a big criss pile (just one big pile) first. Then pick up the As and then the first A as in Albury and then through to the rest of the As. Stick with the As and put in date order. All accounts which have not been paid should be given a coloured post-it sticker. Do one lot each day and so in a month they should all be sorted (though I’d have it done in a couple of hours at worst no doubt). Go to Office Works and get a solid file folder thingy. Take home. With thick texta mark each separator with the appropriate letter of the alphabet. If you have clients with A as the first letter and there are just a few separate by clipping togehter with a bulldog clip. If you have squillions you will need more folders. Now just start on the criss cross pile and don’t store it in the en-suite either.
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Not horrified at all by your tidy desk, Viv. Deeply envious.
Here’s another window into my world. I realise that I can work a lot better without clutter and I know at least notionally that I need to file and discard like a man possessed to get a tidy desk.
Say a standard document comes in the snail mail. Maybe a payment notice from a client. How should I file it ? By client ? Or in a “folder marked “receipts” ? By month ? Alphabetically by client ? Just thinking about it makes me tired. So I put it on the pile and …. hey, an Email from Hung has just arrived ….. and then …. I’m off after that rabbit. Crikey !
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Alphabetically by client name and file in date order.
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Are you doing anything this week, Viv ?
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I clicked the wrong reply – look above for answer.
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I think you are probably right, Viv. Males are four times more likely to have AD/HD than females. And females almost never have the hyper side. Fortunately I have only a little of that.
I think one core aspect of the problem – after identifying all the things that “have to be done” … is to attempt each one or at least start it as soon as the idea happens… and also to try to overlap tasks just because they pop up in the same spot. Overlapping – is not so hard to stop. And meditating is a good way to calm the hyperactivity.
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I can empathise…sounds like what I do on my days off. The days, or nights, that I work are far more organised. There are limited hours left over when I’m at work for 13 hours, so tend to be a bit more efficient.
For example, we’ve been in our ‘new’ house for over two years. The first month we were here I pulled a derelict retaining wall apart to sort out some drainage. Today, finally, I’ve reconstructed about a quarter of the wall. Fortunately I got to play with my new Stihl cordless chainsaw, which cut through big slabs of treated pine like butter. When will it be finished? Who knows. Depends how much buggerising around I do!
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Hi Big.
FM was speculating that our fairly large 1890 place has an unimaginable number of things that we must, should or could do to stop, slow or just live with it’s creaking old bones, rising and falling damp and desperate need for a fresh coat of paint. I agree, but I am chary to do a minimalist thing and head for a unit or townhouse because around the Inner West (which is where we want to live), we’d be giving up a lot of space and losing a lot of cash. Of which there is a current scarcity…… Sigh. If I was 27 years younger I wouldn’t find the mountain quite so high. I was taller then, or perhaps lacked foresight.
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Yes, one of the neighbors was hassling me quite a bit to get in and replace our fence, about a year ago. Thankfully his interest has waned…so has mine!
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So ! The benefit of a short attention span, or the expression of a slowly reasonable man ?
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Lack of cash and lack of interest!
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Must say your study looks a lot like mine too… though without the musical instruments, amplifiers and other more esoteric pieces of musical ‘kit’ scattered hither and yon…
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Must say it does sound very familiar Therese… but I have plenty of complexes already, thank you very much…
😉
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Fair points, both, Asty. This complex is mine. And I wouldn’t want to share it with anyone else. But FM insists on having a go at maintenance – for which I’m eternally grateful. What a gal !
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Dark chocolate, painstakingly shaved into a cup of hot milk with grated nutmeg. Shared with no-one, as FM is still asleep. Then back to bed.
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Fantastic ! That might just work. Many thanks.
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Very confessional and a bit like keeping track of what happens and then control the day’s aim before other things start to dominate. I suppose I am ‘normal’ although compared with H I am far from that. Things with age get better and calmer. Something to look forward to. What is that enormous clock doing rihht opposite the desk?
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Hi Gez. It’ an enormous clock ! Trying to remember that time is passing is really important for we of the frequently unfocussed and easily distracted.
Did you notice the tiny photo of Mom cradling Emmlet II when she was about six days old – and Mom was in her sixties ? That’s how I choose to remember Mom – as a really great Nan as well.
Sorry for the confessional tone. FM said she thought it was a plea for a sympathy vote or an expression of being a victim of circumstance.
I can see it could be read that way, but neither of those were my real motive. Or should I have said “was my real motive” …. Where the hell is Voice when we need her ?
I just wanted to stand back and record the random run of thoughts.
Recently FM and I had one of those major “talks”. I thought that I have been getting better and I wanted to ease off the rather expensive talking therapy. FM says I often present well – that is I can act – but she demurrred and wants me to fess up and get the paid help to suggest an alternative strategy. So the stream of consciousness – or confessional, if you like, just sprung out of my sudden realisation of what I was in fact up to…… I think it’s a useful piece of evidence. Or at least I hope so.
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Yes, I thought that was your mum and off spring but was a bit hesitant to ask. I suppose you have your priorities right with that picture. The bike mag. gives it all the focus of life going on. My bike magazine is the share market which is odd because I am not a materialist but have been fascinated with what makes it all tick and why that form of trading, originated by the Dutch, is such a world wide event played out every second of day and night all over the world.
Your recording of daily life is far more interesting and gives insight and help to many while my share-market hobby is far more selfish and perhaps a bit hypocritical seeing I often sneer at those billionaire captains of industry and mining. ( especially Andrew Forrest of FMG with his feigning love for aboriginals).
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Thanks for your generous reply, Gez. Cheers, Emm
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Have to get ready for our Christmas Party in Balmain…
Good story, Therese, will comment later….
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Emmjay, not Therese
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