ADHD: A Hunter in a Farmer's World
By Thom Hartmann and Michael Popkin
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About this ebook
• Explains that people with ADHD are not disordered or dysfunctional, but simply “hunters in a farmer’s world”--possessing a unique mental skill set that would have allowed them to thrive in a hunter-gatherer society
• Offers concrete non-drug methods and practices to help hunters--and their parents, teachers, and managers--embrace their differences, nurture creativity, and find success in school, at work, and at home
• Reveals how some of the world’s most successful people can be labeled as ADHD hunters, including Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Edison, and Andrew Carnegie
With 10 percent of the Western world’s children suspected of having Attention Deficit Disorder, or ADHD, and a growing number of adults self-diagnosing after decades of struggle, the question must be raised: How could Nature make such a “mistake”?
In this updated edition of his groundbreaking classic, Thom Hartmann explains that people with ADHD are not abnormal, disordered, or dysfunctional, but simply “hunters in a farmer’s world.” Often highly creative and single-minded in pursuit of a self-chosen goal, those with ADHD symptoms possess a unique mental skill set that would have allowed them to thrive in a hunter-gatherer society. As hunters, they would have been constantly scanning their environment, looking for food or threats (distractibility); they’d have to act without hesitation (impulsivity); and they’d have to love the high-stimulation and risk-filled environment of the hunting field. With our structured public schools, office workplaces, and factories those who inherit a surplus of “hunter skills” are often left frustrated in a world that doesn’t understand or support them.
As Hartmann shows, by reframing our view of ADHD, we can begin to see it not as a disorder, but as simply a difference and, in some ways, an advantage. He reveals how some of the world’s most successful people can be labeled as ADHD hunters and offers concrete non-drug methods and practices to help hunters--and their parents, teachers, and managers--embrace their differences, nurture creativity, and find success in school, at work, and at home. Providing a supportive “survival” guide to help fine tune your natural skill set, rather than suppress it, Hartmann shows that each mind--whether hunter, farmer, or somewhere in between--has value and great potential waiting to be tapped.
Thom Hartmann
Thom Hartmann is the host of the nationally and internationally syndicated talkshow The Thom Hartmann Program and the TV show The Big Picture on the Free Speech TV network. He is the award-winning New York Times bestselling author of 24 books, including Attention Deficit Disorder: A Different Perception, ADHD and the Edison Gene, and The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight, which inspired Leonardo DiCaprio’s film The 11th Hour. A former psychotherapist and founder of the Hunter School, a residential and day school for children with ADHD, he lives in Washington, D.C.
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Reviews for ADHD
14 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A good shift in perspective about ADHD. The best quote to describe this book comes from Ellen Littman's Afterword, where she says:
"ADHD traits are neither inherently good nor bad; context has defined their worth... Those grappling with an ADHD diagnosis are empowered when they understand that the assessment of disabled versus differently abled is, in large part, a function of the lens through which they are viewed." - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5As a young adult recently diagnosed with ADHD, this book was great at helping me recontextualize behaviors and experiences and better understand myself. I now feel more empowered moving forward. Would recommend!
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Book preview
ADHD - Thom Hartmann
PREFACE
From Minimal Brain Damage to Hyperactivity to ADHD
Every noble work is at first impossible.
THOMAS CARLYLE (PAST AND PRESENT, BOOK III, CHAPTER XI, LABOUR,
1843)
In the spring of 1980, I sat in the living room of the apartment of Dr. Ben Feingold, overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, listening to him describe his search for a solution to the problem of hyperactivity. At the time, I was executive director of a residential treatment facility for abused and abandoned children, and most of the children referred to us had been diagnosed with hyperactivity
or minimal brain damage
(or MBD, a term later softened to minimal brain dysfunction
). I was acutely interested in what Dr. Feingold had to say.
As a pediatric allergist, Dr. Feingold had noticed over the years that a number of his patients with skin disorders (particularly psoriasis) had identifiable allergies. When certain foods or food additives were removed from a child’s diet, particularly those containing salicylates (the aspirin-like compounds contained in some foods and many food additives), sores and crusty skin patches vanished.
But there was an odd side effect to these skin-disease cures: the children’s behavior also changed. Many of Dr. Feingold’s young patients, in addition to being victims of skin diseases, had been diagnosed with hyperactivity or minimal brain dysfunction. But when the skin-disease-causing foods or food additives were removed from their diets, the hyperactivity quite often disappeared, or was reduced so dramatically that parents and teachers noticed the change.
On the basis of these findings, Dr. Feingold built his theory that minimal brain dysfunction or hyperactivity results from a food or food-additive allergy. His first book, Why Your Child Is Hyperactive, eventually sparked a nationwide movement. Feingold parents
set up Feingold groups,
to discuss ways to keep children away from salicylate-containing foods and food additives. Papers were published, both condemning and supporting Feingold, and across the nation thousands of parents reported dramatic changes with his dietary program.
We tried the Feingold diet at the institution I headed, with excellent results on several children. This early institutional trial became the basis for a report on National Public Radio’s All Things Considered program and dozens of newspaper and magazine articles. I published an article about our results in the Journal of Orthomolecular Psychiatry.
But there were some children with hyperactivity or minimal brain dysfunction—perhaps a majority—whom the Feingold diet did not help. This troubling inconsistency led many professionals to discard Feingold’s hypotheses in whole, and the movement that bears his name is now, years after his death, just a shell of what it once was.
Yet Dr. Ben Feingold was a pioneer. In the opinion of many people, he discovered a key to one facet of what was later recognized to be not just one disease (the minimal brain dysfunction or hyperactive syndrome), but part of an entire spectrum of behavior disorders, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, hyperkinesis, and learning disorders such as dyslexia.
Since Feingold’s time, psychiatry has largely merged hyperactivity into ADD, referring to it currently as ADHD.
Hyperactivity involves restless or excessive (hyper) activity. Hyperactive children are often described as being on fire,
as if they have ants in their pants.
Feingold noted these descriptions and observed that they were probably having the normal reaction to an allergy—an itch—in the brain.
Attention deficit disorder, on the other hand, may occur without any presence of a hyperactive state. ADD is more clearly described as a person’s difficulty focusing on a single thing for any significant period of time. Such people are described as excessively distractible, impatient, impulsive, and often seeking immediate gratification. They often disregard the long-term consequences of their actions, so focused are they on the moment and its rewards. They’re usually disorganized and messy, because they bounce from project to project, too impatient to clean up the debris from their last activity (be it making their beds or organizing their desks). But, while ADD children usually have problems with schoolwork, they’re not bouncing off the walls like their hyperactive peers.
This modern category, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) represents those who have both ADD and hyperactivity. This includes the majority of hyperactive children, although not all, and was the first category to be recognized in medicine more than seventy-five years ago.
While Ben Feingold believed he had found a cure
for hyperactivity, he was baffled by his diet’s failure to cure children of short attention spans. The hyperactive kids he treated no longer needed restraint or drugs, and a few became quite normal
on his diet, but many still showed signs of the ADD syndrome that did not respond to diet.
Initially, he’d concluded that children who didn’t respond had food allergies not yet discovered (such as an allergy to milk or wheat, which are nearly impossible to avoid), or that his subjects were cheating
on the diet. But a few months before he died, Dr. Feingold shared with me his concerns about this apparent inconsistency in the theory. He wondered out loud if there might be several different disorders lumped into what he had seen as a single category.
Feingold, again a prophet, was right. ADHD is now increasingly being recognized as part of a spectrum that usually includes hyperactivity, something that is not generally cured
by dietary change, other than the modest improvements that may result from using sugar in moderation.
It is interesting to note, however, that ADD children and adults often report an inordinate craving for sugar and, occasionally, exhibit some symptoms of hypoglycemia. They may also be more sensitive to the highs and crashes that come from sugar, alcohol, caffeine, and illicit drug consumption (and may benefit from avoiding those substances). But as we will see in a later chapter, these sensitivities may have little or nothing to do with symptoms of a disease.
It is quite probable that they are, instead, indicative of a biochemistry ideally suited to certain fundamental tasks.
INTRODUCTION
Hunters and Farmers Twenty Years Later
There must be no barriers to freedom of inquiry. There is no place for dogma in science. The scientist is free, and must be free to ask any question, to doubt any assertion, to seek for any evidence, to correct any errors.
J. ROBERT OPPENHEIMER (LIFE, OCTOBER 10, 1949)
This book was first published in 1993 and was updated in the decade and a half thereafter. The new 2019 edition includes several new chapters, as well as a few broad updates, but by and large, my original hypothesis still stands and, if anything, has been solidified and reinforced by the passage of time and discovery of new science, particularly in the field of genetics.
In the twenty-plus years since the first publication of this book and my presentation of the Hunter/Farmer concept as a possible explanation for why we have ADHD in our gene pool, there have been many changes in the thinking of people who study the subject. There have also been many changes in the overall view of psychiatric and physiological disorders in general, particularly those with a genetic basis.
The publication of Why We Get Sick: The New Science of Darwinian Medicine by Randolph Nesse, M.D., and George Williams, Ph.D., signaled a turning point in the minds of many. The book, thoroughly researched and brilliantly well written, makes the strong and scientifically defendable case that we are creatures living out of our element, humans with bodies and brains designed to live in a primitive natural environment and still carrying around the physical and psychological tools necessary to that environment. These include things from morning sickness to cystic fibrosis to depression. Our modern lifestyle, evolved just over the past few thousand years, represents not a norm for human life, but an incredibly brief flicker of momentary history in the 300,000-year life-span of Homo sapiens (people like us) on the planet.
Robert Wright’s book The Moral Animal carries the model a step further, dealing with the subject of Darwinian psychology,
and pointing out in dramatic detail how behaviors ranging from depression to aggression to infidelity were adaptive and useful in the very recent history of the human race.
The March 25, 1996, issue of Time featured a cover story on the functions of the brain and the latest research into why our brains behave the way they do. Evolutionary notions of behavior played an important part in that article, including the recent discovery by researchers that those people most likely to have the gene that causes the brain to crave fatty foods and thus produce obesity are also those people whose ancestors over the past ten thousand years came from parts of the world where famines were common. What was an adaptive behavior for primitive peoples has become maladaptive in a world where most hunting
is done at the supermarket.
The 1996 publication of the book Evolutionary Psychiatry: A New Beginning, by psychiatrists and physicians Anthony Stevens and John Price, summarized much of this research, and has provided a deep mine of material for future researchers. For example, they tell the story of the Ik, a group of hunter-gatherer peoples in Uganda whose rates of life-threatening psychological and physical illnesses exploded when they were forcibly moved from their natural hunting grounds and forced to engage in agriculture. Other examples abound in this well-researched work.
WHERE HAVE ALL THE HUNTERS GONE?
Additionally, new advances in anthropology and paleontology have answered one of the most vexing questions about the Hunter/Farmer theory: Why is the leftover Hunter/ADHD gene only present in a minority of our population, and where have all the hunters gone?
In popular literature, Riane Eisler, author of The Chalice and the Blade and Sacred Pleasures, has explored early cultures and shows the fundamental differences between what she calls cooperator
and dominator
cultures. (We in Western civilization are members of the latter.) Similarly, Daniel Quinn, in his books Ishmael and The Story of B, writes about Leavers
and Takers
to describe a similar cultural division. About five thousand years ago, these cultural schisms set the stage for a mass extermination of hunter-gatherer peoples that continues to this day in remote parts of Africa, Asia, and the Americas.
A brilliant study published in the February 1994 issue of Discover magazine detailed the exact answer to the question of when and how this happened, and has since been corroborated by other researchers. Using an analysis of language patterns and DNA, researchers found that three thousand years ago, Africa was almost entirely populated by thousands of different (genetically and in language) tribes of hunter-gatherer peoples. Population density was low and, apparently, strife was minimal.
Then a group of Bantu-speaking agriculturists in the northwestern part of Africa were apparently infected with what University of California professor of Native American Studies Jack Forbes calls the cultural mental illness
of Wétiko (a Native American term for the amoral and predatory behavior of the European invaders). Wétiko is the term that Forbes applied decades ago to describe what Eisler and Quinn today call dominator
and taker
cultural mass psychology.
In his penetrating and thought-provoking book Columbus and Other Cannibals, Professor Forbes points out how Wétiko, which he calls a highly-contagious form of mental illness,
originated in Mesopotamia around five thousand years ago. From there, it spread across the fertile crescent and into Syria, eventually infecting northern Africa, Europe (via the Roman conquerors who carried Wétiko), Asia, and, with the arrival of Columbus, the Americas.
The Bantu-speaking farmers of northwest Africa, culturally contaminated by Wétiko beliefs in the correctness
of genocide, systematically spread across the entire African continent over a two-thousand-year period, destroying every group in their path. The result is that now fewer than one percent of the entire African continent’s population are hunter-gatherers, and the languages and cultures of thousands of tribes—developed over more than 200,000 years of human history—have been lost forever. Entire ethnic groups were wiped out and have now vanished from the Earth.
And it’s entirely reasonable to assume that similar events happened in the prehistory of Asia, Europe, and the Americas. The rise of the dynastic Aztec, Mayan, and Incan farmer cultures is clear in the southern parts of the Western Hemisphere, and agriculture has a long and deep history in China and on the Indian subcontinent. In Europe and Russia (spanning both Europe and Asia) only the most northern or remote of people held off the farmer invaders, and even these, like the Norwegians, were eventually conquered and converted to farming in the past millennia.
The reasons the Wétiko farmers were so successful in their conquest of Africa (and Europe, Asia, Australia, and the Americas) is fourfold:
Farming is more efficient than hunting at producing food. Because it’s about ten times more efficient at extracting calories from the soil, the population density of farming communities tends to be about ten times higher than those of hunting communities. And so their armies were ten times larger.
Farmers become immune to the diseases of their own animals. Measles, chicken pox, mumps, influenza, and numerous other diseases originated in—and are still often carried by—domesticated animals. When the farmers of Europe first came to the shores of the Americas, they killed off millions of Native Americans through accidental infection with these diseases, to which the local hunters had not developed immunities. (This later escalated with the deliberate infection of entire tribes with smallpox-infected blankets by the Wétiko-infected invaders.)
Farming is stable. Farmers tend to stay in one place, and that gives rise to specialization of function. The butcher, baker, candlestick maker, and weapons maker came into being, and armies were formed. Factories were a logical extension of farming technologies, and so farming peoples became even more efficient at producing weapons and technologies of destruction.
The Wétiko culture taught that slaughter could be justified on religious grounds. From its beginnings in Mesopotamia, Wétiko taught that the slaughter of other humans was not only acceptable, but could even be a good thing
because it was ordered or sanctioned by their gods. The most bizarre instance of this can be seen during the Crusades, when Europeans slaughtered heathens
in order to save their souls.
A close second is the winning of the American West,
in which Americans (whose Declaration of Independence says the Creator gave people the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness) decreed that the same Creator gave white Europeans a Manifest Destiny
to overtake the whole continent, and used this religious argument to justify killing tens of millions of the heathen
residents in the largest genocide in world history.
While indigenous hunting peoples often had conflict with neighbors over borders and territories, these conflicts served to strengthen the cultural and independent identities of both tribes involved. Wétiko warfare, where every last person in the competing
tribe is put to death, is something that no anthropologist has ever found in the history or behavior of any past or modern non-Wétiko hunting-gathering peoples. The Wétiko agriculturists, however, viewing non-Wétiko humans to be as exploitable as the land, have a history littered with genocide, slavery, and exploitation.
And so, over the past five thousand years, on every continent and among every people, hunter-gatherers have been wiped out, displaced, slaughtered, exterminated, and oppressed by Wétiko farmers/industrialists. Today, fewer than 2 percent of the world’s human population are genetically pure hunter-gatherer peoples, and only a remnant of them is found in our gene pool, and that only as the result of enslavement and assimilation.
THOSE WHO WOULD DISEMPOWER FOR THEIR OWN GAIN
The Wétiko domination continues in our modern world.
We live in a society so psychologically sick that Mafia kingpins who sell dope and prostitution and order the murder of others live in expensive houses in nice
neighborhoods. We honor those who have attained success,
even if they do it by selling death-dealing substances like tobacco or weapons of war. Billionaires who made their money from fossil fuels, toxic chemicals, or predatory banking essentially own and run our government, and hold high and respected positions in society. Dog eat dog
is a cliché and norm in our culture, and the idea of cooperating instead of dominating is considered quaint and nice
but idealistic and ineffective. It’s assumed that to be successful in business one must lie and cheat, and our political leaders are trusted by such a pitiful minority of citizens (fewer than 20 percent in the 1990s) that it’s doubtful our governments could continue to operate if they didn’t control the police, the prisons, and the tax apparatus (which is enforced by the police and prisons).
In the middle of this cultural milieu, we find those of the helping professions.
The majority who enter these fields do so because of an honest and sincere desire to be of service to others. Much good is done and many lives are improved and even saved, and we rightfully have afforded them a place of honor in our society. Yet within and on the fringes of these professions are also exploiters who proffer dubious advice or outright quack technologies. These controversial treatments range from injecting children with radioactive substances prior to scanning
their brains, to hugely marked-up herbal supplements accompanied by inflated claims, to expensive and prolonged (often for years) brand-name therapies.
Essential to the success of the exploiters is the concept of sickness.
It is well known in the business world that if you can convince people something is wrong with them, you can then make a lot of money selling them a remedy. It’s been done with facial hair, body odor, leg hair, wrinkles, varicose veins, bad
breath, yellowing teeth, and dozens of what used to be ordinary parts of the human condition. Convince people there’s something wrong with or embarrassing about their normal functions and you can get rich selling them mouthwash, douches, depilatory creams, wrinkle removers, suntan aids, diet pills, and a host of other products.
Similarly, exploiters on the fringes of the medical arena depend on the notion of sickness or abnormality to peddle their wares: to sell, they depend on convincing you that there’s something about you that’s intolerable, something that is wrong, something you need to change. In this context we hear some speakers and authors talk about the importance of taking seriously
ADHD.
Their message is not, If you feel you have a problem, I have some solutions that may work,
but rather, You are sick and I am not, and you must unquestioningly let me help you with my cure.
If we agree there is a need but we question the treatment, our intentions are challenged: Why are you questioning me when I’m only trying to help you and your child?
I will be among the first to say that being a Hunter in this Farmer’s world is fraught with difficulty: nobody can deny that. The failures, evident in our prisons and schools and street people, offer loud testimony to the seriousness of ADHD in today’s society.
But to say, "Everything is okay with our culture and society; so it must be you that’s seriously screwed up and needs treatment," is totally disempowering. It robs people of their humanity and dignity. It subjugates them. It is Wétiko.
I much prefer a rational middle ground, well articulated by Harvard Medical School associate professor of psychiatry Dr. John Ratey in his foreword to my 1995 book ADD Success Stories:
After Thom Hartmann’s first two books on ADD, the metaphor of the hunter began to provide many ADDers with an acceptable label for their quirkiness and a way of looking at themselves that was full of hope and permission.
Just as the diagnosis of ADD itself often helps in replacing guilt with hope, so does an appealing metaphor like that of a hunter (which smacks of Robin Hood and Madame Curie) help in giving many people a sense of purpose and direction.
This sort of personal mythology can provide a platform that looks to the future with promise and approval—never masking the problems of the ADD brain but instead offering role models to guide the ADDer into a more optimistic and forward-looking journey.
While this new reframed version of who they are should never excuse foibles or open the door to self-indulgence, being granted permission to be who they are often drives individuals to reach previously unattempted heights. When the shackles of shame are lifted, the future can be approached with a cleaner, crisper, more energetic viewpoint.
WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
And so, more than twenty years after the first publication of this book, we are left with the ongoing questions: What is ADHD, where did it come from, why do we have it, and where do we go from here?
While scientists do not yet know for sure what the mechanism or cause of ADHD is, we do know from numerous studies that when we describe and define people, they will most often live up to that expectation. Tell a child he’s bad often enough, and he’ll most likely become bad. Tell her she’s brilliant, and she’ll strive to achieve brilliance.
Not only do we live up to the things others tell us out loud about ourselves, we also live up to the unspoken assumptions.
The most famous example of this is the study in which a group of elementary school students were divided into two groups, balanced as much as possible by the researchers