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How ADHD Shows Up Differently in Boys and Girls

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  If you grew up in the era when ADHD meant “the kid who couldn’t sit still,” you were handed a definition built around boys. Boys who climbed the furniture. Boys who blurted. Boys who ran laps around the classroom rug. But ADHD never belonged to boys alone. It just looked different in girls — and because it looked different, it was missed. The Boy Pattern We All Recognized For decades, the diagnostic image of ADHD was a hyperactive boy. Not because boys “have more ADHD,” but because their symptoms were louder: Visible impulsivity — interrupting, grabbing, acting before thinking Motor hyperactivity — constant motion, fidgeting, climbing Externalizing behavior — frustration that comes out as noise or disruption Teachers noticed. Parents noticed. Doctors noticed. And so boys were diagnosed. The Girl Pattern We Didn’t See Girls often present with a quieter form of ADHD — not less real, just less disruptive to the adults around them. Common patterns in girls include: Inattentive sy...

πŸŒ… Avoiding Regrets in Later Life (Do it now. It’s not too late.)

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  There’s a myth that aging automatically brings wisdom. Sometimes it just brings hindsight — and hindsight is a noisy roommate. The older we get, the more we realize that regret doesn’t come from what we did ; it comes from what we postponed until the moment passed. The trip we meant to take. The apology we meant to make. The class we meant to sign up for. The story we meant to write. We tell ourselves we’ll do it “when things settle down.” But life never settles — it rearranges. The truth is, later life isn’t the end of the story; it’s the last act with the best lighting. We finally see what matters. We finally know what we want. And we finally have the authority to say yes without asking permission. So do it now — whatever “it” is. Start the project. Call the friend. Learn the language. Plant the garden. Dance badly. Say the thing you’ve been rehearsing in your head for twenty years. You don’t need more time. You need less hesitation. Because the only real regret in later lif...

πŸ›️ How My Cat Made Me a Better Shopper

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  I used to shop like a normal person — impulsively, optimistically, and occasionally foolishly. Then I started living with a cat. Now every purchase passes through a feline audit. Here’s what my cat taught me about retail wisdom: If it crinkles, it’s gold. My cat ignores expensive toys and goes straight for the paper bag. I learned that value isn’t in the price tag — it’s in the joy it brings. Test before you commit. Cats sniff, paw, and circle before lying down. I now read reviews, compare prices, and ask myself, “Would I actually nap here?” Buy less, enjoy more. Cats don’t hoard. They curate. One sunny spot, one favorite blanket, one perfect box. I’ve learned that minimalism isn’t deprivation — it’s discernment. Never shop hungry. A cat on an empty stomach will make bad decisions (like chewing the plant). I’ve learned the same applies to humans in the snack aisle. Quality over novelty. Cats can spot cheap fabric from across the room. I’ve stopped buying things th...