Opinion

The relief of adult ADHD recognition

"The trouble with anxiety is that the grooves were carved in your brain a long time ago. Your rational mind can’t just smooth them out with reason."

Central Park, New York

Central Park: soothing the pressure of being in NYC. Photo: @createsima / freeimages.com

For some, extreme sports is leaping into a canyon attached to a rubber rope or swimming with sharks. For others, it is opening the front door and walking out.

I am nearer the latter. After 18 months in my attic, followed by a couple of months touring UK bookshops, I am back in the business of touring the world with Professor Brian Cox. My job is to interrupt him at moments of audience peak confusion and occasionally read a poem. I have gone no further than Belfast since March 2020, but now there are far wider seas to cross and it is making me anxious.

Like many in lockdown, isolation and lack of distraction led to a discovery that was staring me in the face for decades but which I had managed to elude. In August last year, Jamie Knight, co-host of the podcast 1800 Seconds on Autism, contacted me. We had never met, but he had been following my work for a while. We had a long chat after which he said, “You do realise that every answer you have given strongly points to you having ADHD.”

It is something audience members have been saying to me for years, but I have brushed it aside out of the fear that it would look like I was showing off. At the same time, as Jamie broke it down, it made total sense on many levels. 

It provided a moment of strenuous clarity. I thought I’d better tell my wife this had been suggested. I expected her to be unimpressed. Instead, she welcomed it.

Her reaction was, “That would be brilliant. See, because I’ve always thought you were bipolar.”  

I have still not had an official diagnosis and I am not sure if I will, but it did make me decide to see if I could find something to quieten the incessant voice in my head. 

Unfortunately, I started the SSRIs a few weeks before the tour, not realising that they drag you down before they show you any light. Having spent such a long time surrounded by the familiar, by quietness and birdsong and now blossom, returning to the touring world, to the noise of cramped and frantic life all around us, seemed threatening. I felt like the first passenger of automated steam travel, fretting that the speed of the world would atomise me.

The trouble with anxiety is that the grooves were carved in your brain a long time ago. Your rational mind can’t just smooth them out with reason. The anxiety imagination is both fertile and comes from an old bit of the brain that might not even understand language. 

After much thought and worry, I did send an email to two of the people I will be travelling with, just to admit that my anxiety is peaking of late. It will not cure it, but maybe it will reduce just a bit of the internal pressure. I received a friendly email back reminding me that we will be in Central Park on Wednesday night punching each other in the sunlight, and possibly watched over by the Mad Hatter too. 

My mind played a series of unhelpful sketches of fleeing from the airport terminal or going insane on the flight (maybe I should say “visibly insane”). 

At 6.30am, I reached the airport. Nine hours later, I was lying on a bed in Manhattan, listening to honking drivers and machinery of the city. I turn on the television. I am straight into one of those medical adverts that lists every possible distressed bowel movement, angry rash or aneurysm this miracle cure may cause as it attempts to heal you by killing you another way.

If you don’t supply your own anxiety, the advertising industry can always help you out if the 24-hour news channel hasn’t got you already.

Worrying about tomorrow’s long car journey to Washington DC, I remind myself that I have done this
all before and I can do this all again.

It’s showtime! 

Robin Ince is an author and broadcaster
@robinince

This article is taken from The Big Issue magazine, which exists to give homeless, long-term unemployed, marginalised and vulnerable people the opportunity to earn an income.

You can support them by buying a magazine. If you cannot reach local your vendor, you can still click HERE to subscribe to The Big Issue today or give a gift subscription to a friend or family member.

You can also purchase one-off issues from The Big Issue Shop or The Big Issue app, available now from the App Store or Google Play.

Support the Big Issue

For over 30 years, the Big Issue has been committed to ending poverty in the UK. In 2024, our work is needed more than ever. Find out how you can support the Big Issue today.
Vendor martin Hawes

Recommended for you

View all
Billionaires are making a killing during cost of living crisis – we can't afford to accept this
Daisy Pearson

Billionaires are making a killing during cost of living crisis – we can't afford to accept this

Christopher Eccleston on his love affair with running: 'I always feel better after a run'
Christopher Eccleston

Christopher Eccleston on his love affair with running: 'I always feel better after a run'

Healthcare for trans youth is a human right – it should matter to us all
trans rights human rights
Chiara Capraro

Healthcare for trans youth is a human right – it should matter to us all

A lifetime of playing the imitation game has reaped rewards
John Bird

A lifetime of playing the imitation game has reaped rewards

Most Popular

Read All
Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits
Renters: A mortgage lender's window advertising buy-to-let products
1.

Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal
Pound coins on a piece of paper with disability living allowancve
2.

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over
next dwp cost of living payment 2023
3.

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over

Strike dates 2023: From train drivers to NHS doctors, here are the dates to know
4.

Strike dates 2023: From train drivers to NHS doctors, here are the dates to know