@ciilekes: içime aşırı sindi bu arada bu postuda gece hazırlıyorum ama gündüz paylaşacam çok beğendim bu arada keşfet açılır gibi olmuş ama benim aktifliğin düştü üç günde o yüzden bu video için hiç bi tahminim yok zaten düşünüp dertte etmeyecem gerektiğinden fazla kötü bir dönemden geçiyorum ama her şey hallolur gözlerim kapanıyor çok uykum var amk #wlw #fyp #taekook #xyzbca #kesfet

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Tuesday 16 June 2026 09:29:27 GMT
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strwdollise
doe ꫂ᭪݁ :
normalde mb hic sevmiyorm ama taehyung tam bir melek olmus
2026-06-16 10:01:03
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sllyonde
perle⁷ :
yuh dehset
2026-06-16 11:04:14
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brzzy.y
berk,, :
SIISX SEVEN BEĞENİ😂😂
2026-06-16 12:04:51
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When Respect Matters More Than Status Most people think ADHD is only about attention, forgetfulness, or being easily distracted. But there’s another side that rarely gets talked about. Many people with ADHD don’t naturally organize the world by titles, social status, or who has the most authority. Instead, they often focus on something much simpler: how someone treats other people. I remember sitting in a room where everyone became unusually quiet the moment an important person walked in. The conversation changed. The tone changed. People who had been laughing suddenly became careful with every word they said. At first, I thought maybe I had missed something important. Then I realized I hadn't. What I noticed wasn't their position. I noticed whether they were kind. That difference stayed with me. Living with ADHD can sometimes mean your brain pays attention to things other people overlook, while completely ignoring the things society expects everyone to care about. You know who the manager is. You know who owns the company. You understand who has authority. But inside your mind, none of that automatically decides how much respect someone deserves. Respect feels earned through actions, not titles. That can confuse people. Sometimes they assume you're being disrespectful because you speak to everyone the same way. You might comfortably chat with the CEO exactly like you'd speak to the newest employee. Not because you don't understand the difference. Because your brain doesn't automatically assign more value to one person than another. This can show up in everyday life in ways that seem surprisingly small. You might question a rule that everyone else accepts without thinking. You may ask
When Respect Matters More Than Status Most people think ADHD is only about attention, forgetfulness, or being easily distracted. But there’s another side that rarely gets talked about. Many people with ADHD don’t naturally organize the world by titles, social status, or who has the most authority. Instead, they often focus on something much simpler: how someone treats other people. I remember sitting in a room where everyone became unusually quiet the moment an important person walked in. The conversation changed. The tone changed. People who had been laughing suddenly became careful with every word they said. At first, I thought maybe I had missed something important. Then I realized I hadn't. What I noticed wasn't their position. I noticed whether they were kind. That difference stayed with me. Living with ADHD can sometimes mean your brain pays attention to things other people overlook, while completely ignoring the things society expects everyone to care about. You know who the manager is. You know who owns the company. You understand who has authority. But inside your mind, none of that automatically decides how much respect someone deserves. Respect feels earned through actions, not titles. That can confuse people. Sometimes they assume you're being disrespectful because you speak to everyone the same way. You might comfortably chat with the CEO exactly like you'd speak to the newest employee. Not because you don't understand the difference. Because your brain doesn't automatically assign more value to one person than another. This can show up in everyday life in ways that seem surprisingly small. You might question a rule that everyone else accepts without thinking. You may ask "Why?" when everyone expects silent agreement. You might notice unfair treatment long before anyone else says something. And when someone is rude simply because they have more authority, it can stay with you for days. People sometimes mistake this for being argumentative. In reality, many people with ADHD have a strong internal sense of fairness. When something feels inconsistent, unfair, or based only on someone's position, the brain keeps coming back to it. It's difficult to simply ignore. That doesn't mean every person with ADHD experiences this the same way. ADHD looks different from one person to another. But many adults describe feeling uncomfortable with social hierarchies that expect automatic obedience instead of mutual respect. They aren't rejecting structure. They're questioning whether someone's title alone should determine how people are treated. Think about school. Maybe the teacher who listened to every student earned your trust immediately. Meanwhile, another teacher demanded respect but never showed kindness. Which one did your brain naturally respond to? For many people with ADHD, the answer isn't based on authority. It's based on connection. The same thing often happens at work. Some managers earn loyalty because they listen, encourage, and treat everyone fairly. Others rely only on their position. People with ADHD often notice that difference almost immediately. This sensitivity can become both a strength and a challenge. The strength is that it helps you recognize authenticity. You often appreciate people who are genuine, regardless of their background or status. The challenge is that not every environment rewards that way of thinking. Some workplaces expect people to simply accept hierarchy without asking questions. Some families believe age alone means someone should never be challenged. Some social groups care deeply about status and influence. If your brain naturally values honesty over status, those environments can feel exhausting. You may even wonder if something is wrong with you because everyone else seems comfortable playing by rules that never made sense to you. There isn't necessarily anything wrong. Your brain may simply prioritize different information. Instead of asking, #adhd #adhdlife #Neurodivergent #ADHDAwareness #ExecutiveFunction

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