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Jenn O'Tool | Unicorn Drops's avatar

This was so good -- and complex...I think I need to read it again. My best friend's daughter (34 now) spent her late HS and College years attempting to mask and self-medicate her myriad mental health issues with cannabis and other random drugs. She's been "on the verge" more times than I'm sure I'm aware of.

She was 30 before she was able to tolerate the process of assessment and diagnoses and the arduous path to identifying which meds cocktail would help more than hinder her mental health stabilization. By the grace of god, she white knuckled her way through a nursing degree, which had always been her dream, and now feels stronger having a clearer sense of her purpose. And perhaps also a greater appreciation for what she overcame to get there.

And your writing itself is both raw and beautiful - I admire your expression of emotional depth!

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Jenn McRae's avatar

This means a lot to me, Jenn. My biggest motivation after my own processing is to write pieces that others can find themselves (or loved ones) in. In particular at the intersection of neurodivergence and women's mental health. I have a new piece coming out on Wednesday about how hormones play into all this. It's all so under-discussed and poorly understood. And can quite literally ruin lives for not getting the appropriate care.

I honestly believe if I'd been properly medicated for ADHD from my teens a significant majority of the most traumatic things that have happened in my life -- in particular these episodes -- wouldn't have. I can barely breathe thinking about what that means at scale when we know that 1/4 - 1/8 people have neurosensitivities but *less than half* know that they do. So many people, especially women, are, like your friend's daughter, just white knuckling it through their own lives.

Humans don't come with owner's manuals. If no one every explains that your normal is 'not normal' you can end up doing life on hard mode for no good reason other than your sensitivity hasn't been properly named and supported. It's just... heartbreaking.

I wish all the beautiful things for your friend's daughter. Especially that she finds the supports that work for her.

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