oo I have an answer of sorts!
Humans are endurance predators, not ambush ones. We're meant to be moving often for hunts, standing still for long periods of time isn't what our body's good at.
I feel like a lot of modern society does whatever it can to ignore the fact that we're animals too
Not specifically ADHD things but very few people I encounter understand how hard it is to do things that require lifting your hands above your head. That's literally how crucifixion kills. 😬
I swear I wanna just have the next person telling me it would be easier to clean the ceiling tiles by just wiping them in place instead of taking them down and doing it in the sink to do it themselves and see how hard it actually is.
I tried to explain this to my wife. I can walk for long periods with no issue. But shopping? Amusement Parks? That shit is not walking, its trudging and it plays completely different with my energy levels.
Not from ADHD but my knees will allow me 10-15 minutes of standing still until righty decides it's sit or move time or you get the knife treatment. I can walk and move around for hours with no issues. There was a push for standing desks at work and that just sounds like torture for me.
Oh for real? I just got one and I never thought to get these types of things. I've heard of anti-fatigue mats, but what are these things called (just so I can look them up)?
I never "stand" at my standing desk, I'm always moving. Ngl, I thought the whole point of these desks was that standing for too long is uncomfortable, so you naturally move around more, take more breaks, and go for stretches.
Exactly how I feel about sitting up straight. If I can't lean back or sit fully cross-legged (or lay down ... 🤤), I would rather stand. To be clear, sitting straight hurts with more consistency than any other position. I'll take it, versus all the things I can do relatively without pain that would cripple my father and most other men I know.
I work at a standing desk and I love it... I almost never stand still, though. I dance and pace as I'm thinking and get to bounce around and be a lot more active than when I was in an office chair.
When I need to stand for a thing I will inevitably fidget. I don't frequently need to stand stoicly (I don't have a job that requires me to be the silent background or anything) so it's not really an issue for me. Pace and enjoy it.. if you're in a museum it's actually kind of awesome once you realize you can pace and get different angles to view things from and, every once in a while, you'll hyperfocus on something and just dead stare it... but it's perfectly acceptable to pace and fidget as an adult.
I'd also mention that I think the constant need to fidget is actually a long term health super power - it's unhealthy to maintain monolithic postures for extended periods of time - moving is healthy and micromovements keep your body on constant motion.
Yes exactly, that's how I think of my standing desk too (and I thought that was the whole point of them). You're not actually standing at them, you're supposed to move around. Standing for too long is uncomfy, so a standing desk makes you move around more as you start to feel less comfortable standing in one position.
Standing? What is this? (Writing as I'm currently pacing around the house with my phone). Pacing helps me relax or think about stuff. Also whenever I'm waiting the bus, almost all the times I'll be pacing around (I kinda wonder how others can simply stay still), 1-2k of my daily steps might happen around bus stops and 2-5k might happen inside the house, lol (a week ago I did ~13k steps according to my phone without leaving the house that day). I feel so oppressed when people tell me not to pace around (or not to move my legs) :/
PS. Without leaving the house and being around the middle of my day, my phone has recorded around 3k steps today.
Shout-out to all those retail/service employees that are demanded to stand in a 4x6 chairless box like some 90's RPG NPC, and then are yelled at for "leaning."
I swear that experience compressed my height by more than a few inches...And you better believe I practiced my martial arts kicks on the sales floor when the manager was out. Lol
The major destination outdoors chain I worked at had stools we could bring out for cashiers, but only if there was a documented medical necessity. They were actively hostile towards employee comfort.
My favorite though was when they turned off the AC (it was controlled from corporate) when it was 100 degrees outside to save on the electric bill. Customers stopped shopping because it was miserable, and without the AC running the whole place got super humid and over a million dollar's worth of guns rusted.
But the facilities team at corporate was able to say they saved a few thousand in electric bills.
Whenever I'm hiking I despise when the person in front of me forces me to stop because then I can feel all my aches and tiredness. I can only imagine what it would feel like to actually be disabled.
My mother always used to tell me to sit the hell down because pacing made her uneasy, like there was something that needed to be done that she wasn't doing, lmao.
I feel this with my very being. I am disabled from cancer that invaded and collapsed my spinal column. I can walk again thankfully but it took a while to get here. I can't stand, run, jump or move in any way that is more stress than walking or I fall down.
People often tell me I am sure obviously not disabled because I can walk.
Everyone gets arthritic enough to figure it out eventually. Anyone who doesn't understand is still young enough that getting a decent night's sleep fixes all aches and pains.