Submitted by MelissaOrlov on 03/17/2009.
For info on the Dr Phil Show, please see the more recent March 30 post. I didn't erase this spot because people had posted attachments to it which would have disappeared had I eliminated the post all together.
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Tired Spouse in a ADHD Household
Submitted by Joanne (not verified) on
Joanne
Submitted by Steph on
Joanne, I have read this and I truly understand what you deal with everyday. Its very similar to my marriage. Today I came to the conclusion that maybe my husband is just a jerk and its not all his ADD symptoms that is ruining our relationship. I am just so incredibly sad right now and he has no idea, not in the slightest bit. I am ready to leave. Its not what I want, but I think its what I need.
Best wishes to you.
Steph
Steph, I truly understand the
Submitted by Joanne (not verified) on
Joanne, please don't let
Submitted by Steph on
Joanne, please don't let guilt keep you someplace where you aren't truly happy and thriving. I do firmly believe that things happen for a reason and that relationships, no matter how inconsequential, are for a specific purpose. The tough thing is understanding that sometimes those relationships are only for a certain period of time , and when a goal is accomplished (set by someone above??) its time to move on in your journey. Think, if you will, of people in your life that have passed away...their purpose is done...they have completed their mission...they move on. Its really a beautiful gift once you think that way about it. Its taken me a long time and a rather tough spiritual journey to think along those lines. I do accept certain relationship endings with more peace now and well, maybe this way of thinking will give you some much needed peace in your life???
I wish you the best and look forward to hearing how things unfold for you
Steph
"...I think what bothers me
Submitted by David (not verified) on
Husband Doesn't Know
Submitted by MelissaOrlov on
David's point is a good one - your husband does need to know the extent of the misery you feel, and how close you are to walking out. (And, by the way, some people do live in two homes - bi-coastal couples, for example.) But I also know just how hard it is to get a person with ADD to come out of the clouds and really internalize the information you are giving them about how much pain they are causing you. This happened with my husband and I - I kept telling him how unhappy I was, and even that I would be better off without him because I was so incredibly lonely - yet unable to do anything about it because I was married. Even after I did do something about it (by having an affair) he still didn't really "get it" and change his direction (though he was mighty unhappy about the affair).
For us, the turning point came from within me, not him. I don't know if this would be the case for you or not. But our turning point came when I decided that I needed to be true to myself. Set the boundaries that I needed in order to be the kind of (good) person I wanted to be. This changed my behavior rather dramatically. Among other things, since I was focused on me it meant I left him completely responsible for his own behavior (didn't try to change him any more). This was a huge relief to him, since much of our conflict was over my trying to get him to do things differently. In a bizarre twist, once I stopped trying to force him to change he actually changed on his own. The other thing that finally turned things around for us was that I disconnected myself from the outcome of our marriage struggles. I accepted that my marriage might well be over...so the next job was to get myself into a better place, behave in a way that I felt was ethically right and how I wanted to be as a person - a sort of going back to my roots (back in my 20s type of "way of being".) This meant that I expected a certain level of respect from my hubby...if I didn't get it then I didn't interact with him. But by demanding respect in a calm, ethical, good, respectful way, I got it. (If I had yelled at him to respect me - i.e. not respected him while demanding respect for me - I'm sure I wouldn't have gotten it.)
To some degree this is what David is saying, too. His wife finally got to the point where she demanded that he respect her feelings and deal with them in a realistic way. He doesn't mention how (separation? different behavior? new boundaries?)
Anyway, I don't think escape is the reason to leave...rather that you've thought out who you are and it feels right. Maybe that's too subtle a distinction, but it's food for thought.
Re: Husband Doesn't Know
Submitted by David (not verified) on
Husband Doesn't Know
Submitted by Joanne (not verified) on
Re: Husband Doesn't Know
Submitted by David on
"I think of a "soulmate" as someone who understands you inside and out... seems that with everything I read that it may not be possible with adhd,..."
It is possible, I think. I have ADD - my wife defines it as severe. I'm not any different than your ( or anyone else here ) husband; maybe worse. Its only by coming through horriffic places that we catch a glimpse of how things are and are able to effect changes.
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Even Agent Smith Gets the Blues
- Eugene Donohoe, Dublin City
I'm tired too...
Submitted by ginettec on
I totally understand what you are feeling. Sometimes I feel like I need to get away too. I feel like life is already hard as it is without my spouse stirring the pot further. It's like he's an accident waiting to happen and everyone with him gets driven into the same ditch!! It is a very helpless feeling. After several rounds of counseling nothing penetrates, he is oblivious and says it's just me. Of course, it's just me - he's walking around with his head in the clouds. I don't understand how people live like that. I know I can't go on with this much longer. It's tiring, frusterating and just plain destructive to my and my health ( I have MS ). Sometimes I think love just isn't enough to keep people together. It takes work on each part and you can't make people do what they don't see. I'd give anything for a month away from it all. I am tapped.
Marriage and ADHD
Submitted by Margaret South (not verified) on
My ADHD is affecting my marriage
Submitted by Dana (not verified) on
To Dana
Submitted by Steph on
Hi Dana - I am so sorry that things seem to be so bad for your marriage right now. Have you tried going to counseling together? I can see that you feel strongly about saving your marriage so consider that a place to start. Hopefully you can find a good counselor that will help you both work together to solve some of the problems you are experiencing. Maybe some good strategies to help with your ADHD, maybe some better communication skills...it can only help!
I will keep your family in my prayers...
Steph
re:My ADHD is affecting my marriage
Submitted by David on
You're actually one of the lucky ones. The fact that you've caught it this early in your life ( as an adult - relative to a lot of us, you're still a kid ) and you are obviously serious about doing something about it, AND your husband seems to want to work things out; all add up to a good prognosis.
Finding out one's spouse has been unhappy in the marriage for a period of time and having been oblivious to that is very common, regardless of any ADD. Counseling and treatment for the ADHD as well as marriage counseling ( do yourselves a big favour and find a good marriage counselor, bad or mediocre ones can be worse than none ) for the both of you should be top priorities.
Remeber too that in both cases ( the ADHD and marriage reconcilliation ) expect at least one step back for every two or three steps forward for some time. These kinds of things are not clean, black and white - open and shut affairs that lend themselves to neat, crisp fixes. They take time to resolve and the remedies don't always present themselves with clarity.
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Life is what happens while you are busy making other plans.
- John Lennon