Or health, in a sense. Recently I’ve been seriously overworking myself, but the only signs that I can notice early on are mental. Such as being unable to stay on a task or project for more than 10 minutes at a time max, or forgetting how to talk properly and slurring my speech.
And to put in perspective how exhausted my actual body is, I’ve been just straight up collapsing, barely able to walk straight, shaky noodle legs and the such. But I don’t notice any actual physical problem until I literally fall over, and then I’m like “Oh, I should sleep or stop and relax” or something.
Is this a thing anyone else experiences? I was diagnosed with the AuDD combo a while back but I’ve been unmedicated, since being poor in America and all that.
IT can be very different depending on the platform and how the work is organised (or not), work from home / office, etc.
Academia is basically universally chaotic, with a high level of freedom, independence and thus personal responsibility. In academia, no one is going to create structure for you, help you focus your energy or jump in to pick up the slack when you inevitably drop a project at 95% done for some new shiny thing.
In companies, it is very possible to find good teams that share the workload and responsibility, where a (neuro)diverse person can contribute with their strengths, while having their weaknesses compensated for by other team members with different skill and personality profiles.
I have worked this way across 3 teams over 5 years. Then again, I am apparently not severe enough for an ADHD diagnosis so YMMV. I definitely have worked with autists though.
P.S. I also hate shitty proprietary software and love open source. Currently working with Linux, Kubernetes, Postgres and Python and tolerating a thin layer of Windows shit through which I have to work. Oracle too, but not for long.
I love linux because if something is broken and I know the bug is simple I can just AUR pull the git version, modify it quickly, and install it as normal