 Good morning, John. So, you might remember that when I was a little kid, I was diagnosed with a learning disability, a sensory dysfunction. Basically, sensory disorders are when you either have a hard time dealing with the information you have coming into you, or you have too much information and you're not getting enough information. And when I say information here, I'm talking about stuff coming into your senses. Not like stuff you're learning, but just everything coming at you all the time. If I'd been born 10 years later, I probably would have been additionally or alternately diagnosed with ADHD. I can't say for sure, of course, but when I was 7 years old, which is the average age for an ADHD diagnosis, attention deficit disorders just weren't being diagnosed or discussed as much. I definitely had symptoms that don't fit into the attention deficit box, but are sometimes overlapping conditions, like mild dyslexia and motor control problems. On the other hand, I definitely do have some attention issues. Schedules can be really frustrating for me. I have a hard time being in a place where I'm supposed to be at the right time. Everyone who works with me can tell you that. I'm sorry, everyone. When I am able to focus on things, which is actually pretty frequently, I get really focused and when I am forced to disengage from that focus, I get irrationally angry. I'm always searching for new things to create. You might have also noticed that. And I wear holes really fast in my socks because my toes never stop moving. They're going right now. I've gotten pretty good at managing these things with the help of friends and family and tutors and teachers and thank God, an assistant now. How did I ever function without help? But I still often hurt people's feelings or annoy them by going somewhere else in my head when people that I care about are talking to me. As I've previously said, I'm often late for stuff, which makes people think that I don't care about them. Sometimes I have very difficult to control flashes of rage and grocery lines. But here's a general thing about psychological disorders, which we're discussing now on our new channel SciShow Psych, by the way. Disorders are only classified as disorders when they're ongoing, frustrating impairments. And I, especially now, am less impaired by the different way that my brain maybe works. That's because of great support from family and from teachers, and it's because I've gotten myself into situations where the different way that my brain works is actually maybe an advantage rather than a hindrance. And it's also because of, like, economics. My parents took me to a handwriting therapist who was like, can you get this kid a computer? Because he needs to learn how to type. Like, this person is a professional person who makes people write better, and they were like, get this child a computer. And the fact that getting a computer was an option for my family back in, like, the 80s, and that then I had this tool in my home that none of my other classmates had that allowed me to develop a skill set that none of my other classmates had. All those things are huge. There's kind of two parts to minimizing the negative effects of your brain not working normal. Changing the environment to suit the brain. And then there's improving the functionality of the brain itself through things like medication or mindfulness or exercise. Because of the advantages I've had, I've been pretty successful at doing that first thing. Which means I kind of maybe didn't ever have a hard enough time to look into the second thing. So do I have ADHD? Maybe. But I am definitely dedicated to doing my best to understand my own shortcomings and to develop techniques and habits to deal with them. And I've learned some of those habits by living inside of my own body. But I've learned others from people who have ADHD and are talking openly and honestly about it. And also from people who work with people with attention disorders. I think by now I've gotten through the hardest parts of living in my brain, you know? Like figuring out how to cope for all the ways in which my mind isn't perfect for the situations it finds itself in. I am proud of that. I think that it took a lot of hard work, but it also took a lot of help. Help that I got in spades because of my economic advantages because I was diagnosed with a sensory processing disorder early on and I had a lot of great tutors. In short, I've been very lucky and I've had lots of help. If you think that you might have ADHD, I have a video to recommend for you. It's very good. It was the thing that inspired me to make this. Figuring out how to live in your own mind and your own body is like the task of your life. And there's no reason to think that you have to take that on alone. John, I'll see you on Tuesday. This, by the way, is the reason why there is blue paint all over my hoodie.