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karohalik

29

Karma

2025-01-19

Created

Recent Activity

  • UX & Content Designer | 10+ Years of Experience | Remote & Hybrid Positions

    Location: Lisbon, Portugal (EU)

    Remote: Yes, any timezone

    Willing to relocate: Yes, within EU & SEA; willing to travel

    Technologies: UX & Product [Figma, Miro, Adobe Creative Cloud], Content & Strategy [Adobe Experience Manager, WordPress, Ghost CMS, Webflow, Canva, Notion]; Marketing & Analytics [Google Analytics, Adobe Analytics, Semrush, Hotjar, Meta Business Manager, Klaviyo, GetResponse, Mailchimp]; Community Building [Discord, Slack]

    Résumé: https://linktr.ee/karohalik_designer

    Email: hello@karohalik.pl

  • Yeah, I’ve been noticing the same. But let’s be honest, most people don’t really get to choose their relationship with tech. The whole analog tech and minimal phone thing sounds nice, but it’s still a luxury. You need a certain level of stability to even consider disengaging. So while I’m hopeful and happy to see those small changes, I’m also skeptical. Real change won’t happen until it stops being a lifestyle choice and becomes a bigger shift (or its part).

  • No one is saying that structure or boundaries aren’t important. Of course they are. But what is being challenged here is the assumption that a meltdown = misbehavior. Sometimes it is. But often what looks like “acting out” is actually communication. Discomfort, overstimulation, unmet needs, not manipulation.

    Teaching kids discipline without empathy doesn't create resilience. It creates shame, masking, and fear of expressing emotions. And yeah, being on time matters. But so does understanding why the kid is melting down in the first place, especially if it’s a recurring thing. Otherwise, you’re just dragging a panicked, overwhelmed human out the door like a bag of potatoes and calling it a parenting win.

  • I get that he didn’t say that here, but I’ve seen other replies leaning toward the idea that “it’s easy if you just try hard enough” and that’s what I was addressing, too.

  • I think you're oversimplifying ADHD and its impact. It's not just a matter of using tools or strategies. ADHD exists on a spectrum, and it's often comorbid with other conditions like anxiety, autism, or depression. What works for one person might completely fail for another, especially if their challenges are layered or more severe.

    Also, saying “regardless of diagnosis” is invalidating the real need for accommodations. People with ADHD often require not just personal effort, but systemic support, whether that’s in school, work, or healthcare.

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