Mark-John Clifford
@markjohn · 4:17
Experts, Coaches, and More. Of My!
Nine times out of ten, you don't fit the ideal ADHD bookish person. Now, sometimes you do. I mean, I'm not going to say no one does, and I did say that and I didn't mean that. But no one is a book. I mean, I found it very rare that everyone fits that. Now experts go along with coaches. Coaches. I find I'm kind of against coaching because I believe you can coach yourself
Mark, I love the caption. I mean the image here. I love your message too. There is a distinct difference between experts and coaches. Experts come and go. Like you said, everything that we know now we didn't know before. And if we did know about it, it was an iteration. It was a progression. It was a prequel to the knowledge we know now in almost every single category of life. And that's never going to stop
Tanya Coles
@MsColes77 · 3:39
We didn't have someone to go to to give us that accountability and all that we're looking for in a coach. So I do agree with that. I think that the coaching market is just becoming oversaturated. Everybody's a coach for everything. It's like they go through something and then they turn around and become a coach
Swell Team
@Swell · 0:15
Mark-John Clifford
@markjohn · 1:21
But I'm sorry, I just see a definite I think coaching is basically to make money. That's it. I don't see any great work in it. I had a friend of mine that went through coaching and he spent more time with me than he did with his coach that he was paying 150 an hour for or his parents were paying
Mark-John Clifford
@markjohn · 3:12
So of course they're going to start using that name because it means more, it means more definitive people. It opens up the spectrum, as you want to call it. I have ADhd and autism, and I kind of resent being thrown into a group where we don't have our own individual life. I mean, I've always admitted to being adhd. I admitted to having autism. I admit to being a diabetic. As soon as they start saying, you're living with diabetes