Recent forum posts (all topics)
- New diagnosis by: jasond 11 years 5 months ago I finally went to get tested for ADHD a few months ago. Never could sit still, pay attention, read a book for pleasure and had problems with binge drinking. It never bothered me enough to do anything about it. My wife recently told me she was unhappy with our marriage, which i admit, i was totally oblivious to. She said we don't really communicate with each other. She also was fed up with the binge drinking, with the most recent episode ended up with me blacking out while peeing and waking up with my head through the wall. I started researching on why i binge drink and saw there was a connection with ADD. I got tested for ADHD through a psychologist and got positive results back along with anxiety. I have always hated being around groups of people, makes me really nervous and there is just too much going on to focus on. Long story short, i had to wait a few weeks from diagnosis til i could get a prescription from my family doc ( a long/anxious 2 weeks), but i took my first dose today (Concerta) and I think i feel like the fuzzy noise in my head is toning down a bit. I don't feel as jumpy and anxious. I'm hoping this is not just placebo affect and i will continue to progress. I think the worst thing about the ADHD for me, is not being able to sit down with my kids and play or read to them. I start to, but i always have to move on to something else. I never had much of a relationship with my father that i wish i could have had, probably because he has undiagnosed ADD and i want to be there for my kids and wife. Enough babbling. Would appreciate anyone else's feedback on their first experiences on meds and what to expect. Thanks, Jason
- I'm invisible I don't exist by: jennalemon 11 years 5 months ago Yesterday morning, he left before I knew he was gone "to work?". He does not have a place of business, just a small warehouse full of his junk where he "hangs out" saying he is working there or he is "on the road" and will mention the name of some old client. He does not say good bye. He didn't come home until 10pm. He didn't say hello or good night. This morning, when I asked where he was he said, the "shop" and then went on his way without saying good bye. This guy needs NO connection AT ALL! His independence and freedom from responsibility is more valuable to him that his wife and home (or he is hiding something). I am reading about how spouses of people who drink and are impulsive and irresponsible are sometimes obsessive about their spouses whereabouts and activities.....I have become an obsessive, leary, anxious wife. Why is it so hard to stop thinking about THEM? Why am I thinking about HIS activities? It is my work to get involved in things that make me fulfilled and busy. Yet, I have the thoughts that when he doesn't take care of things, things fall apart and it affects me. It feels like the roof will be falling on my head, It is only a matter of time. A person becomes vigilant when there is unseen, oncoming calamity. I write these things because I have been denying so much for so long that I need to write and read them to get it in my head about why I feel so bad.
- Not sure where to begin - Speaking Different Dialects With Multiple Disorders by: Redsoft 11 years 5 months ago This will be long. I am new to the forums and really not sure where to start with this information, and just sort of need to vent, too. :/
My fiance and I have been together for four and a half years, lived together for three, have been through much together, and will be married at the end of summer. We are a good balance. We both suffer from mental health disorders, and while this makes things particularly difficult, we are both therefore pretty well-equipped in terms of empathy, understanding, and gathered education to help the other out. It's a backwards blessing in disguise that we both have disorders. That said, we still have our standard relationship issues.
His ADHD is pretty all-encompassing, and he suffers depression from it, though that is well-treated. I have major depression, generalized & social anxiety disorder, a nonspecific mood disorder, and am anorexic-in-long-remission, and my situation is...well, it's not good in general.
Though we possessed pretty solid basic knowledge of ADHD, we wanted to get our "doctorate." ;) After reading ADHD and Marriage and Is It You, Me or ADHD? among others with tears and shock this last autumn, it became extremely clear that his ADHD wasn't even close to controlled. He has been in therapy for years, and takes medication, so that is one battle I never had to fight. Because he is such a different person on the meds, we both became somewhat complacent that that was the treatment along with keeping his verbal filter in check. Ugh, not even close, which was an unexpected relief for me in that I had renewed hoped that things could really get easier in many ways. However, because of this complacency, he has formed really bad habits. We both suffer from the "I'm fine, doctor" syndrome at therapy, so I have begun going to every other or so session of his to make clear how things are from my perspective, which has greatly helped in his treatment. (We have the same therapist, and my fiance is also kind enough to reciprocate aid of that sort for me too.)
After reading in depth about ADHD, he thankfully became more aware, or it finally clicked or something, what my position felt like in the relationship. It was a relief for me in many ways, but he seems to slowly be forgetting as the months tick by now. Back are the accusations of "nag." Shushing is back too, which is so demeaning to me and is instantaneously infuriating, especially when he often speaks loudly. I'm trying the best I can to keep life on track, to make sure the house doesn't turn into a maelstrom of his dirty dishes, clothes and papers everywhere, and that we eat healthy, home-made meals instead of being sluggish and spending loads on take-out.
Healthy eating is extremely important to me (portion control, no fast food, staying away from processed) since I deal with anorexic thoughts daily, but if he is left to his own devices, he will get take-out for every meal and let the trash pile up. He always says he wants help eating properly and with staying on track with exercise, but then resents me when I tell him we can't buy go get ice cream or eat out every other day. He'll say I'm in charge of health because he can't do it, and then when I veto another slice of pizza tells me to stop and that he can eat what he wants. He has an extremely fast metabolism and is quite thin so doesn't "see" what he's doing to himself, but his diet only makes his reactions and moods worse. Dorritos and soda is not lunch!! He has gotten much better and monitors himself much better as well, but he is a sugar hound, and that makes him bounce off the walls.
His reactions are by-the-book defensive for most things, but instead of getting full-blown angry, he turns into a real a**. When not medicated, he says random things, as if he has low-scale contextual coprolalia with some child-like goofiness thrown in. This is extra problematic, as a huge part of my mood disorder is anger/serious impatience. Admittedly, I am quick to swear him up and down when I am constantly put down for trying to help and made to feel like the crazy one he's walking on eggshells around, and in turn my depression kicks in too, and I end up apologizing for being mean and for all of it entirely. It's hard not to go crazy if you're a sane person put into a padded room - a terrible cycle.
He is always worried about me and trying to provide because of my disorders, and I'm afraid he doesn't take the time to look at himself and his needs emotionally (self-esteem, personal goals). Everything is about me, and I hate being the center of attention, haha! He always says we can talk about anything together and I am always open and feel respected, but when something is bothering him, he doesn't want to "make [me] feel worse" so hides it. This of course makes his mood worse, and then I try to pry because I know he's lying about nothing bothering him, knowing that if he doesn't share that things get so bad he finally breaks and has a meltdown.
For everyday things, I feel like we'll often talk and/or agree about the same thing, but he doesn't see that and feels attacked. With anyone else, individual things would be said as matching items of the same opinion, and it would end with something like "Yes, exactly!" If I try to comment on something he just said, he gets defensive, like I didn't listen to him (irony...), when really I am just conversing. Example: Him: "The sky is so orange right now." Me: "Yeah, it looks like sherbet!" Him: "So... Orange. Yeah." Me: "Yeah, totally." Him: "That's what I just said." Another ironic point is that he often repeats himself when he :feels: he is misunderstood, often upsetting others because he keeps dragging them conversationally into a circle when, really, they do understand.
At this point, I feel like we've run into another slump where I feel like a roommate instead of his partner at best, and I can't talk about anything semi-serious with him without him interrupting me with a completely unrelated subject (if I do that to him, it's a crisis), him getting defensive mid-way, or him just straight up not paying attention then getting upset when he decides to return to the whole one-minute long conversation and accuses me of not making sense or never mentioning something.
There are things I've told him, like, "Don't put trash in the kitchen sink," for our entire time living together, but it's as if every chance he gets, he will do it. This is just a mild example, and mostly I am frustrated about things like him shushing me when I try to explain myself. I understand old habits die hard, but he never catches himself or apologizes when he does these things. He's not one to never apologize either - if he was wrong about something, he is very apologetic and humble, so it's even more frustrating - he doesn't see, maybe, how frustrated it makes me or how much a little thing like leaving his razor and charger on the counter actually counts for now since I've repeatedly if not daily told him many of these things. It carries the weight of every other time I've told him not to. I realize repetition is part of the challenge, but at what point does it cross over into flippancy on his part, disrespect?
It is stressful right now with the wedding coming up and me having been laid off, but luckily he has enjoyed wedding planning and being involved and sees it as a fun project, so I'm thinking it's not really that as much as it is the same old reaction to standard new stresses, which would mainly be the money crunch we're experiencing now. Especially since the only reason we've waited to get married is because of me!
I am one that falls into the stereotypical non-ADHD partner predicament: feeling like his mother. I'm not a controlling person by nature, so even :having: to in certain aspects for life to function is seriously stressful. Why would I want to monitor his movements when I can hardly deal with my own issues (anxiety, depression, anger, etc.)? I don't want to be anyone's mother. I don't even want children of my own - why would I want to mother my husband?
As of right now, I feel like we are two ships passing in the night, even though I am currently unemployed, so it's not like our schedules or off or anything. Whatever we say to each other get misconstrued or something. I misunderstand him because he doesn't focus enough to explain what he means or realize the way he's saying something sounds really terrible, and he misunderstands me because what I say isn't in the exact format he expects it to be in (which changes daily). See: Him: "Did you take out some chicken?" Me: "It's cooking now." Him: "But did you take it out of the freezer?" Me: "How could I cook it if it was frozen?" Him: "...You could have just said, 'Yes.'"
I would love to go to therapy for couples' communication and dealing with mental disorders as a couple, but it would have to be private because of my anxiety, and we can't afford that at all. The combination of the both of us together is the makings of fireworks or dynamite, depending on the day. Of course, both of us being frustrated and tired makes the most basic affection undesirable, at least for me.
Don't get me wrong - most of the time things are great, with a little strange dance in conversation time and again. My fiance is fantastic. Silly as it is, he treats me like a princess when he's actually listening to me. I feel like getting upset over these things makes me seem like I'm complaining about a draft in a mansion, but I have feelings too (more than I'd like).
I guess what it comes down to is that I feel like he doesn't hear me - or how he sounds. Then time passes and he comes to an epiphany - strangely enough what I'd been telling him the whole time, but when someone else says it, it's gold. Him not listening to me makes me feel unimportant, angry, and depressed. But, I don't know how to "make" him listen. I've tried keeping the focus all on me "It hurts :me: when you....", but he seems to like jumping on that boat and making me into the bad guy. I've tried making time for conversations that need to happen - I'll let him set the rules, like no yelling, no laughing (at someone's expense), and no eye rolling, but he breaks his own rules five minutes in. The only thing that's ever seemed to work is if I send him an email - but the idea of spending my marriage writing emails whenever I need to talk about something is horrible. I'll leave notes - he loses them. Set an alarm on his phone - he puts it on silent.
I'm at a loss as to what I am not doing. I know I have things to work on, especially like anger, but I think anyone would start to get upset. What am I not doing? What haven't I tried? We are happy together, but I :know: things can be even better - I don't want him to feel complacent after we get married and that he doesn't have to impress me anymore, even though we've been together so long already. - One Year Later... by: Pbartender 11 years 5 months ago
Hey, everybody...
I'd just noticed this morning that's it's been a year since I first joined this forum, and months since I've posted anything. Thought I'd let you guys know how things have been going...
I haven't been around here, because I've been posting and getting advice and support on another forum more appropriate for my problems.
For those of you who don't remember my story, you can find the whole, long version here, including what's been happening since I stopped posting here. The "short" version is this:
My marriage had been slowly going downhill... My wife was building a history of being just a little too friendly and flirty with other men, while neglecting me. About a year and a half ago, I caught her kissing one of her coworkers at a party, and later caught her sexting a different coworker. Both times, I tried to work things through with her, but it didn't really take... She has always refused marriage counseling.
I was a mess.
A little more than a year ago, she moved into the basement bedroom to initiate an "in-house" separation, and starting talking about getting divorced. I shortly thereafter, I received my ADHD diagnosis and began treatment... Medication and counseling. In the meantime, my wife worked toward neither reconciliation nor finalizing divorce, and was living at home for free -- I've been paying practically all the bills at home.
Living in such close proximity with no progress toward resolution one way or the other, the situation became steadily worse. Eventually, I got her to talk over doing an amicable, no-fault divorce with as little involvement with lawyers as possible, and we came to a general agreement on most terms... amongst them, 50/50 time split with the kids, neither of us needs child child support since we both make about the same income, and I'd be willing to take responsibility for most of the kids' expenses. I had found a lawyer willing to draw up the paperwork and file it for a modest fee. I was willing to pay for the service, and she agreed. I hired him, and came back with the first draft of the Settlement Agreement and Parenting Agreement... And she kind of freaked out.
From there, she steadily escalated the conflict... Within weeks she was openly dating her boyfriend, and even introducing him to the kids. She was spending most her time away from home and the kids. She was (and is) still living at home, but not helping to pay any of the household bills or expenses and she mostly stopped buying groceries... living there practically for free. And yet, she was stalling the divorce process by stonewalling me and my lawyer, and refusing to file. Finally, I got tired of waiting, and filed for divorce on Valentine's Day in February.
When she did decide to begin negotiating, it was to demand a majority of custody time with the kids and full statutory child support (28% of my net income... about $900/month). While we eventually came to an agreement of sorts on the custody schedule, she dug her heels in on the support. In the end, the matter went before a judge, who ruled mostly in my favor.
Now, the settlement is almost complete. There are only a few detail to hammer out, but she's still stalling. Next week, my lawyer will file a Petition for Temporary Child Support in an effort to get her help with the bills and expenses, and maybe convince her to move along with the divorce.
I've learned a lot in the last year... I am ADHD. That's for certain. But it's not nearly as bad as I'd first suspected, and I had been dealing with it pretty well (a few tips and tweaks care of my counselor, and it's even better).
I've learned that my wife is almost certainly either Borderline or Narcissistic. And that most my worst symptoms could be attributed to the depression, anxiety, and lack of sleep caused by her blame-shifting, gas lighting, manipulation, lies and emotional abuse. I had grown very co-dependent about it, the undiagnosed and mostly untreated ADHD didn't help, and had made enough of my own mistakes to give a certain amount of credence to her complaints and accusations. In hindsight, she had been involved in several emotional affairs -- possibly physical affairs as well, though I have no hard evidence for that -- over the years of our marriage. And in the last year, her emotions, attitude, choices, and actions have become increasingly erratic. She has, largely, tended solely to her own desires and ambition, abdicating all responsibility for raising and caring for the children to me.
I have since effectively become a confident, independent single father. My relationship with my children is the best it's ever been. Money is very tight right now, but I get all the bills paid on time and always make sure there's food to eat. With a little bit of luck, I expect to be debt free by the end of the year. I've taken back up several of my old hobbies. I'm getting out and reconnecting with old friends and am making new friends. I've even gone on dates with a few women, and found one who is VERY interested in me.
So, it's been rough. But things are going as well as can be expected. Hopefully, the divorce with be final soon, and I can really begin to focus on being the man I want to be... The man I should be.
I want to thank everyone here for all the help and advice they gave during one of the worst times of my life. You guys really helped me start to get my head back on straight, and I wouldn't be where I am, without you.
Thanks again.
Pb.
- How Love found me.with my ADHD by: QD-PRN 11 years 5 months ago
Dealing with ADHD is no picnic, from the perspective of the one without ADHD. I have ADHD but I know what I am great at and what I am not. i apply Just-World Hypothesis to my proclivity at any given time and determine whether the outcome is satisfactory. As I type this entry, I want to be with my girlfriend who is peacefully sleeping in our room. I could sit here and interact with the computer all night long, but I know it's counterproductive. She wants me by her each night but I have insomnia. I use this to my advantage, I lay awake and think up new and creative ways to acknowledge her. I cook dinner most nights because I like to cook. After dinner She helps her children and mine with their Homework while I clean up the dining room and kitchen, while I listen to music, but not too loud as to disturb them. The only subject I am not great at is math. I am glad that the tree oldest can do most of their homework on their own, I think I get off too easy doing household chores. She makes sure they all get bathed and I get her bath ready about that time. A great time to use my creativity and surprise her. As someone with ADHD, my mind never stops working. I use this energy for their benefit, not mine. It is never easy on them and me as well. My home life is structured to suite my ADHD and with a routine we all can live with. It is far from utopia, but at least we know how to overcome conflict, and that is what open and honest communication does. There are a few phrases I hate saying to my partner. Any statement starting with 'you", such as "You are and You know I..", I find very disrespectful to her and her feelings. The other one I detest is, "I know how you feel" i have no clue how she feels or what she may know, emotionally speaking. If I use any of these statements when we are expressing how we feel, I must do something nice for her in return but there is no deadline put on me either. Knowing all of this now, came at a great cost. My first marriage ended with my wife saying "All I wanted was a husband, not a doctor" I treated her as if she were one of my patients. If you have ever seen the TV. series Doc Martin, it is easy to see his disorder to those with ADHD. Off to make my rounds and make sure my six angels are sleeping soundly before i am asleep myself.
I would love to know if anyone else has found how to use ADHD to an advantage.
- Husbands with ADHD/ADD by: JW 11 years 5 months ago
Hello I 48 years old, diagnosed with ADHD/ADD 4 years ago. I have been married for 20 years. I have two wonderful kids and a beautiful wife. I have a good job(teacher) and I am very blessed. Now here are the problems that may cost me everything I love. 1. Can't communicate with my wife on an intimate level 2. Blame all my frustraitions and disappointments on her.( because she is successful) 3. Stay ill at the kids a lot 4. Can't let go of old career goals that are not going to happen and I know it. 5. I struggle to be emotionally supportive to my family 6. I have trouble following through with Doctors advise. (Do it for 2 months then fall of the wagon) Are there any other husbands out there like me. I need help.
- Chores and crazy logic by: Caroline Fischer 11 years 5 months ago
Let me start off by saying that I now do all the household chores every single day otherwise they wouldn't get done and lately I am enjoying having a nice clean house. My partner's only responsibility is his dishes and to clean up after cooking for himself (put things away, put refuse in garbage, wipe up spills etc.) and even this is only done sporadically. Lately he's taken to flat-ironing his hair every other day (don't ask) and when he does this, he gets hair ALL OVER the bathroom floor. I assumed that it should therefore be his responsibility to clean up after himself afterwards by vacuuming up the hair so I nicely said to him, "hey, if you vacuum the floor today I'll do all your dishes" just to be nice. What I got in response was, "no thanks. vacuuming the floor is a big job". Meaning he wasn't going to do it even though he should and even after I offered to do his dishes just to be nice. When I gently suggested that he should be vacuuming the floor once a week now that he is doing his hair every other day and making a mess, he freaked out and started yelling at me saying that, "You can't do that to me! You can't do that, that's not fair! You can't give me a weekly chore just because I use the bathroom." When I, again gently, suggested that it wasn't a chore per se, but was "cleaning up after himself" because he was making a mess in the bathroom" he told me it still wasn't fair because he'd "be cleaning up some of my 'debris' in the process of cleaning up his hair". Well if I knew a way to separate my relatively few hairs, skin cells, and toilet paper lint from his massive hair accumulation then I would, but I think considering I do EVERYTHING ELSE around the house, cleaning up his own mess shouldn't be seen as unfair because he might 'accidentally' clean up some of my relatively tiny mess. Crazy thinking. Just crazy.
- How Do I? by: RoadtoRecovery 11 years 5 months ago
For some history, please go here.
I've been doing some real soul searching these past 4 months. As in many cases, I've been feeling grief, anger, sadness, and hope that things will get better. I am however dealing with some negative thoughts that I feel the need to express.
Why I am concerned: I was introduced to the idea that I had ADHD by my wife, who was introduced by her mother. My wife began reading Melissa's book and asked me to start reading it as well. As in many cases, it took awhile to get on board (roughly 3 months) but once I started reading the book, I couldn't stop. I actually finished the book before her which surprised me because i thought she read the whole thing. She expressed that she gave up when I wasn't showing interest. I convinced her to finish the book because, though I was so saddened by what I read, I did have hope and want to immediately seek treatment and begin turning things around.I knew that I would need her to read the rest of the book, which deeply goes into the non ADHD side and how to interact with their ADHD spouse. She did finish reading it and was angry to see all of the things Melissa proposed the non ADHD spouse do in order to move forward. However, she stuck around and I began treatment and counseling. Now, facing this alone, I have some fears:
I am not concerned about turning myself around. I do believe i can stick to this plan. I've written lists, and schedules and put lots of things in place to keep me motivated and on task. What I am concerned about is: If she does choose to become more involved in our relationship again, I don't think it will work unless both her and her parents have a full understanding of what it is like to have a brain like mine! Not just for me, but for our daughter! My wife also has some serious issues to deal with from her past that she really has never faced. I feel like she would really need some counseling and soul searching as well before i could really believe that we could be a fully functional couple again. Has anyone gone through a similar experience to mine? I would appreciate any advice, insight, wisdom on the way I am feeling!
- High IQ ADHD husband does not contribute financially. Exhausted. Frustrated. Any hope or encouragement out there? by: Hope4TheFuture 11 years 5 months ago
My husband and I are 35. He was diagnosed with ADHD 6 months ago. We married at 22, right out of college. He is a genius, who did very well at a top-notch college (at that time, top 15) despite putting little effort into his studies. Being young when we married, I believe I was reasonable at that time to believe that he would do well in life because of his obvious academic talents. I graduated from the same top school as my husband, also doing well, but deep-down all I ever really wanted to be is a mother who was the glue behind a great family and a confident man. It is not about the money. I was raised middle-class, and would have been perfectly happy staying there. He is well aware of all of this - we have discussed these facts the entire time we've been married (and before).
Well, fast-forward 13 years . . . we put off having children because we somehow knew the stability wasn't really there. I have 2 graduate degrees, I am a successful attorney, and I have made 95%+ of the money over the course of our relationship. I am a capable and well-liked person, which is why I fell a**-backward into great (i.e. high paying) jobs over the years - it is NOT because I am particularly career-oriented in any way. He has basically drifted through life, trying desperately to hang onto retail management jobs very sporadically over this time period. We were getting older and both really wanted children . . . he seemed to have some kind of epiphany - after toying with the idea of going into academia (which would really suit him, but would take forever to attain), he decided he was really going to focus on his career and just making money for the family so that I would eventually not have to work so much. Ok, so he became a real estate agent and did really well at it for a while - just long enough for us to think it would be a great idea to go ahead and get pregnant. So, now we have a 2 year old daughter who is precious and perfect and the light of our lives. But of course the real estate thing fizzled out, I burned out at my job, and he was diagnosed with ADHD, all around the time when we were supposed to be trying to have our 2nd child, which we still really both want, even though we are driving each other crazy right now.
I decided that I could not go on with such a stressful job, and am now working for a more low-key firm, which of course means less money. That's fine, as long as he cooperates with downsizing our lives a bit, which he's done ok at so far, but sometimes his symptoms work against it - the impulse buys, damaging/not taking care of our property, etc. He is not working. He feels that his treatment is his work, and that he is not ready yet. To be fair, he does have really severe adult-ADHD - all of his team of ADHD professionals have commented that he is their "worst" patient (worst symptoms, not least cooperative or anything like that). He plans to go back to school to prepare him for some kind of ADHD-related career (like counseling or special ed teacher), which I totally support. However, I feel like this is taking forever. He is progressing well with his treatment and doing a lot better with tasks around the house. I understand he does not want to jump into another "career" type job too hastily, then have to change later because he chose the wrong thing - that would be a waste of time for all of us. But the dude is a genius - surely he could find something to do in the meantime (before he goes back to school) that would contribute a little financially - intellectually there would be many jobs that would be so easy for him, like test prep instructor, or tutor, or delivery driver (he loves driving and listening to lectures or the radio). Why won't he contribute financially?! I am so exhausted (mentally and physically) from supporting this family all of these years! I know he will get on the right track eventually (his treatment really is going in the right direction), but geez, give me a break! I have been so patient and supportive here - throw me a damn bone! And I really want that 2nd baby, like now. I am getting too old to have another after much longer! His parents are being very supportive (including financially), but I do not feel right taking money from them for very long when I am capable of working (even if it will kill me).
Any similar experiences out there that turned out well? Please say yes. I love my husband and our family. I'm just sooooooo tired of working so hard, and I want to be able to focus more on our home life, including adding that 2nd child. We are both great parents, but I would like to be there more than I am now.
- I can't do this anymore by: Broken by ADD 11 years 5 months ago
As the wife of a man recently diagnosed with ADD, I want to know when do I get to stop being him mother? When do I get to stop having to clean up behind him? When do I get to stop being the only mature, responsible person in my home? When do I get to stop hurting, crying loosing sleep? Is it wrong to feel that everything is all about him, while I'm the one suffering?
I've lost my companion, my lover, my safe place to be to this invisible thing that isn't even new. I've lost myself, the strong independent woman I once was, to a man who I love so much it hurt. I feel like I'm walking on eggshells all the time. I'm not sleeping very much and for the last few days, I cry because of anything, everything and nothing. I don't feel like I'm living, and just barely surviving. It's like I'm on life support, but I can't pull the plug. I need the pain to stop. I want to go to sleep and not wake up until he has himself under control.