cognitohazard? cognitoopportunity? 

Having the weird thought that a lot of things I perceive as experiences are actually things I'm doing and I have the option to stop. I just tend to get caught up in them and forget that.

cognitohazard? cognitoopportunity? 

This is seriously OP. If I take the time and do it calmly, I can gently shift from executive dysfunction to actually doing things, seemingly without any long-term consequence.

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cognitohazard? cognitoopportunity? 

This implies that executive dysfunction is a trance, and it is possible to find it and adjust it. At least for me. I don't know if the cause is the same for everyone, and it took a lot of work to learn how to do that.

cognitohazard? cognitoopportunity? 

Addendum: for me it can also be different forms of tiredness. Or the "brain residue" that making decisions seems to leave. And those require rest of a sort, but the rest can be made more efficient by directing it to the specific condition. Which isn't always equally easy and may take more time.

re: cognitohazard? cognitoopportunity? 

There's this feeling of mental "fog" that I haven't been experiencing lately, and I attribute that to working on this and keeping up with it.

re: cognitohazard? cognitoopportunity? 

@madewokherd :serperior: congrats, I know that's a lot of work & glad it paid off for yall 💙

I don't know if I'd say "trance" for myself, but there definitely (probably?) is a distinct mode of hypo-activity where everything is impossible, which I can rarely push through to a more active version where stuff is sort of possible but utterly exhausting after, like, 2h tops.

I feel that there has to have been a mode at some point where I could do things and then do different things when done w/o that being more tiring than inherent to the activity? maybe not, I've (maybe?) always had trouble changing activities as a kid

re: cognitohazard? cognitoopportunity? 

@emerald I've been finding that some rest is required to transition between things or into activity, it's just possible to do that very quickly if you focus it where it's needed

re: cognitohazard? cognitoopportunity? 

@madewokherd yeah, I think a lot of my problem is that I correctly identify that I need to rest, but then either do something light that isn't rest but sucks me in (e. g. social media) or rest for way too long and then fail to make a purposeful(?) choice when starting fresh from that restful context

re: cognitohazard? cognitoopportunity? 

@emerald that is very relatable

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