Executive Functioning & Diseases of Aging


Please read this important blog post on Health and spread the word. Thanks!

ADD . . . and-so-much-more

A Humanitarian Problem
short-sighted at best – unconscionable at worst

© Madelyn Griffith-Haynie, CTP, CMC, ACT, MCC, SCAC
part of the Executive Functioning Series

This might be the most important post I have ever written
(out of 500+ information-dense articles).
It applies to every single one of us,
so I hope you will take the time to read it all.

A tragic implication of Boiling Frog Syndrome

As I began in an article as part of the Executive Functioning Series, two Mondays ago [How well do you REALLY function?], when things decline gradually we tend to accommodate the accumulation of difficulties until we are struggling to cope and practically desperate for help.

Found HERE

Before I continue with a Series of articles designed to describe and discuss EF struggles, what’s involved, and explain what you can do to mitigate the effects (before, during and after they develop)

View original post 2,562 more words

5 thoughts on “Executive Functioning & Diseases of Aging

  1. Hi, I know a bit about executive functioning issues, I have ADD, but I made it through university and did well. The funny thing is that most people don’t have a clue what it’s like to have these issues. People often complain about the “way” I do things because my brain is wired differently. They don’t understand and then I get depressed.

Comments are closed.