ADD meds. (Depression meds were somewhat helpful when I was actually depressed, however.)
Are you actually diagnosed with ADD? I took it for granted that you were at first, but then it occurred to me that some people attempt to use these for augmentation above the baseline. This works better for some people than others, but it can be accompanied by some pretty serious side effects.
Personally, I consider halting the use of my ADD medication in my first year of college to be one of the most glaring failures of instrumental rationality in my life, particularly given that I already knew that in the past, medications had radically changed how they affected me after interruptions to consistent, regularly applied dosage, so I did not have good reason to suppose I could go back to it if I felt it was necessary.
Yes, I have been diagnosed with ADD.
Like many people here, I think a lot about how to become more awesome. I'm fairly optimistic about my chances, because I can clearly remember times in the past when I was less awesome than I am now-- not necessarily less rational, but less productive and with fewer relevant skills.1
So I've been thinking about what changes I believe have most improved my effectiveness, changes which have caused me to learn many useful things and/or greatly increased my productive capacity. I found the list interesting:
Things which are notably not on the list:
So how have you actually improved your own effectiveness?
1 Some of these less-awesome past versions of me suffered from clinical depression, but the last time I had a major episode of depression I was able to deal with it much more purposefully than in the past and still accomplish a large percentage of the shit I was supposed to be doing, so I think there has been improvement independent of my state of mental health.
2 Major consequences for failure seem to be very effective motivators, but since I want to undertake projects that are difficult enough to have a significant chance of failure, I would like these consequences to be highly motivating without being horribly costly, if possible. Ideas?
3 I have learned a lot from pleasure reading, but I'm not sure how much was actually useful, and since I've been reading for pleasure since I can remember there's no easy before-and-after comparison to make.