My ADHD husband is totally at the mercy of his symptoms right now. I got him to read enough that he agrees he has it. He is in the “process” of getting himself in somewhere so that he can be diagnosed officially. Reading between the lines, you know know what that means.
Of course, he doesn’t understand the scope of their effect yet. And I do understand that and am reminding myself so I don’t hold it against him.
And in the meantime, I know that it would be so helpful for both of us if I praised him for something. The trouble? His symptoms are so rampant.
The man I live with is super sensitive and always angry. A good day is him just being cranky and irritable. He doesn’t do anything except his hobbies and go to work. He has no friends, like so many others we read about on this forum.
I can thank him for working hard for our family. I can thank him for the occasional affection he initiates. But other than that... I’m at a loss. Idle conversation isn’t very common, and when it is, he takes offense at things I say.
Our marriage is in a really bad place, actually. And he doesn’t see that his relationship with our teens is not in good shape, either. He just can’t see all the destruction the symptoms are causing, and everything is, in his view, everyone else’s fault.
But I know it isn’t hopeless and I know that since I’m in the best place, that change and growth here has to start with me. (I don’t always feel like being the one to do it, but I know it won’t come from him.)
So what do I do if all I can find at this moment is that he goes to work and the sometime-affection? How else can I praise him? Is there another way to build some positivity back in?
I was feeling guilty that things are so bad and that I have stopped offering so much to the relationship, but now I’m being reminded exactly why I stopped. It does no good, it makes me feel worse to have my efforts go unnoticed or to backfire and have him yelling at me or ignoring me...
But the being more positive... that would help me, even if it made no difference to him. I would be reminded that somewhere in there is a guy who might not be too far gone. Because that’s really what I dread might be true. I am afraid that he’s never gonna deal with the symptoms and his emotional health, and that this is the footpath leading to the end.
Sigh...familiar territory.
Submitted by Goldilox73 on
Oh, Brindle...I wish we could have coffee together. So much of what you said resonates. Living with an angry spouse. Feeling guilty that giving praise is difficult because you are hurt and mentally spent. Being yelled at because of sensitivity and misinterpretation. I am there, too. I’ve done so much research I could write my own book. But, I’m coming to the harsh realization that I can’t fix this myself. Without his participation, things will never change. Not what I signed up for in a marriage! But here we are. Just wanted you to know you’re not alone...
Did I write this? Or was it you...
Submitted by Intuitive1 on
Wow. Just wow. I feel like you just spoke for me and our children. And as of late, things have just been getting so much worse. The issue has been identified, and supposedly "accepted" but what's being done about it? My therapist says, I am doing all I can on my part, I have all the tools necessary, and that the rest is up to him. Well, shit. What do me and the kids do in the meantime? We are miserable! Hell, HE is miserable! I feel like we are falling apart, and fast. Our son has a chronic illness and was diagnosed in Feb of 2017. Its when I had my breaking point with; who do I take care of first? My son or my husband. It was my 9 year old son. It was a pivotal moment for me, a turning point in our marriage because I realized that I had been enabling my husbands ADHD crutch all these years, taking on the extra responsibilities of what he just couldn't remember to do, or follow through with. I gently told him, our son is sick, he needs us, me, and I have to pass the "backpack of life" over to you for a bit. You are going to need to hold yourself accountable now, bc my priorities have had to be shifted. I am here to support you and help when I can. Every therapist we have been to agrees. But my husband feels abandoned. Unloved. Barely tolerated. And has become someone I no longer enjoy being around. Not only do we have a chronically ill son, we have found out that our daughter has ADHD and Anxiety and possibly the RSD(Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria) that we discovered my husband has. So, hear me out..I have an ADHD Hubs, with RSD, a chronically ill son with incurable disease(Crohn's) and a daughter wtih ADHD and RSD as well. For lack of better terms, I am drowning.
We have a marriage therapist, and I have an individual therapist. I am doing EVERYTHING I can do on MY part to survive, and cope, and help, and motivate, and support, and empower, and love, and deal with on a daily basis, that I just do not feel like I am getting anywhere.
What else can I do??
Intuitive1, I have no answers
Submitted by SweetandSour on
Intuitive1, I have no answers. You are carrying a heavy load. Anyone in your shoes would be anxious. I guess just try to accept the things you can't change (AA speak, but true). All of your family members have conditions that you did not cause and can not take away. I'd like to give you hope although I don't know you, but you sound like a very caring person and I think you will be able to adjust and find ways to cope with what life has (unfairly) dished out to your family. Keep with the counselling and also engage in one thing that's only for you that gets your mind off everyone else. I'm so sorry that you and your family have all this on your plates.
Intuitive
Submitted by Brindle on
I also have no answers, but we are always here to listen. I have multiple people in my home that have ADHD, too, and it is daily a hard thing. The kids are learning about themselves and their issues, and he isn’t. He’s not learning about them or himself. It’s hard, it’s exhausting, but I have hope the children will be equipped to manage their symptoms and to grow into healthy emotional and mental maturity.
Try to take as good of care of yourself as you can. Try not to let any accusations stick to your heart that he might level at you. I’m proud of you for telling him that you can’t do it all and that he would have to figure it out. You’re doing the best you can.
Goldilox
Submitted by Brindle on
It is impossible to change alone. I try to keep that ever before me, and then some kind of “I-can’t-take-it-anymore” comes over me. And I find myself straining against it again. I must have come some way of the journey to acceptance, though, because this time I was at least just focused on my attitude and not “how can I get him to see?!” *smile*