Too often, couples who are unaware of the impact of ADHD in their relationship pick exactly the wrong approaches to solving their marital problems approaches that would make sense for most couples, but not when one or both partners has ADHD. Melissa Orlov, author of the award-winning book, The ADHD Effect on Marriage, tells you about the surprising ways that ADHD impacts your relationship and why you BOTH need to be aware of the issues and working on them.
This is not a small problem. Research suggests that 58% of marriages in which one or both partners has ADHD is clinically dysfunctional. But in this case, knowledge really is power. Learn about the specific patterns encouraged by ADHD symptoms that the two of you engage in and you can change them. In this talk, Ms. Orlov helps you identify those patterns, understand the roles you are both playing, and provide you with specific tactics that you can use to start to turn things around.
She can be reached at www.adhdmarriage.com
By Melissa Orlov
Marriages affected by ADHD, like all marriages, range from highly successful to completely disastrous. It is safe to say, though, that those distorted by ADHD symptoms sit squarely in “the worst of times.†Pain and anger abound. During the worst times, you can barely talk to each other. When you do, you rarely agree or see things the same way. You’re frustrated that you’ve gotten to this point, and you’re incredulous that you haven’t been able to make things better. Both of you have begun to suspect that your spouse doesn’t really want to improve things. If he or she did, wouldn’t things have gotten better by now?
If you are married to a person who has (or might have) ADHD, you might feel ignored and lonely in your relationship. Your spouse never seems to follow up on what he agrees to do—so much so that you may feel as if you really have another child in your home instead of an adult. You feel you’re forced to remind him all the time to do things. You nag, and you’ve started to dislike the person you’ve become. The two of you either fight often or have virtually nothing to say to each other that you find meaningful. You are frustrated that your spouse seems to be able to focus intently on things that interest him, but never on you. Perhaps worst of all, you feel intense stress from not knowing whether you can rely on him and feeling saddled with almost all of the responsibilities of the household, while your spouse gets to “have all the fun.â€
If you have ADHD, (or think you do), you may feel as if the person you married is buried deep within a nagging monster that lives in your home. The person you had cherished has been transformed into a control freak, trying to manage every single detail of your life together. No matter how hard you try, you can never do well enough for your spouse, even if you are successful elsewhere, such as in your work. The easiest way to deal with her is simply to leave her alone.
If either of these descriptions sounds familiar, you are suffering from what I call the ADHD effect. Your courtship was happy and exciting (and often fast), but your marriage has been completely different. You may feel desperately unhappy and lonely, and your partner isn’t even aware of it—even if you’ve tried to talk about it. You fight and nag much more than you expected, and life often seems depressingly up and down and out of control. The underlying reason could be that ADHD symptoms–and the responses both of you have to those symptoms—have been destroying your partnership.
The good news is that understanding the role that ADHD plays can turn your marriage around. You can learn how to identify ADHD and the issues it brings to marriages, as well as specific steps you can take to begin to rebuild your lives.
You will be surprised by the consistency and predictability of the patterns in marriages affected by ADHD. These patterns start with an ADHD symptom that triggers a series of predictable responses in both spouses, creating a downward spiral in your marriage. In this case, knowledge is power. You both contribute to these patterns. If you know what they are, you can also change them or avoid them altogether.
The stakes are high. Research suggests that rates of marital dysfunction and divorce are about twice as high for people with ADHD as they are for people without it. However, these statistics do not mean that people with ADHD can’t make good spouses. In these marriages, both partners fall victim to a combination of ADHD symptoms and their mutual responses (and lack of responses) to those symptoms. Know the patterns that ADHD symptoms create, and you can repair your marriage.
The ADHD Effect on Marriage is the guide my husband and I wish we had from the beginning. It will take you through the steps needed to regain your footing in your relationship, repair the emotional damage, and create a path into a brighter and more satisfying future. You’ll find out that your problems aren’t because of character flaws or failings, but are the result of the ADHD effect—and that the two of you together can overcome it. You’ll learn how to put ADHD back where it belongs: as just one of many aspects of your lives, not as the overwhelming determinant of your days.
A brief overview of my own story will demonstrate that even the most dysfunctional marriages can improve and thrive with the right knowledge, understanding, compassion, emotional strength, and a determination to move past marital history.
Like many couples, my husband and I had no idea that one of us had ADHD. I had fallen in love with my husband’s brilliance, sharp wit, and penchant for adventure. He is a lover of music, food, and wine, and he breathed unexpected excitement into my life with love, attention, gifts, and surprise trips. He focused on me with a ferocity that both surprised and flattered me. He was accomplished and professionally successful, yet warm; when I got sick on our first date, I was touched that he tucked me under a blanket on the sofa and made me hot tea.
But in its early years, our marriage began to fall apart, despite the fact that we loved each other. I couldn’t understand how someone who had started out so attentive could now ignore me and my needs so completely, or be so “consistently inconsistent†when it came to carrying his weight around the house and with the children. He sometimes helped out, but usually didn’t, and often seemed to be unaware of my existence. As it turned out, he was equally confused and annoyed. How could the woman he had married, who had seemed so warm and optimistic, change into an exhausted nag who wouldn’t give him a break and wouldn’t leave him alone?
By our ten-year anniversary, we were completely dysfunctional as a couple and contemplating divorce. We were held together only by our desire to raise our children well and a feeling deep inside that we ought to be able to do better. We were angry, frustrated, completely disconnected, and deeply unhappy. I was clinically depressed. Around that time, our daughter, at age nine, was diagnosed with both a math learning disability and ADHD. In time, we learned my husband has ADHD, too.
Discovering that one or both of you has ADHD is just the beginning. Medication is the most efficient way to jump-start treatment, but it does not effectively treat ADHD in marriages without the addition of behavioral changes. These changes must be voluntary. No matter how much a non-ADHD spouse may want to, she can’t “make†her spouse do certain things like be more organized or more attentive. Furthermore, these changes must come from both partners. Changes only in the ADHD spouse don’t resolve the marriage’s issues. We learned both ideas the hard way, mostly at my husband’s expense, as I kept trying to force him to do things differently. The harder I pushed, the more he resisted, and the worse our relationship became. Sound familiar?
Finding joy in your marriage again after years of hurt is a journey of change, not a quick fix. The rewards of the journey are worth it. My husband and I have moved from completely dysfunctional to almost ridiculously happy. We are thriving as individuals and feel that our relationship is stronger now than it has ever been. Back “in love,†we feel safer and more optimistic than on the day we married over twenty years ago. My husband’s ADHD symptoms are under control, and I have a much stronger understanding and appreciation of the effort that takes. Unlike during our difficult times, we know and accept each other’s faults and rejoice in each other’s strengths. Our pride in our ability to pull ourselves back from the brink helps us to celebrate our feelings in ways that are loving and supportive. We won’t ever go back to our difficult past, and have crafted a new relationship and brilliant future.
You can do this, too. You can move past your current unhappiness and create something better than you could have ever dreamed possible.
It’s amazing how consistent are the patterns in struggling ADHD marriages. These patterns start with a common ADHD symptom that triggers a series of pretty predictable responses in both spouses, creating a downward spiral. But what if you knew what those triggers are, so that you could eliminate them or respond differently? What would happen if you could just say “Oh, that’s the ADHD right there†and brush it off, rather than engage in battle? You can learn to recognize many of these patterns and then eliminate them from your relationship using methods that take ADHD into account.
These twelve patterns are discussed in much more depth in my award-winning book, The ADHD Effect on Marriage. Learning about them is just one step in your journey. It is my hope that you’ll be inspired to seek more information and start taking the steps you need to take to find the joy in your partnership that you thought you had lost.
© Melissa Orlov 2012. All rights reserved.
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