I was diagnosed with ADD when I was 9. I always seemed to have a hard time in school, all the other kids were getting good grades and I was failing every class. I went to a private school and the teaching there is a lot different than a public school.
My teachers noticed my constant struggle to get good grades and called my mom in. They told her that I have a learning disability and need to be medicated. She was offended, especially with how they said it. They're not doctors, they're teachers. My mom ended up taking me to the doctor and he prescribed me adderall. I took it for about a year, and it was awful. I don't mind taking medicine but this seemed a lot different. Although I did focus a lot more, it wiped my personality out completely. I would get really bad mood swings and I physically felt terrible.
My mom took me off the medication and I finished up at the private school. Going to a public school for high school changed things dramatically. I made a lot of friends, something I wasn't used to. And I was getting all A's with the exception of a few classes (math

). I still had a very hard time focusing, and I still do but my teachers really supported me. They congratulated me when I did well and when I didn't, I asked what I could do different and they tried to help.
The ACT was the hardest part for me. I knew I needed to study for it but I didn't. I wanted to see how much I knew, without studying and cramming. I ended up scoring a 23, overall with a 17 on the math portion. I have never been good at math, but I had never been more proud of myself. None of my teachers in high school knew I have a "learning disability" or what they call it, and I'm glad things happened the way they did. I am still currently unmedicated and going to college, the first in my family actually. It is a really tough road but because of how much faith my high school teachers put in me, I know I definitely have the ability to get through college. I guess the teachers helped more than the doctors did this time haha