The way I see it, I never actually had depression. I was sad-ish and struggling with life in a way that caused me to get full marks on a depression self- assessment questionnaire, but that was because of the ADHD. So when every time I got told I had depression, the attempts at treatment did nothing, it was because I was being treated for a symptom without anything being done about the underlying cause. Stick 30mg of Elvanse into me every day, and hey presto I'm no longer depressed at all.
The way I see it, I never actually had depression. I was sad-ish and struggling with life in a way that caused me to get full marks on a depression self- assessment questionnaire, but that was because of the ADHD. So when every time I got told I had depression, the attempts at treatment did nothing, it was because I was being treated for a symptom without anything being done about the underlying cause. Stick 30mg of Elvanse into me every day, and hey presto I'm no longer depressed at all.
Oh hey that's the article that lead to me getting diagnosed! I read this right after coming back to work after a long COVID furlough. I had been finding it really hard to be back at work and was seeing a therapist for depression (again) then read this and realised that it had actually definitely been ADHD the whoooole time and the current problem was the complete atrophy of all my coping mechanisms after so much time not using them.
Depending on how long it's been since you've played, they've changed the rules probably like between two and five times since then, so you'd have to learn how to play pretty much from scratch anyway!
I'm an Elvanse (Vyvanse for Americans) user, unfortunately. I don't tolerate Methylphenidate well (they made me try like four different versions of it first before they'd give me the Elvanse) and as far as I know there is a shortage on just about all Dexamphetamine based medications.
The medication shortage has had me acutely aware of my ADHD this past month, does that count?
As far as I can tell, the "problem" is that the dresscode states that the student's hair can't extend below his eyebrows or ear lobes "at any time". So, hypothetically, if this student took his hair down out of the braids, it would be longer than the dresscode allowed.
This, of course, is fucking stupid reasoning. The school probably just doesn't like this hairstyle - because racism - and is choosing to use an overly literal reading of the rule to try to force the student to change it.
This game was already a 10 out of 10 for me, and now to see the amount of support the devs are still putting into it? There's been like a million headlines recently talking about how Baldur's Gate 3 is setting examples for what a good game release can look like, and I Dave the Diver deserves very similar praise.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to claim my way is the only or even the best way! A thousand debates have been had over the "correct" Cosmere reading order, and I personally think there is basically no "wrong" order.
I've just found that the people I know who started with Mistborn, often struggled to get into Elantris and/or Warbreaker. I don't think it's unfair to say that they are not as breezy a read as Mistborn. And that telling them "it's a shared universe! You just gotta read these two other 600-page books before that starts mattering" is kind of a hard sell.
So my take in this is that yes, some parts of Secret History make more sense if you've read Elantris and Warbreaker, but; Elantris and Warbreaker are relatively hard sells for the more casual reader, kind of hard to get into, in my experience.
I've found that giving new readers Secret History first, pulling back the Cosmere curtain just a little, gives them a reason to want to read Elantris and Warbreaker.
Looks great! I think artichokes are severely under-rated as a vegetable option on pizzas.
Yes, they do! They both take place in the same universe, called the "Cosmere", on different planets. There are several other works of Sanderson's that are also in this universe, though not everything he's written. You can read most stuff as standing on its own perfectly fine, but the further you get into the books, the more connections start to appear.
Sanderson has a page on his website explaining some more for newcomers: https://www.brandonsanderson.com/what-is-the-cosmere/
If you are reading Mistborn with the intention of continuing on to Sanderson's other Cosmere works afterwards, I would highly suggest reading Mistborn: Secret History after you finish The Hero of Ages. I like to say it's like a "Nick Fury showing up in the post-credits scene of Iron Man" moment, where you really first get a glimpse of how the various different stories and series are connected.
I've found that hot and active sorting do not create the most enjoyable feed experience for me. I currently have my sorting set to top>6 hours, which I like much better. It means my feed does not change that much over time, so if you're opening Lemmy frequently for a couple of minutes of browsing, it doesn't really work. But I generally only come here during my commute, so twice a day for a longer period of browsing, and it works really well for that.
I'm a big fan of the comic it's based on, and found myself struggling to get past how much they changed. I can see on a more objective level that the movie is great on its own merits, and actually kind of wish I could have watched it without the baggage of my expectations, existing knowledge etc.