In The Loop

A More Human Pace


You may be wondering why both of the shops are still closed. You may think that I've gone on vacation or maybe I've finally gone mental and just can't do this anymore. Maybe I ran out of money and have to close but am just in denial?


None of those are true and, in fact, what I am doing and why it's taking so long is hard to explain quickly. So I will explain more in depth if you're interested in knowing. If not, please know that yes, I will reopen soon but no, I'm still not exactly sure when.


It's been just about 10 years since I started Dots & Loops. 


It's been about 5 months since I took over Here Nor There.


It's been about 3 months since I was finally given an ADHD diagnosis. 


I have obviously had ADHD my entire life, as it doesn't just appear as you age. For various reasons, it was never caught in my youth and I adapted to living within its limitations. Doing so gave me terrible anxiety and caused a deep and long lasting depression. It was only as I was finally treated for my mental health that I realized that I may also have a neurodevelopmental disorder. Antidepressants helped but only so far. I was stuck with a lot of toxic adaptive traits, fixes and coping strategies. I was stuck in a toxic cycle.


I have inattentive type ADHD. That means that I was never a hyper little dude, interrupting class and unable to sit still. I was quiet, read a lot and was only interested in what I was interested in. If I was uninterested, good luck getting me to pay attention. I was interested, good luck getting me not to pay attention. I coasted through life, assuming I was just never meant to live up to my expectations. The true nature of my issues didn't arise until I started to work for myself and could see the way that I work and how I manage time, tasks and money. All of that procrastination that I had kind of worked in school - I was the queen of last minute. But when you own a shop and things have to look good, employees have to be supported, payments need to be made, paperwork and emails need to be done and then you also have to make time to take care of your home and yourself and your relationships, a lot of things get pushed to the wayside. My cycle became hyperfocusing at work (which was needed, because things would get neglected/procrastinated upon) and then I would work 12 - 18 hour overnight shifts at the shop until I got everything done. My attention issues made me unable to rely on myself to be able to be present on the shop floor, so I had to stop doing that and hire more help. Then I was unable to focus if I came in but worked in the backroom because the systems I had in place didn't work for me and I didn't know why. After hyperfocusing (during which, I would not be able to focus on anything else), I would be totally drained and then would normally get very low and need to be in bed for days or weeks on end (which definitely didn't help me at all). When I came out of that, I would need to hyperfocus on my non-work issues that had been pushed aside (this would lead me to ignore work again.) Then, I would realize how far behind I was at work, get into hyperfocus, and the whole cycle would start again.


I have now been put on medication that is working for me and it's pretty much night & day. When I was thinking about heading back to work after my holiday vacation (literally, that Sunday night), I realized all in a flash that if I wanted to make my shops work for me, I needed to completely rethink how I have them set up, how they work together and how I work within them. So, I've torn every operational thing apart and now I'm putting them back together. The only unfortunate thing is that when I would hyperfocus at the shop, I could complete tasks insanely quickly and get so much done at once. Now, I am working at a more human pace. It's so slow!! I'm actually going home now - cleaning, doing laundry, getting a haircut, spending time relaxing. 


I'm telling you all of this because I am a big believer in sharing what makes our brains different from each other. I believe that it's what helps us see outside ourselves and have more compassion and understanding for others. I also think that it can help you understand your own brain just that much more, and I'm all for that. I'm telling you this because maybe you also have ADHD and you don't know it and every time you see a blog post about finding a work/life balance, you just want to scream a little. I'm telling you this in case you have ADHD and never thought you would live up to your own expectations because of how you were treated by neurotypical people around you.


So, I'm currently surrounded by a massive mess but it takes a mess to get things truly clean. Once this mess is gone, we'll be open again and I'm so excited to get everything back on track (or maybe just, on track.) 


Thanks for reading and much love, be safe! 

Melanie Strong
Owner, Dots & Loops + Here Nor There

Jan 13, 2021

This post really resonated with me. Thank you for taking the time to share and for helping destigmstize these issues. Best of luck! Look forward to stopping by as always when we are in Lunenburg.

David Mulder
Jan 13, 2021

Good for you for disclosing. So many women get missed. My husband just got diagnosed after our daughter at 20 got diagnosed with ASD and ADHD. The more aware we become the more inclusive we can be as a society. All the best to you.

Kathleen
Jan 13, 2021

I totally get this and you. So many more of “you”out there than you know. Much love and a peaceful mind. See you when we see you and your lovely little shops

Debbie
Jan 13, 2021

I totally get this and you. So many more of “you”out there than you know. Much love and a peaceful mind. See you when we see you and your lovely little shops

Debbie
Jan 13, 2021

Thank you so much for sharing. 💗

Heather

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