Chemistry- the tie that binds or the forbidden fruit?
I'm pruning this post, I admit to how dumb I sound and how wrong my behavior has been.
I'm pruning this post, I admit to how dumb I sound and how wrong my behavior has been.
Every time I read this board I cry, cry and cry. I cry out of sadness, anger, confusion, and denial. The man I love with every bit of me decided that he was leaving because he was no longer interested in me; he felt that there was no romantic feeling in our relationship. I swear that every time I look at the ”six signs that ADHD is apart of your relationship” I feel like this is why my relationship didn't work. I wish he would read this board, do some research and STOP asking his friends for advice! My now ex-boyfriend was diagnosed with ADHD in his adult years.
I would be very interested in hearing some discussion on situations where both partners have ADHD.
Hi everyone.
So here I am again...feeling sad and hopeless. My husband and I got into another argument over the phone and he hung up on me.
I'm at work and I am loathing going home. The rest of the day will be filled with upset and wasting hours of time being upset and defensive and not solving the initial problem until we are both so off topic and tired of arguing that we just go to sleep exhausted and with my husband feeling like nothing ever got solved and me secretly happy about it being over and hoping it will be forgotten about.
I've been married for over 10 years and have 3 children.
Wow, where do I start? I can't believe I found this site. I finally have reached clarity after 35 years of an adhd marriage. Our marriage has all the symptoms in Melissa's book. The most damaging are my husband's outbursts, his lack of emotional suppor ,my disconnecting (for my own protection ) and my emotional repression. We have been in counseling off and on for years. I thought I found a wonderful counselor, but he never mentioned my husband's adhd as perhaps the root cause of our problems.
My husband started medication mid-Oct (100% for work issues, our marriage was better than it had been in many years). He started on Concerta. It made him irritable and it took me forever to convince him of this. He stopped but wanted to try another, so he started Vyvanse. It had the same affect on him, it made him really hostile and short fused. He took it long enough that I honestly thought I had lost him to the medication because he refused to see what it was doing and it wasn't an easy road getting there, but he did agree to try and stop taking it to see if it would help.
Hi everyone, I've been a lurker here for months, and I guess it's time for me to post and share my story.
I'm a 34 year old gay man in a relationship with my partner of 8 years who was diagnosed with ADHD a couple of years ago. For a long while I didn't believe in ADHD, just thought really, everyone has ADHD symptoms, it's a matter of controlling it. I didn't truly believe in it until about a year ago.
While most of what I have seen here is negativity, judgment and generalizations which make ADHDers look infantile, inept, insensitive, abusive and generally a fearful burden to their spouses, I feel that portrays an unrealistic and lopsided view and serves to dishearten both ADHDer and "normal" alike. I know there are others here who are engaged in the lifelong process of navigating the challenges of ADHD and have had both small and great successes. I propose this topic as a way to celebrate your success and provide hope to both your fellow ADHDs and partners as well.