Doubt

Russell Kramer Avatar

Note: I am writing tired and with a headache. Something AI will never do. Soak it in. It is human.
Note note: My lack of professionalism is emerging from the sensation that nobody is reading this, reading my book or interacting with these efforts.

Should I stop talking about ADHD meds?

You don’t hear the story of the non-failures/Non-successes that drift into obscurity. If you are hearing that story, it did not drift off. It drifted to you.

There are two judgements to make toward the reaction of creative efforts in the age of virality-for-metric-of-value:

1: It just hasn’t taken yet – be patient
2: It’s not valuable.

Wait… Let’s adjust these points.

  1. It’s not valuable yet
  2. Be patient.

Still maybe.

Following publication, I came out like a matador’s bull out the cage when I published my book. I work for myself full time and released my book at a calm in a life/reality storm. I did everything I could with the resources I had. I believe that. But I also may very well have been bucking back and forth, kicking up dust. Now the bull is starting to realize, he might be in a ring, setup to do this and it’s rare that a bull gets the fighter.

And still, I chose to advocate against a leviathan force, societal agreement of the full acceptance as pharmaceuticals for mental alignment. If I had just written something fun, I would just be carrying my story along with me. But I have chosen to try to shepherd with my efforts, a conversation. A dialogue that I am not capable of completing on my own. A dialogue I think a lot of people don’t want to have. A conversation that is readily dismissed by the community that enjoys medication for ADHD and seen as not interesting to those who aren’t a part of the constant online ADHD dialogue (and good for them).

Taking meds for ADHD is the topic and my media leans toward anti-med rhetoric. I took them for over a decade’s time and had a serious affair with the meds. They were a big part of my life and quitting them was as life changing as any other divorce.

Talk to me on them – “They enrich my life. Help me creatively, give me a spark and bypass an error in the wiring of my brain”

Talk to me off them – “Those medications left me worse than they found me. I forever deal with the fallout of learning how to focus and work, later in life. From a ‘productivity’ standpoint, I vary in levels of living in the shadow of an unrealistic expectation of productivity. Those drugs are dangerous. Taking them messed with my brain and I have to rewire it”

For more of what “me off them” has to say about it, here’s the book.

How am I supposed to shepherd this discussion?

My only visible credential is the willingness to follow through with the writing of a book and some blips of digital media. Media that as of lately, with the introduction of effort have tended to come off as desperate and try-hard.

Making small clips that all seem to have some value and put them up against a seemingly imaginary machine that dictates what gets seen on the phone. The phone we all spend so much time looking at.

I make these clips and they get very little interaction on the phone and they took a significant effort to create.

I have to be honest with myself, maybe I should stop doing it. Let things steep. Make what I feel like making, when I feel like making it, and when it’s a reasonable time to do it. It’s not carrying the dialogue forward.

If I was meant for tiktok and reels, would the environment of using the app frustrate me as much as it does?

I am enjoying this – writing this.

Pointing my camera at myself to pretend like I am ignorant, and then correcting myself is a behavior that does not feel innate in me. But it feels like I am ringing the same bell over and over, in different areas to see if it makes worms come up in the dirt. That bell that sings “TAKE A CLOSER LOOK AT THE PHENOMENON OF ADHD MEDICATION”

And because that message is obviously unpopular amongst the ADHD-med-taking community, I have arrived at an audience (ADHD) with a message (Maybe ease it on the amphetamine) that is unwelcome. The media I create has a category to be filed under, but it is placed underneath most everything else because the notion it dictates is seen as misinformative, non-self-affiming, disruptive and borderline conspiratorial. It invites users of a medication to be in conflict with their use.

Media is changing faster and faster. The way it’s created and the way we consume it. Mostly, what is delivered to everyone. If I see things I want to challenge on my algorithmic media table, it is because I enjoy resisting it. The algorithm has gotten so much better at this job. Before, when I posted content about ADHD meds, I would regularly invite argument and discourse in the comments section.

Now, people don’t come back against me, the people who would are not shown the argument I am making or they completely ignore it because my videos aren’t passing the snuff test in terms of production value or base content to even reach scrutiny. People who like my stuff, if all goes well, only do for a short period because they quit the drugs and move on with their lives.

Grateful I feel about how posting lots of little shorts went for the month. It really showed me someways I do not want to create. I don’t want to create desperately, rapidly, trendy and I do not have to. This has shown me that posting rapidly doesn’t work for me, therefore, I can stop doing it. I think a good, valuable video was posted one out of every four or so videos I posted. That should probably dictate the ratio of posting for this kind of thing.

I could see a path where I could easily lose touch with my intent, my story and my subject and get lost in the creation of videos without considering what I am even saying. I can’t get lost in the medium. Back to the message. Also, it’s gotta be okay to talk about things other than one subject. This “niche paralysis.” I can’t begin to imagine creators of this kind of viral work find themselves under.

So I can be prepared for the matador to come at me if he does, but I think rushing at his flag makes me more vulnerable and tired.


4 responses

  1. rememberplants

    I love you man.

    You really poured yourself into all this, and I think it was for right reason and proper motivation that set you off to do so. Now, I believe you have bigger fish to fry, and where that actually is I don’t know, but maybe giving this all some space to settle will be good. Trust me, I wanted you to be on rogan and all the others getting interviewed and sticking it to the machine and all the rest, AND as you mentioned, you are tired from the incessant treadmill of viral video efforts… I can’t blame you and I am all the while impressed by how much you cranked out.

    What do you WANT to do? What feels like the next steps, with our without the subject of what you wrote about?

    >

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    1. Russell Kramer

      I love you too brother. Thank you for this support. I am learning a lot. One thing is how slow this process may be. I think by taking my eyes of social media, I can migrate to areas better suited for what I have to say and how I have to say it. With that, the answers should show themselves.

      I have been very bogged down with “what I feel like I should be doing” I think I have to unearth what I actually am called to do. Or even as you put it, what I want to do. I like making things, I like writing, but there is more to who I am than someone who talks about ADHD and meds. I even started a book-binding project over the weekend 🙂

      I am glad I went so hard in making reels and such and in a way, relieved that it didn’t take off, that would have obliged me to make them for eternity.

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  2. Susan

    I’m the mum of a 30 year old son who has came back home in September 23 to come off Vyvanse (and the alcohol that went with it) and it’s has been so difficult to find resources on the internet about what he is going through. Your YouTube videos helped me hugely and I’ve only just discovered your blog here which is also tremendously helpful. My son is in a deep depression, bit of suicidal ideation, no energy, not working, says no to nearly every suggestion except a walk in nature most days. It’s hard going and I’m starting to feel the weight of it now. He was taking it for over 3 years after an adhd diagnosis, adderal for the first year, took excess of both. Said it was a deal with the devil.

    Anyways the reason for your book not being read, at the moment anyway, I wonder if the shit has still to hit the fan. I struggled so much to find a single thing on amphetamine withdrawal. Not like benzo or opiates, there’s tons on that. Maybe the cat hasn’t come out of the bag with amphetamines yet. Maybe it will be next and the whole idea of children being put on these will seem as ridiculous to us one day as the old adverts for opiate lozenges in the 1920s. Also are people even reading books these days. I Would you consider an audio version?
    A huge thank you, and much much love and well wishes to you. It’s been a Herculean task taking in the enormity of the spell of conditioning people are under.

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    1. Russell Kramer

      Susan. Thanks for your comment.

      I am grateful that the resources I have created have been helpful. It helps me to remember that I should keep going.
      There is truly something faustian about the whole thing.
      I appreciate your considerations and I also do believe what I really need to write is a guide to getting off the meds and living med free. My story is helpful, but the guide is next.

      I really want to create an audio version but I am looking for the time between an already busy life. it is on the list.

      You are a good mom.

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