
Ahem. Is this thing on. Hi. I’m not sure if you remember me but I used to work here ages ago. Then I left to write novels, which is what I’m still supposed to be doing but then there was a pandemic and the schools closed so now I’m an unqualified governess to two, shall we say, spirited children. I used to write a lot about them when they were little — their funny turns of phrase and how much they were teaching me as I muddled thorough early motherhood. But then they became bigger children, who can read and know what suing someone means, and I had to acknowledge that as such they had human rights, one of which was not to be mined for lols online by their attention-starved parent. That’s when the novels came into it.
Right now I’m struggling with the fiction writing, even though I’ve got a contract for more books. That’s a pretty terrifying thought. So I thought that I might dip back in here and waffle on a bit while the Havers of Human Rights work on some literacy and maths on all the computers we own (I’m writing this on my phone). I’ll try to talk more about me than them and my goodness what a treat that will be for you all.
A little catch up for the new kids: I’m Jess. I live in Sydney, with my husband H (that stands for husband, it’s not really his initial) and my children, known on here as May Blossom and Garnet. May Blossom is almost 11 and Garnet is 8 and a half. They are bright and funny and sensitive.
H runs a business from home, and is a very equal partner in the running of the house and our life. This fact means that I have a great deal of help with my wifely duties (not THOSE wifely duties), so it’s long been something of a mystery to me that I find it so unbearably hard to do all the things an adult is expected to do: help keep the house tidy and clean, cook, keep on top of grocery procurement, keep everyone in the correct size and warmth of clothes, not cry all the time, attend to the health of two cats, be a reasonable friend and daughter and aunt and sister, keep myself fed and exercised, attend to general life admin.
Last week I learned from a new psychiatrist that this is because I have ADHD. I am forty-two. You could have knocked me down with a feather. Then I would have lain on the ground staring at the ceiling rose for ages, and then googled what kind of feather it was, and then thought a lot about feathers and particularly about feather beds, and then spent some time recalling how interested I was in the bed fillings of the children in books I loved as a little girl. Laura Ingalls and Heidi both had hay-stuffed mattresses, which sounded cosy to me back then but which now I fear might be a bit prickly. I suppose it would depend on how thick the fabric they were stuffed into was. My parents had a mattress on their guest bed that was made of horse hair. Guests hated it.
Anyway, ADHD. I don’t know. It might explain some things. I’ve never had trouble sitting still class or at work. I’m pretty bloody sedentary for a diagnosis with “hyperactivity” in it. I did very well at primary school. High school was harder, and I definitely daydreamed a lot more than I listened (because MY STARS the Peloponnesian Wars were really just stunningly uninteresting. So many islands. So many naval sorties. Herodotus can get in the bin.)
Apparently one symptom of ADHD is that you’re fine concentrating on things you find interesting, it’s just boring stuff that your brain will go to any lengths to avoid. I thought that was just how brains worked. I’m still not a hundred per cent sure it’s not how everyone is and it’s just the weak and pathetic who can’t force themselves to just get through the tough stuff.
The doctor tells me that girls often manage fine with ADHD in primary school and even through parts of high school if they are quite smart (there’s a compliment in there somewhere), and it is true that once there was more required of me in life (what is colloquially termed “adulting” because what are the young people for if not the verbification of more or less everything) I started suffering from anxiety and depression.
Long story short (‘SHORT?’ I hear you scream. ‘We might have to have a bit of a chat about the meaning of short’): I haven’t done my tax, I’m struggling to sit down and write my book, and I’ve just started on some ADHD medication this week. What a time to restart a blog!
Now all that’s out of the way I will try to write more normal fun stuff for you every few days. Perhaps I’ll tell you about how H and I have been watching Line of Duty and now we amuse ourselves by speaking only in police jargon. Perhaps I’ll tell you about what I’m cooking. Perhaps I’ll talk more about Mattresses of Yore. If there are things you’d like me to talk about, leave me a comment on here or on Instagram. I love messages and comments. Mad for a chat, me.
It’s nice to be back.
Jess, you are and always have been amazing. Am sorry for the reason that you are back. But am very glad you are back.
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What a delightful surprise to see in my in box! Lovely to hear from you again. Please feel free to chat away on any idea you choose.
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When you were in your interested-in-bed-fillings stage I didn’t destroy your romantic illusions by telling you the truth about hay-filled mattresses. Now I can. They are diabolical. I first met one as a boy-soldier in the Australian army. They were called paliasses, and everyone had to sleep on them. Subsequent research revealed the reason: the defence department, in its ‘look after the pennies, and the billions of dollars will look after themselves’ (think submarines) approach to supply, had the just pensioned off all its horses, and it could think of no other use for all the left-over hay.
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Keen to hear more about wifely duties.
The Peloponnesian war was a great story! I mean, sucks if you died in it, but great history.
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Great to have you back! I have enjoyed your excursion into novels, but nice to have the blog back too.
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Super news! Welcome to the club. I found out (officially) about 2 years ago. I very much get the “isn’t that just how everyone’s brain works?” thing.
The best way I have found to explain ADHD is that it’s not a deficit of Attention. It’s an inability to Regulate your Attention. So feather vs. straw mattresses? FASCINATING. Doing your tax? Like trying to push a needle onto an oiled glass ball. It’s just impossible to keep straight on the task.
Anyway, glad I’ve discovered your blog, and I’ll be looking forward to reading more of it!
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Delighted to have the blog back! Love the books too, obvs, but it’s a treat to glimpse the mishaps, mayhem and … um, merriment?? Blanking on a cheerful m-word … of someone else’s day-to-day. X
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Oh yay! You’re back!
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I am so happy your blog is back! Thank you for writing for us, Jess.
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New reader here. Adore your writing style. It’s much like how I wish I could speak in my day-to-day life. I agree re your diagnosis ponderings and how brains work… if only women ruled the world, so much time would be saved trying to identify ‘problems’ and invested instead on actually solving them!
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I am glad to have found this blog. I knew there was a reason I liked you. I have finally booked to see a psychologist about my interesting brain. At 53, married to a husband with obvious (undiagnosed) ADHD (of the hyperactive body kind) and mother of two diagnosed with ADHD, both expressed differently again, I figured it might be time to untangle the knots of my own brain. I mean it’s probably nothing (selective mute until 10, high IQ, excellent at languages failed every other HSC subject, and OH so much more 😄)… I can’t wait to hear more Jess wisdom. Welcome back, although I never knew you were gone.
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Welcome back! I see this in my own daughter now…
I think she’s quite clever and she has been described as ‘bored’ by educators. constantly in trouble at school for doing her own thing…
ADHD makes more sense now.
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Fifi diagnosed me with ADHD last year (based on my behaviour matching her two friends at school with official diagnosis). Life has been full of inviting rabbitholes worth diving down to avoid the boring-most-things. I may look calm on the outside but inside I’m a hyperactive ferret. One day if I am well organised enough I shall get to a psyche for an actual diagnosis.
It’s lovely to have you back with gusto. Me gusta mucha.
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Hello, I am reading one of your novels atm and thoroughly enjoy it – “How to be Second Best”. I read the inside cover and found info about your blog and now here i am. I enjoy your writing and reading your blog i am with you with the verbification of things and “Mum-ing”. I enjoy your outloud thinking and have similar interests / thoughts about stuff. I hope that you are ok and will keep writing your blog. A bright spot for us all 😉
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