What's it like to go through life with ADHD? To fail over and over again? To be criticized for poor performance or inattention to details? To wonder why you are so different from other people? To hide your feelings and pretend you're okay?
Many books describe individuals with ADHD. They state the problems--the inattention, distractibility, impulsivity, hyperactivity, disorganization, difficulty managing time, and more. But we don't see the resolution, the changes, the outcomes for this person. We never find out how these individuals cope or conquer their difficulties--if they do.
Bob Ossler struggled with ADHD all his life although he didn't know that term until later in life. In school, he knew he was different, weird even. His red curly hair, his myriads of freckles, his sometimes inappropriate behavior, and his poor academic performance made him the brunt of vicious teasing by peers.
He didn't learn in school; he learned in spite of school. In class, his oral presentation skills earned him A's; written work earned him F's. Clearly, he was an atypical student. Nevertheless, he graduated from high school and joined the military where he trained first as an x-ray technician, then a psychology technician, and finally, an emergency medical technician. After the military, he joined the Chicago Fire Department and became a paramedic/firefighter and air-sea rescue diver.
While employed full-time with the CFD, Ossler enrolled in seventeen years of part-time study to become an ordained pastor and chaplain to fulfill his desire to comfort hurting people. In 2001, he served as volunteer chaplain in New York City after the September 11th terrorist attacks. He describes his experiences at Ground Zero in his book, Triumph Over Terror.
How did Ossler manage all that when he barely scraped through high school?
ADHD brought him difficulties with learning in traditional settings, but it gifted him with high energy, insatiable curiosity, an incredible memory, the ability to hyper focus in high-stakes situations, a vivid imagination, a competitive spirit, a willingness to take risks, and a compassionate heart.
In his mid-thirties, by chance, he heard Dr. Edward Hallowell on talk radio describing the behaviors of a person with ADD. Ossler recognized himself. He tracked down Hallowell's book, Driven to Distraction, and read it from cover to cover multiple times. "That's me. I have attention deficit disorder."
Assuming a label didn't solve his problem, but it provided a measure of relief. He had a nameable problem; other people had this problem, too. He was not alone.
Walk with Bob Ossler from kindergarten through adult learning situations. What did he think? How did he feel? How did he learn? What strategies did he discover to take himself from failure to success? Ossler shares all that in this book.
Coauthor Janice Hall Heck served as writing mentor as Bob Ossler worked through his failures and successes in life. Together they pulled out the principles that helped him learn. This is a book of hope--you can be successful even though you have ADHD.