Why do I feel weird after taking my ADHD medication?

It is important to discuss any unusual feelings or side effects from ADHD medication with a doctor or mental health professional promptly. Feeling "weird" may indicate that the medication dosage is too high or that a different type of medication might be a better fit for you. Do not stop taking your medication without professional guidance.


Why do I feel weird on ADHD meds?

Some people find that their medications make them tense and cranky. Like most ADHD drug side effects, this may fade in time. If your moodiness is bothering you, ask your doctor about adjusting the dose or changing your medication.

What is the 20 minute rule for ADHD?

The 20-minute rule for ADHD is a strategy to start tasks by committing to work on them for just 20 minutes, overcoming procrastination and task paralysis, often leveraging momentum or the Pomodoro Technique. It works by making tasks feel less overwhelming, allowing you to focus for a short, manageable burst, and then either continuing if you're in flow or taking a planned break to reset. This helps manage time blindness and provides dopamine hits, making it easier to initiate and maintain focus on chores, studying, or other goals. 


How are you supposed to feel after taking ADHD medication?

Once you find the right medication and dose, most people find ADHD medication helps their symptoms. The symptoms involved with hyperactivity, attention span and impulsive behaviors improve.

How to tell if ADHD medication is too high?

Signs your ADHD medication is too high
  1. Significantly increased anxiety or depression.
  2. Feeling “too wired”, especially into the evening.
  3. Severe Insomnia.
  4. New tics.
  5. Extreme irritability or agitation.
  6. Hallucinations.
  7. No appetite and significant weight loss.
  8. No longer feel like yourself, “sparkle” is gone.


The Adderall Effect: Strategies for Minimizing the Crash



What is the 30% rule in ADHD?

The ADHD "30% Rule" is a guideline suggesting that executive functioning (self-regulation, planning, impulse control) in individuals with ADHD develops about 30% slower than in neurotypical peers, meaning a younger developmental age. For example, a 12-year-old with ADHD might have the executive skills of a 9-year-old, helping parents and educators set realistic expectations and understand behavioral differences, not a lack of intelligence. This concept, popularized by Dr. Russell Barkley, is a helpful tool, not a strict law, to foster empathy and appropriate support.
 

What cancels out ADHD medication?

Fruit juice, citrus, and foods high in vitamin C can increase acid levels in your digestive system. This can lower the levels of some ADHD medications in your body, potentially making them less effective.

What is the 10-3 rule for ADHD?

The 10-3 rule for ADHD is a time management strategy that involves working on a task with full focus for 10 minutes, then taking a short, structured 3-minute break (no distractions like social media) to reset, and then repeating the cycle to build momentum and make tasks less overwhelming for the ADHD brain. This technique leverages short bursts of intense concentration followed by brief mental rests to combat procrastination and maintain focus. 


What are the signs of overstimulation from ADHD meds?

ADHD Overstimulation Common Symptoms
  • Inability to sit still, fidgeting, or feeling uncomfortably restless.
  • Feeling drained or excessively tired.
  • Migraines, headaches, or dizziness.
  • Difficulty falling or staying asleep.
  • Increased sensitivity to environmental factors like light or touch.


What are the dark side of ADHD?

The "dark side" of ADHD involves significant struggles like poor performance (school/work), financial issues, unstable relationships, substance misuse, and mental health comorbidities (depression, anxiety), increasing suicide risk, alongside internal battles with low self-esteem, feeling misunderstood (lazy/weird), and negative thought patterns (catastrophizing), often stemming from lifelong difficulties with executive functions (inattention, disorganization, impulsivity) and societal stigma, as detailed in CDC, Mayo Clinic, and Taylor & Francis Online. 

What is the minimum sleep for ADHD?

There is no specific number of sleep hours needed. Each individual is different, and the amount of sleep can vary slightly from one person to another. Just like everyone else, people with ADHD generally require 7-9 hours of sleep per night for optimal health and daily functioning.


What calms people with ADHD?

To calm ADHD, use a mix of lifestyle changes, mindfulness, and structure: incorporate regular exercise, good sleep hygiene, and healthy routines; practice deep breathing, meditation, and yoga; break tasks into smaller steps with timers (like Pomodoro); minimize distractions by decluttering; and find soothing sensory input like music or petting animals, while seeking professional help for personalized strategies.
 

What does high functioning ADHD look like?

High-functioning ADHD looks like appearing successful externally (good job, relationships) while struggling internally with disorganization, time blindness, emotional dysregulation, and constant mental chaos, often masked by perfectionism, over-preparing, last-minute hyper-focus, intense effort, and reliance on alarms/reminders, leading to significant hidden stress and burnout despite outward competence. Key signs include inner restlessness, missed details in complex tasks, difficulty starting mundane chores (executive dysfunction), and a cycle of high-pressure bursts of productivity.
 

What is the Starbucks syndrome for ADHD?

If these patients start at the very lowest dose available, they are already overdosed and experience the Zombie syndrome (emotional blunting, lethargy) or the Starbuck's syndrome (being too revved up, having a rapid heart rate, becoming irritable). The patients do fine when they take lower doses.


Can ADHD meds make you feel spacey?

The ADHD zombie effect is a drugged, zoned-out feeling where a child is unnaturally quiet. It is one of the side effects of stimulant medications and can indicate that a dose is too high. Some children experience these symptoms even when they are taking an optimal dose.

Can ADHD meds cause derealization?

Dextroamphetamine is one of the main medications for treating ADHD. It may cause several psychiatric side effects including hallucinations. As far as we know there is no previous report of clear derealization.

How to know if ADHD meds are too high?

An excessively high dose of ADHD medication can lead to various emotional and behavioural issues: Anxiety: Increased nervousness or feelings of unease. Emotional Blunting: Reduced emotional responsiveness, feeling detached or indifferent. Irritability: Heightened sensitivity to stimuli, leading to frustration or anger.


What is the burnout cycle of ADHD?

The ADHD burnout cycle is a repeating pattern of intense productivity (often via hyperfocus), followed by a complete crash into mental, emotional, and physical exhaustion, leading to procrastination, guilt, and shutdown, only for the need to catch up to restart the cycle, driven by ADHD's core challenges like executive dysfunction and sensory overload. It's a push-pull between overdrive and collapse, making daily demands feel insurmountable and disrupting self-trust. 

Why do people with ADHD not like being touched?

People with ADHD dislike being touched due to sensory hypersensitivity, where their brains overreact to tactile input, leading to sensory overload, discomfort, or even pain from textures, unexpected contact, or light touches, often linked to sensory processing differences common with ADHD. This isn't about affection; it's a physiological response where the nervous system gets overwhelmed, making normal touch feel intense and distressing, like itchy tags or sudden hugs. 

What is the 2 minute rule for ADHD?

The ADHD "2-Minute Rule" is a productivity hack where you do any task that takes two minutes or less immediately, preventing small things from piling up and becoming overwhelming. While great for momentum, it needs modification for ADHD; a related idea is the "2-Minute Launch," where you commit to starting a bigger task for just two minutes to overcome inertia, building momentum to continue, though you must watch for getting lost in "rabbit holes" or task switching issues common with ADHD. 


What tone is good for ADHD?

Since people with ADHD can get easily distracted by surrounding stimuli, listening to brown noise could help minimize auditory distractions, allowing them to concentrate better on what they're doing. Some people may also find that it helps quiet their internal whirlwind of thoughts, making it easier to focus.

What are brain breaks for ADHD?

ADHD brain breaks are short, intentional pauses with movement or engaging activities to help reset focus, manage energy, and improve concentration, crucial for the ADHD brain that struggles with sustained attention, often involving quick bursts of exercise (like jumping jacks), deep breathing, sensory input (like coloring), or brief, timed games to refuel and prevent overwhelm. Effective breaks are short (under 5 mins), timed (using visual timers), and incorporate physical activity, sensory input, or quick mental challenges to stimulate dopamine and oxygen flow to the brain, making them essential for cognitive refueling.
 

What is the hardest age for ADHD?

Usually, the most difficult times for persons with ADHD are their years from middle school through the first few years after high school. Those are the years when students are faced with the widest range of tasks to do and the least opportunity to escape from the tasks that they struggle with or find to be boring.


What not to eat on ADHD meds?

A high-fat diet may be associated with symptoms of inattention in ADHD. Additionally, overconsumption of unhealthy saturated fats may increase your risk of heart conditions and memory problems. Sources of fat that are best avoided include fried foods, processed meat, butter, high-fat dairy products, and heavy cream.