executive function rambling
I seriously considered not taking my meds today b/c the weekly pill thing was empty and I didn't want to fill it up. then I thought taking just todays meds from the bottles, which satisfies my(?) rule of "no day is a failure if I take my meds" but leaves me in the same position tomorrow.
then I tried to think real hard about how filling the weekly containers wasn't, actually, unpleasant in any way, it's a few minutes of using my hands and then it's done. after a bit of that I filled up 3 weeks worth of med containers. it took a few minutes and wasn't unpleasant in any way.
& then had more thoughts about how the whole delayed gratification thing probably mostly isn't that 1-2 weeks from now, when I'm facing this same situation, I remember that past me left a full container in the cabinet that I can use, and that reward reaches back 1-2 weeks in time to reinforce the behavior past me did (or maybe it is idk)
but rather my ability to look at those three med containers & think "yeah! I did a good job that will pay off in the future and I feel good about that right now!"
re: executive function rambling
@emerald I feel like even if the reward were immediate, it wouldn't actually influence my behavior.
re: executive function rambling
I've been wondering since noticing this was a thing: how much of neurodivergent "executive dysfunction" is because the things that motivate neurotypical folks don't really work for us, and the things that work aren't taught to us? Followed by a vague swirling mass of: what might be the reasons/motivations behind that?
re: executive function rambling
Where I'm vaguely ending up is: motivations that are not healing or empowering are, though possibly temporarily effective, not sustainable. And motivations that are healing or empowering make us inconvenient.