>>16471933>still going to have troublein a way yea, idk a lot about those conditions but i'm pretty sure they're chronic, maybe some meds can lessen some symptoms but there's no full cure so ultimately you basically have to live with it, the only thing i'd add to that is the story of this "eceleb" who has severe autism, basically he started his career by trying to do esports interviews but he'd get so nervous that no matter how much he rehearsed if he got too flustered and had to think for more than 1 second he'd abruptly cut the interview short and leave, but he worked on managing his autism a lot, he got better and better and now he hosts international tournaments and does other longform content and you can't even tell that he's autistic, so i think even if things like autism and adhd objectively make some things way more challenging, i don't necessarily consider them limits
>a case by case thing ... What goes for the majority still doesn't go for everybodyright, just because some approach is best for most people doesn't mean you should try to shoehorn it into your own life too, for me though when i see that study and how different researchers keep replicating it over and over, it looks like strong evidence for the benefits of a growth mindset
>Might just be one of those things in life that depend on luck, more than anything else.yea cause as a kid you don't really have control over how you're raised and all those environmental factors that can affect how you learn and grow up and the way you see the world and obviously you don't have control over your genetics either, some people are born with adhd and some aren't
>In my situationyea hard to know, probably even impossible honestly, but i think in some instances like this one ultimately it's not really relevant since you can't change it and even if you know what caused the attention issues, the cause probably doesn't affect the prescription, general prescription, not necessarily meds, charlim