I’ve told myself and others that I don’t get bored easily. I can daydream through some experiences or I’ll distract myself with games, books, etc.
But I’m finding out that I’ve always had my hands full with an activity, doing more than one at once. Like playing animal crossing with a movie playing, and eating lunch. Of course, I end up missing conversations in whatever media I’m consuming.
It’s like I’m so good at distracting myself that I need something to catch my focus. If it’s boring or predictable, I don’t have to pay attention. I’ve had friends point out that I do things the hard way a lot.
I don’t want this feeling to be boredom because that feels like a moral failing. It’s thinking of people I care about and not being able to muster up enough compassion to give them my undivided attention. I can’t sit through a phone call and I wish I could.
I hate that it comes off as me being an edgelord sometimes. But it’s just me not reacting strongly.
Writing this, I realize how much of this is an attention disorder or something dissociative. I’ve carried these confused feelings about how I perceive myself and I’m only now starting to dismantle the shame.
And I’m probably going to look into helping my focus.

In a very stereotypical ADHD move, I saw your comment was long and didn’t read it before posting. But then I decided to read it anyway.
I think the combination of our comments is quite nice: I very much try and share how I deal with my issues, while you posted a much more… Human response? Its important to be gentle with yourself (thanks for pointing this out).
Lol I do the same all the time! In fact, it happened this time, too! I saw OP was hurting because she felt it was a moral failing to not be able to focus, and that she was failing her loved ones by not being able to give them her undivided attention, so I started typing a post thinking “I’ll give OP some tips, I know I have adhd, I should be able to help!”
Then while typing the 2nd paragraph I realized I really struggle with what OP describes, and that right now I’m trying to figure out strategies that are not hurtful in the long run, or masking super hard, but I really don’t have any. So I turned my post into one saying “be nicer to yourself, and share your struggles with the people you care about, most of the time they’ll understand and work with you”.
I really appreciate the practical advice, though. I’m going through the process of getting officially diagnosed with ADHD right now after masking and burning out for decades, so I’m a little bit new to figuring myself out with the knowledge of having ADHD, and I don’t have a lot of actual practical advice beyond “pretend to be neurotypical really hard and fuck yourself up in the process”. Which isn’t the best advice. On the other hand your comment was everything I hoped to be able to write from my own experience.
I could see OP feels bad about not being able to focus, so at least I could offer some support and encouragement to make accommodations for herself and ask the same of others. ‘Unmasking autism’ has gotten me thinking about how we can make room for ourselves with our disabilities in our personal and social lives, because society sure as hell isn’t offering us that room to begin with.
This has been a great way to start my day with good vibes :)