A tale of the over- and understimulated AuDHDer: When watching a video is too much and not enough

Originally published on Medium

I stare at the carpeted floor, annoyed.

Earlier, I had started playing a video from my YouTube watch later list. Seconds passed. Inside, a swirling turmoil protested “This is too much.” Each new sound from the small speakers poked my ears. I was determined to not quit watching again so I muted the sound and turned on closed captions.

Didn’t help.

Ugh. Fine. I relented and closed the app.

And so here I am, on the floor.

I like myself but sometimes I can be really annoying.

Maybe I can listen to something, music? A book? Podcast?

The inner turmoil churns again and I sigh. Nope.

Well reading is always good. I open my tablet again to a new ebook and start reading… and a couple sentences later I close the tablet, put it on the table and lay on the floor, disgusted.

I can’t even read!! What’s going on?

I lay on my back and stare at the ceiling, thinking back over my past month.

I’d had a planned activity almost every weekend. And one weekend there were 2 different things happening (a lot for me)! And during the week, I worked more than usual but slept less than usual. Mostly because it was one of my period cycles where I lie awake pretending I’ll fall asleep any moment until midnight comes. Then I finally give up and read until I can fall asleep. And once my sleep schedule is that messed up, it needs time to get back on track.

“Wow,” I say aloud to myself. “Sorry, I didn’t realize I needed a break.”

So I keep staring at the ceiling and go back to an old childhood game: what would it be like if the ceiling and ground were swapped and we walked on the ceiling? I imagine it. Then I close my eyes and breathe, allowing the inner turmoil to slowly lessen enough so I can handle stimulation later with…a walk? Or some music?

Ehh, we’ll see what I can handle.

Thanks to Helen Olivier’s article If You Are Autistic with ADHD, You Are a Study in Contradictions for inspiring this.

Author | Aneisha - Writer and Bookkeeper

Aneisha Velazquez is a bookkeeper and clarity guide who helps neurodivergent-led businesses stop fighting their numbers and start trusting themselves.

Having experienced firsthand the pressures different-brained entrepreneurs face in systems not built for them, she brings compassion to money conversations and normalizes the mess — making finances feel less overwhelming and far more manageable.

She’s the founder of Yellow Sky Business Services and writes the newsletter The Peaceful Pocket, where she explores making business more neurodivergent-friendly, money tips with context, and stories and behind-the-scenes as an AuDHD founder.

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