Faster Than Normal: Turbocharge Your Focus, Productivity, and Success with the Secrets of the ADHD Brain
Faster Than Normal: Turbocharge Your Focus, Productivity, and Success with the Secrets of the ADHD Brain book cover

Faster Than Normal: Turbocharge Your Focus, Productivity, and Success with the Secrets of the ADHD Brain

Paperback – October 3, 2017

Price
$17.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
256
Publisher
TarcherPerigee
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0143131229
Dimensions
5.56 x 0.65 x 8.23 inches
Weight
6.4 ounces

Description

"Peter is a pioneer, an adventurer, an inventor and a seer. His advice is the best kind of advice. xa0It is advice learned in the trenches, in the arena, on the fields of life." --Edward Hallowell, MD, from the Foreword, bestselling author of Driven to Distraction “Peter Shankman is living proof that living outside the bell-shaped curve, combined with a drive to succeed, can produce amazing results.” --Jordan D. Metzl, MD, author of The Exercise Cure “While ADHD may be considered a ‘deficit’ to some, Shankman positions it as an attribute within the context of our immediate future. ADHD is a unique gift of creative synthesis that makes sense only inside of the complex digital networks and hyper-stimulation that now defines us.” --Amanda Steinberg, CEO, Worth Financial and author of Worth It Peter Shankman is an entrepreneur, CEO, runner, skydiver, podcaster, Ironman triathlete, and a dad. He’s the founder of ShankMinds: Breakthrough, a private, online entrepreneur community with members from around the world. Peter also hosts the top-rated podcast Faster Than Normal , helping people to understand that ADD and ADHD are a gift, not a curse. He’s based in New York City. Visit FasterThanNormal.com. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One An Introduction to the World of Attention Deficit . . . Ooh! Shiny! Hi, I'm Peter Shankman. I'm the most ADHD person you're ever going to meet. But I'm also really, really proud of that. My ADHD is responsible for the majority of my success, and I've had a little bit of success. I've started and successfully sold three companies, the most well-known of which is called Help a Reporter Out (or HARO), which singlehandedly changed how journalists around the world find their sources and how companies and regular people get into the media. I'm also a worldwide keynote speaker, spending the majority of my time on an airplane to give keynote talks to major companies across the globe, including American Express, Disney, Huawei, Starwood Hotels, and hundreds of others. I host one of the top podcasts on ADD and ADHD, called (duh) Faster Than Normal. I run an online entrepreneurial community of more than three hundred people called ShankMinds. I've written four business books, including two bestsellers. I built a top-selling video course on ADHD, called the FTN Course. I go on TV a lot, including CNN, Fox, Bloomberg, and CNBC, talking about marketing, advertising, business, and the customer economy. I'm an Ironman Triathlete, a "B" licensed skydiver with more than four hundred jumps, and possibly most important, a dad to an amazing four-year-old daughter. I've also been diagnosed with ADHD three times, have a very addictive personality, and wake up every single morning sure that today will be the day I'm found out to be nothing more than a fraud who's never done anything good in his life. I've blown countless past relationships because I didn't know how to slow down and match the life-speed of my partner, I've had some spectacular failures, both professionally and personally, and for whatever this is worth, I've cried at more than 70 percent of all episodes of The West Wing. While you're reading this book, look for the word "SQUIRREL!" Why? Because I get it-I'm ADHD. I know that books in general are occasionally hard to read-not because we don't like reading, but because sitting through sixty thousand words can, at times, make us want to do anything else. Again: I get it. That's why I'm going to use the term "SQUIRREL!" When you see "SQUIRREL!" it means that I'm saying something even more useful than everything else. It'll be something small, it'll be something tweetable or great for posting on Facebook, it'll be something you'll want to highlight and share with people, it'll be a quick tip that can truly change your life. So keep an eye out for "SQUIRREL!" They're essentially the Cliff's Notes of this book. Needless to say, an introduction like that doesn't get me very many matches at speed-dating events. If you're reading this and you don't have ADHD-or maybe you've never been diagnosed-or you know friends or family or loved ones who do-keep reading. One of the beauties of this book is that it's also for everyone-not just those with ADHD. Those without it are going to learn just as much (if not more) from the tips, tricks, and hacks that I lay down here. Trust me-you'll get three hours a day back in your life, just for starters. If you do have ADHD, though, some of the stories here will be incredibly familiar to you, I have no doubt. Like sitting in my dorm room at Boston University two days into my freshman year, asking myself why I simply couldn't shut up every once in a while, because I'd just blurted out something that I thought was funny, but no one else in the room did, and I was sure I'd just blown the next four years of my social life. Or perhaps the frequent trips to the principal's office in grade school, where one of my parents would come collect me after school, and each meeting would start with "If he only applied himself . . ." Maybe you might relate to the constant "WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH YOU?" looks that I would get every time I had a new or (in my mind, anyway) amazing idea, after I presented it to my bosses, or even to people who I thought loved me. (Definitely one of the reasons I went out on my own professionally, that's for sure.) During my time researching this book, and doing all of the homework for it, I've run into countless similar stories from people I've met, those whom I've interviewed on the podcast, and others who have e-mailed me out of the blue to say "I can relate." Do any of these scenarios make any sense to you? After getting a note from the dean of students in my son's bag six times in two weeks, I called the dean up and asked him point-blank, "Can you tell me if there is anything my son is doing right lately?" If I get into the office super early and work before anyone else shows up, I'm so much more productive. The second the office fills with people, it's like my brain shuts down and I start spacing out. I finally had to explain to my boss that I needed a half hour in the middle of the day to go exercise, or I'd be useless to him for the remainder of the day. Once I got that and he understood why, my productivity went through the roof, and I've been named "Employee of the Month" three times in the past four months! SQUIRREL!: Here's what matters more than anything: You're not broken. You're not damaged, you're not defective, and you're not destroyed. You're not on the island of misfit toys, and your life isn't "wrong" because you've been diagnosed with ADHD. In fact, I hate that term "diagnosed." You get "diagnosed" with a disease that can hurt you, one that can kill you. You don't get "diagnosed" for good things. No one has ever been "diagnosed" as a lottery winner, or "diagnosed" as stunning enough to win a beauty pageant. So the first rule here is this: you're never allowed to say "diagnosed with ADHD" again, because ADHD is not a negative. Say it with me: ADHD is not a negative! Quite the opposite. You're gifted with a brain that's faster than normal, and in this book, we're going to learn how to operate it to its maximum potential. It's going to be awesome. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A refreshingly practical and honest guide that rewrites the script on ADHD
  • Peter Shankman is a busy guy -- a media entrepreneur who runs several businesses, gives keynote speeches around the world, hosts a popular podcast, runs marathons and Iron Mans, is a licensed skydiver, dabbles in angel investing, and is loving father to his young daughter. Simply put, he always seems to have more than 24 hours in a day. How does he do it? Peter attributes his unusually high energy level and extreme productivity to his ADHD. In
  • Faster Than Norma
  • l, Shankman shares his hard-won insights and daily hacks for making ADHD a secret weapon for living a full and deeply satisfying life. Both inspiring and practical, the book presents life rules, best practices, and simple but powerful ways to:Harness your creative energy to generate and execute your ideasDirect your hyperfocus to get things done Identify your pitfalls--and avoid themStreamline your daily routine to eliminate distractionsUse apps and other tech innovations to free up your time and energyFilled with ingenious hacks and supportive self-care advice, this is the positive, practical book the ADHD community has long needed - and is also an invaluable handbook for anyone who's sick of feeling overwhelmed and wants to drive their faster-than-normal brain at maximum speed...without crashing.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

“Having ADHD makes life paradoxical.” Edward M. Hallowell, M.D.

If you did not buy your copy of this book from Amazon (mine was a gift), don't bother to review it because -- with rare exception -- Amazon only features reviews of verified purchases. That policy may be legal but it is certainly contemptible.

* * *

Almost everything I know about attention deficit hyperactivity disorder I learned from a dear friend, Ned Hallowell, one of the world’s most renowned authorities, who has this to say about Peter Shankman in the Foreword:

“Peter is a good man, a kind man, a devoted father, and a man who wants to leave the world a better place than he found it, which he has already done (improve the world, that is, not leave it!) IT is good to know when reading a book, especially a book that offers you advice on how to live your life, that the author is a good person.” High praise, indeed.

In the Introduction, Shankman recalls this passage in Ned’s classic work, Delivered from Distraction, co-authored with John Ratey, M.D.:

“Having ADHD makes life paradoxical. You can superfocus sometimes, but also space out when you least mean to. You can radiate confidence and also feel as insecure as a cat in a kennel. You can perform at the highest level, feeling incompetent as you do so. You can be loved by many, but feel as if nobody really likes you. You can absolutely, totally intend to do something, then forget to do it. You can have the greatest ideas in the world, but feel as if you can’t accomplish a thing.”

Obviously, “normal” is a relative term. If I understand Shankman’s use of the term (and I may not), he is thinking on two levels: what is normal for someone who is ADHD and what is normal for someone who isn’t. According to Shankman, ADHD (like the Chinese character for “crisis”) can mean both peril and opportunity. “The first rule of life should be this: If you’re not taking care of yourself, you can’t possibly be expected to take care of anyone or anything else. If I don’t focus on being [or becoming] the person I can be, (including exercise, self-care, awareness, etc.,) how can I possibly focus on being a good father and a good businessman? So, doing the things that benefit me and not sacrificing long-term goals for short-term gains is probably the best lesson I can offer. There’s a reason airlines tell you to put on your own oxygen mask before helping others. We should all heed that advice, not just on airplanes.”

Whenever asked what he does, Ned Hallowell replies, “I open up gifts.” Shankman offers an excellent example of someone who lived and worked for 30+ years before being diagnosed ADHD. He has already opened gifts within him and will open others in years to come. Meanwhile, with his podcasts and writings, he is helping countless others to open their own gifts. Like Ned Hallowell and John Ratey, Peter Shankman is living a turbocharged, purpose-driven life with focus, productivity, and success.

And so can almost everyone else.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

I want to endorse this faster than normal

If you had asked me a year ago if Shankman would be a good choice for learning focus, I would have replied. "Shankman excels at everything. Focus appears to be the opposite of how he does it"

Then I started reading the work he's done leading to this book.

Wow.

I should have known. Peter Shankman is good at focus too. I love following everything he does and this book is no exception.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Best ADHD book in recent times!

If you have ADHD and you know it, buy this book! This has been one of the best ADHD books I've read in a long time, and the author gives you MANY ways to cope with and use ADHD to your advantage. BUY THIS BOOK!
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Use your turbocharged brain to full advantage!

Peter's ability to wrestle his turbocharged brain into channeled productivity is a wonder to behold--not because I think it shouldn't be possible for someone with an ADHD brain, but because I watch my own son struggle with his turbocharged brain every single day. My new pipe dream (and I'm known for making such things happen) is for Peter and my son to co-author an edition of Faster Than Normal for pre-teens and adolescents. Call me, Peter! I'm easy to find!
1 people found this helpful