• @gazby@lemmy.world
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    548 months ago

    The trick is to have the things obstruct the door, so you’re forced to become consciously aware of them as you leave. Nothing short of that (or a spreadsheet for packing if you’re going overnight) works for me.

    • Seraph
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      368 months ago

      What idiot put this thing in front of the door? Oh well off to where I need to go!

    • @xpinchx@lemmy.world
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      198 months ago

      But wait, you forgot your coffee. Go back inside, set the important thing down, get your coffee and lock up.

      I swear ADHD is like life in hard mode sometimes.

      • @Zink@programming.dev
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        58 months ago

        There was a meme I saw on Lemmy a while back that said undiagnosed ADHD is like having life set to hard mode but you and everybody else think you’re set to easy mode.

        Getting a diagnosis and/or treatment doesn’t change the fact that you’re on hard mode, but at least you know what you need to tackle.

      • @ZoopZeZoop@lemmy.world
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        18 months ago

        I bring a satchel with me when I leave the house. I leave it in the car 99% of the time, but it has my sunglasses, sanitizer, umbrella, etc. in it. So, it’s helpful to bring along. I toss my keys in it and whatever the important thing is. If the important this is too big, I wrap the strap of the satchel around the thing or wind the strap around some part of it. I still forget things sometimes, but this has helped me significantly.

    • @kozy138@lemm.ee
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      58 months ago

      That’ll be the one time I decide to use my front door instead of garage door on the morning lol

    • @FoxyFerengi@lemm.ee
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      38 months ago

      This is why I have magnets on my door. So if it’s something like a form or an envelope to mail, I can stick it right over the doorknob

    • @Signtist@lemm.ee
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      28 months ago

      I always put my keys on anything I need to remember, since they’re the last thing I grab before I head out, and I can’t lock the door or start the car without them. If it’s more of a concept, I write it on a post-it, then put the keys on that.

  • @Phen@lemmy.eco.br
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    518 months ago

    I’ll never forget the day I went out to the grocery store a couple blocks down and thought it was a good idea to also take the trash out.

    I took the trash to the grocery store.

  • @bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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    208 months ago

    This is relatable. In my experience, the only way to prevent is to make it literally impossible to leave for the place without bonking into the thing. Like don’t put the thing next to the door, put it in front of the door.

  • @pyrflie@lemm.ee
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    198 months ago

    Gets to the door. “Ok, I remember there was something I HAVE to bring … … What was it again?”

    • Dandroid
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      148 months ago

      “Hm. If I can’t remember, it must not have been important”

      “FUCK IT WAS MY PASSPORT”

  • Dr. Coomer
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    98 months ago

    I don’t understand how it happens every time. EVERY TIME.

  • @jose1324@lemmy.world
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    78 months ago

    Is this a case of everybody just saying that it’s ADHD or nah? Because I don’t think I have it but this is pretty familiar

    • @nicetomeetyouIMVEGAN@lemmings.world
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      8 months ago

      Adhd-ers aren’t living in alien bodies, we’re all uniquely human. The problem with adhd is in the executive function of the brain. So we make certain human mistakes others (can) also make to the point where it becomes a disorder. In this case to all the things that have to do with executive functions. Looks different for everyone and there are many different expressions of the disorder.

      So you can relate? Okay now imagine this happening everyday multiple times a day with things big and small. The other day I wanted to put lotion on my face so I put toothpaste on my gf toothbrush. It’s harmless and small most of the time, but it’s constant and you have to work hard to overcome it.

    • @LwL@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      There are a lot of things ppl seem to ascribe to adhd that aren’t (and also it often depends on the severity/frequency whether it’s normal or not) but also symptoms for different mental afflictions often overlap and distinguishing between them can be hard. So it’s very possible something is related to adhd, but someone experiences the same issue without having adhd.

      I have no idea if this particular issue is related to adhd though, but doesn’t seem unlikely.

    • @cybirdman@lemmy.ca
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      38 months ago

      I swear more than once I put a thing resting on the door so I would have to take it when leaving but I somehow moved it and left without…

    • @Comment105@lemm.ee
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      28 months ago

      Put thing in front of the door, not beside it. Make yourself have to move it away to move on without it.

      • @Zink@programming.dev
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        18 months ago

        Yesss, I feel so seen!

        Don’t put the thing in an easy to remember spot, or an easy to find spot. Put it in an inevitable spot. It has to be physically impossible to leave without it.

        Small items can go in front of the door, or put the keys with them, ideally clipped on with a carabiner. Large items have to either block the door, or go in the car ahead of time immediately when I think of it.

        Combine this with a wife who is a pro at losing things, and if something is in her way she’ll move it to the nearest open flat surface with no time or reason.

  • @nova@lemmy.world
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    68 months ago

    “Thing thing thing remember to bring the thing” “I always forget things, but not this time because I’m thinking about thing” “I must have ADHD for always forgetting to bring things” “How do other people just remember things?” “There’s a bunch about me that’s different from other people, probably from my undiagnosed ADHD” “Like how I can’t focus during conversations because my mind drifts” “And how I…”

    2 minutes later

    “I forgot the thing”

  • @Zink@programming.dev
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    68 months ago

    Having a mnemonic helps me with routine everyday things, though one-time things require the “attach keys or block door” method.

    What I have settled on for routine items is a numbered list. Nothing complicated to remember. Just which item is which number.

    When I get ready to leave my house, or stand up to leave work, it goes like this counting in my head:

    1, 2: work phone and personal phone in one pocket

    3, 4: wallet and keys in the other pocket

    5, 6: watch on my left wrist and water bottle in my right hand

    [7, 8]: if necessary: wireless earbuds and backpack

    Plus at work, I have a strict rule that I cannot put my keys anywhere but my pocket. My fob to get in the building is on my key chain, and after the second time I locked myself out I made the rule. If I do take my keys out of my pocket to clip/unclip something like a USB flash drive or nail clippers, the keys stay in my hand until they go back into the pocket.

  • Favrion
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    68 months ago

    I’m starting to suspect ADHD in my genes… lol

  • @logicbomb@lemmy.world
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    58 months ago

    I don’t often personally identify with this comic, because I don’t have ADHD, but I feel this one deeply.

    I have found that putting things by the door doesn’t work as well as putting them with things that you will never forget to take. For example, I don’t wear shoes indoors, so I will put the thing I need to take inside my shoes. Or since I have a private garage, I can simply put it in my car ahead of time.

    • The Pantser
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      48 months ago

      One thing I learned from Dr Drew from the Loveline days is to put your keys with that thing. He would put his keys with vaccines in the fridge to take with him when he left. So if you plan to drive when you go put your keys with the thing or the thing with your keys. I always thought about having a “take box” an box dedicated solely to holding the things you need to take somewhere.

  • @Downcount@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Another good tip is to try a positive reminder. So, instead of: “Don’t forget the thing!” you’d rather tell your self: “I will totally take the thing!”