Submitted by JamieI on 06/18/2008.
I've been married to a wonderful man for 4 years, together for 6. Like many non-ADHD spouses, I was attracted to the spontaneous, child-like, fun qualities of my now-husband and felt that "opposites really attract". However, since being married, the effects of his acknowledged (but untreated) ADHD had corroded our marriage and turned me into a bitter, angry, sad, and anxious wife who is ready to leave. My husband teaches students with behavior disorders, so he knows all the signs and coping mechanisms to deal with his own ADHD, but as of yet, refuses counseling, medication, or strategies to make our life better. I'm a total type-A person who has taken on the majority of responsibility in our lives, and have become someone I barely recognize... I never laugh, never smile, and generally think depression is a factor in my life. I now want to have a child, but can't fathom the idea of having a child when I feel as though I'm already raising one, and do not want to bring a child into a home that is so disfunctional and broken. He is a good man, with good intentions and a good soul; but his habits, lack of motivation, and inability to follow-through has driven me to the breaking point. I feel incredibly guilty for thinking of divorce, because if ADHD is really a disability (as my husband claims), than I am a rotten person for not staying to support him? I feel as if life is too short to be this unhappy, and I sincerely doubt my ability to support him long-term with these challenges. I've tried many suggested ideas, such as lists, schedules, reminders, etc, but nothing seems to work and I just don't want to try much more. He says I've checked out of the marriage, and I think he's right. He says if I just love him enough (more) things will get better. I think it will take more than love; from reading other posts, it seems like it takes a lifetime of patience, extra effort, and more patience, which frankly, I've never been in high supply of. Any thoughts on my predicament?
I sincerely feel your pain.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on
I feel yours too
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on
Same boat
Submitted by Jamie (not verified) on
When to Leave
Submitted by MelissaOrlov on
If there is a benefit to not commenting for a while, it's coming back to the forum and seeing a rich conversation going on like this one!
The situation that you all describe is the quintessential issue for ADHD relationships. That may not make you feel any better. But the issue is, where do you draw the line? I tried to get at that a bit with my last post, though I struggled to write it, and still don't think I said exactly what I wanted to say.
But here are some thoughts:
In my observation, it is both partners who need to be invested in fixing the relationship, in part because it takes developing good communication - by definition something that happens between two people, not one. The non-ADHD spouse cannot organize the ADD spouse unless that is part of a larger plan for how the couple uses their various strengths to make the whole marriage work. "Organizing" a spouse in order to get them to "do better" is always a losing proposition - one that engenders resentment on both sides, and one that also gives the ADD spouse an opportunity to depend on the non-ADHD spouse. On the other hand, the role that the non-ADD spouse can plan (and should, in my opinion) is that of cheerleader and supporter. Change is hard, and it is easier if you feel your spouse is in your court.
So, what that means is this - if you are going to ask your husband to try for some period of time longer, then make sure that you aren't checked out from the process. Don't interfere, but don't abandon him, either. Let him lead the process of change, but be a sounding board for him. An example of this, ask if he wants your input about behavioral observations as he tries out various medications (often takes experimenting to find the right one). Your input can be useful in this.
If it gives you any hope at all, my husband and I were in the exact position of all of you in this thread, with the exception that we had two kids (the reason we decided to keep trying a bit longer). We finally did have the breakthrough necessary to stay together and work it out and now I can't imagine we could be happier...so it can work out, though won't always.
The important turning point for me was deciding in my heart that the most important thing, bar none, was to be myself - happy, outgoing, thoughtful - no matter where that took me. This decision unhooked me from the thought that I had to stay married for my kids or that I had some obligation to the struggle we had been having other than to behave honorably and as I would want to be treated. It freed me to change my behavior from resentful and angry back to the "true me". The result was that my husband noticed the change right away. As we worked through whether or not we wanted to stay together he saw the person whom he had fallen in love with orignally - a person who had disappeared under the stress of our ruined marriage. He decided to try one more time and we were both able to clear out the ruins of our past and reinvent the relationship.
That may sound backwards, and I didn't decide to be true to myself with the goal of staying together in mind. I just decided I was better and stronger than staying in an awful relationship and fixing the relationship happens to be where that decision took me.
Be true to yourself, and if that includes compassion for your husband, who knows where it will lead you. But you cannot support him forever - either he decides to be the person with whom you fell in love or he doesn't. Marriage always does include compromises, but in my mind that doesn't mean that you become someone you don't like.
Melissa Orlov
leaving him
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on
Wow...how I feel your pain
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on
My Story too.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on