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Jan
1
2009

The Brilliant Reality of ADHD Book Covers

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Here are the covers to my new book The Brilliant Reality of ADHD. The Brilliant Reality of ADHD will be available in the spring of 2009. I believe it is fortuitous, in a very positive way, that my new book has been finalized on the 1st of January 2009 and on New Year’s Eve, www.ADDerWorld.ning.com had its 500th member join! So many members, so fast, it’s overwhelming and humbling.

We move ever forward together, making each day better, brighter and abundantly, positively more constructive in every way.

Happy New Year and welcome to 2009! Let’s do great things together…

Brilliant Reality of ADHD

Back cover is undergoing final changes… 

Special thanks to ADDer World members for providing ‘reader comments’ for inside the book.

Special thanks to Keath Low, Nancy Ratey, Gina Pera and Dr. Charles Parker.

Special thanks to Joan Hutchinson, Mindy Schwartz and Taryn Simpson for assisting me with the final editing.

~Bryan

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  1. Dr Charles Parker posted the following on January 1, 2009 at 5:02 pm.

    Bryan-
    Great news for the New Year! Very pleased for you that your site, helpful information here, and your new ‘Brilliant/Reality’ book about ADHD is finding a larger audience. ‘Brilliant and Reality’ – reassuring to see those two coming together – so often they remain strangers.

    So much shaming on the ADHD side continues, even within the medical community, who often don’t get it, simply because the diagnosis is so limiting, so often ineffective, and so difficult to objectify. Even the psychologists frequently miss the target – and when they miss it, lifetimes can be lost completely.

    My most frequent office observation: Negative feelings about ADHD arise because medications and med management remains so often imprecise. The public and other professionals simply don’t think we know what we are doing. And they are right. Dosing strategies remain obscure, objectives seem ephemeral, and the diagnosis itself is based almost entirely on description, not function.

    The new treatment imperative: people, not symptoms.

    To make matters worse, well informed practitioners recommend using counterproductive, known drug interactions to adjust dosage of commonly used stimulant meds. This is completely unacceptable, and typifies the overt disregard for peer reviewed science in ADHD treatment.

    Here, in the contemporary context of abundant new discoveries with brain and body science, we are still treating the tip of the iceberg rather than looking underwater to truly see biologically what is floating the berg. Intelligent, well informed practitioners look at superficial measures, skip the details, and still attempt to use parameters such as body weight to adjust dosage. Practice really should catch up with science, and the basics of liver metabolism.

    Well Bryan, I am glad we are on the same soapbox, – I appreciate your observations, and will soon add to the discussion with my own new book, so will give this comment a rest.

    I appreciate the opportunity to work with you and wish you the best with your new book project,

    HNY,
    Chuck

    Reply to Dr Charles Parker
  2. Bryan posted the following on January 1, 2009 at 6:17 pm.

    It all starts with us getting together, talking about it and then standing up and talking to everyone else via our soapboxes! Thanks for everything Dr. Parker. Our conversation earlier was especially beneficial… have a great NY!

    Reply to Bryan
  3. angel posted the following on February 13, 2009 at 9:20 pm.

    i’m off to check out the ning!

    Reply to angel

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One Boy’s Struggle

"One Boy’s Struggle is a real eye-opener. It should be read by all parents struggling to understand how best to support their ADHD children. Adults with ADHD will likely find validation and new hope from reading Bryan’s story.” ~Dr. Edward Hallowell

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“A very brave and moving memoir.” Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, Katherine Ellison, author of 'Buzz'.

"Gripping account of both the struggles and positive polarities of ADD written beautifully in a honest, open and courageous manner." David A. Crenshaw, Ph.D.

"Anyone with ADD or with friends, loved ones or colleagues with ADD will be informed and touched by Bryan’s book." Bryan Robinson Ph.D. author of 'The Art of Confident Living'

Thank you!

It is an honor to have written a book that is meaning so much and benefiting so many. It is my hope that one day ‘One Boy’s Struggle: A Memoir’ will be read by every teacher and parent, as well as read by every adult with ADHD. If you own a copy and have read it, please consider passing it on, loan it out to friends, a support group or donating it to your local library.

Thank you!

~Bryan

 
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