For those of you who are freaking out about folks in this thread that have already sumitted or are near submitting applications, calm down.
From someone who has done this twice already, both sort of unsuccessfully and successfully, getting your applications in super early is not necessarily a must. It could be advantageous if you have some professors who are eagerly awaiting your application to pluck you from the applicant pool right away. However, there could be an argument made that sending your applications too early, especially if faculty members are not expecting them, could lead to lost materials. Sometimes clinical programs wait until January to start reviewing applicant materials anyway.
Additionally, it is important to note, as could be observed from last year's SDNers who were offered admission, the time/date one submitted an application often correlated little with whether one was offered admission. You'll see lots of applicants (who will be successful in the end) telling stories on November 30, December 14, and January 14 saying that they just barely made it to the post office on time to send their materials overnight.
I even found that with some of the schools who portray an attitude of "we don't allow anything late and we prefer everything 3 weeks before the deadline" that they will still make exceptions for materials that get lost or letters that are misdirected.
I also thought I should mention, since some people have brought up the issue of working on personal statements, I don't think there is a magical formula to creating the perfect "one." As will be evidenced by everyone sitting down and looking at the requirements of each individual application, one will see that nearly all require an individual personal statement tailored to the school and the faculty of interest at each. Personal statement guidlines and requirements vary widely from 250 words to as many as 16 pages. I found that by starting a few personal statements tailored to the first few schools I sent applications to, I was able to then construct the following dozen personal statements largely from cutting and pasting pieces that worked and then tailoring part of each essay to the attriubutes of each program and the faculty of interest.
It's a feat to get them in at all. It's like a second full-time job. Good luck to everyone in getting them done.
By the way, I am looking into schools with professors mostly studying ADHD.
-UBC
-UVic
-OISE
-Wazzu
-U of Maryland
-U of Rochester
-Penn State
To name a few.