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December 17, 2009
Filed Under (Adult ADHD) by admin
When journalist Gina Pera married a man with undiagnosed attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), she embarked on a wild ride that took her from frustration and confusion to understanding and advocacy. Today she runs support groups for people with ADHD and their partners, and her book Is it You, Me, or Adult A.D.D.? was published in 2008. Q: A: When we first started dating, he used to miss our exit all the time when driving down the freeway in San Diego. Then he had two fender benders in probably the first three weeks we were dating. ADHD tends to create problems with driving because it involves concentration on so many levels. The first time he said it was because he was so excited to have me in the car with him. And I made logical excuses for him: He grew up using the subway; he’d learned to drive, in Paris, only the previous year. It’s not that there weren’t little red flags everywhere; I just didn’t know what they were. Share Your ThoughtsDoes your partner have symptoms of ADHD? How has it affected your relationship?
But those red flags soon became bigger problems. Promises were ignored and not even acknowledged. He was doing really thoughtless things and I knew he wasn’t a thoughtless person. We tried counseling, and the therapists just loved to hear our stories: They could tell we loved each other and they were thoroughly entertained by our problems, but they just couldn’t give us any good suggestions. One day at the library I came across the book Change Your Brain, Change Your Life by Daniel Amen, MD. I was fascinated by his description of ADHD and the way it physically affects the brain; it really seemed to describe my husband all the way back to his childhood. I took the book home and said to my husband, "Do you think this could be you?" And he said, "You know what? This really makes sense."
Next Page: Why do you use the term ADD instead of ADHD?
A: My husband has what I call "stealth ADHD" because I always thought he was so relaxed; his eyes weren’t even ever open all the way when I first met him. Turns out, he was just exhausted because his time was managed so poorly. In general, both terms (ADD and ADHD) present obstacles to understanding the true nature of the condition. For example, "attention deficit" isn’t exactly true, because people with ADHD can still focus on certain things. In fact, they often hyperfocus—spending way too much time on one thing, like playing video games or reading about hang gliding on the Internet for eight hours straight. They stay up all night; they’re sleep deprived the next day. It’s not an attention deficit problem; it’s an attention regulation problem.
Q: A: Money is also huge, especially in this economy. One large survey showed that ADHD costs adults $77 billion a year in lost household income, due to lower education levels, lower-level jobs, and unemployment. Even if someone is employed, they might be missing out on promotions or raises because they’re constantly in trouble, missing deadlines, or getting bogged down with little details. The third thing is just the unreliability of a person with ADHD. A lot of spouses I know complain about having a partner who’s like another child: They feel like they have to scold them constantly and remind them to clean up their messes, they can’t rely on them to pick their kids up from school, they’re always worried about another car accident or surprise credit card bill. That can be a real relationship killer, and it can cause a lot of bitterness. A: Even if they’re not chronic spenders, many people with ADHD tend to have other financial problems. In my house, we spent a ton of money just on overdue library books. My husband would forget to mail his mother’s birthday present ahead of time, so we’d spend a fortune overnighting it to Canada. Unpaid bills, late fees, speeding tickets, higher insurance rates due to car accidents—all these things can add up to big problems. A:
Q: A: I was amazed what a difference medication can make when it’s prescribed properly. My husband is now the attentive, caring person I always knew that he was deep down. Equally important, he is much happier in his life and in his work, where he is exponentially more productive and fulfilled. I will never say that everyone needs medication to control their ADHD, but I also think it’s definitely worth a try if behavioral techniques and lifestyle changes don’t help. A: Why? Because in our culture, the conventional wisdom is that women are caretakers. It’s normal for them to get their husbands to see the doctor, to notice health issues, to nag their husbands about excessive TV watching or sloppy habits. But the idea of a man encouraging his wife to see a doctor or a therapist, and complaining that she’s messy, or that she lets old food collect in the fridge, or that she can’t do laundry because she leaves the clothes in the washer and they get moldy? People look at him and think, "What a chauvinist pig! You’re mad that your wife is a bad housekeeper." But he’s not complaining for selfish reasons; he’s genuinely concerned about his wife’s habits and the effect it’s having on their marriage. A lot of these men are earning the money, working full time, and doing all of the chores, getting the kids to school, and paying the bills, because their wives can’t manage. I knew one young father who got a job closer to home so he could visit at lunchtime to check and make sure his wife wasn’t asleep while their toddler was up. That’s an extreme case, of course, But I think most men shy away from seeking "support"—because they might see it as a sign of weakness that they can’t handle the situation. So by the time I see a concerned husband at one of my support groups, I know his wife probably has pretty severe symptoms. That’s starting to change more recently, though, as women with ADHD who themselves have initiated the diagnosis are asking their partners to become educated.
Q: A: But then people say, "Relationships take work; give it time; you need to compromise more," so you brush things off and give your partner the benefit of the doubt. But meanwhile, you’re getting more and more turned around because of his or her habits. A lot of spouses I know joke that they have "ADHD by osmosis." A: And even once your partner gets diagnosed and decides to try medication, you can’t just sit back and wait for the treatment to start working. Far too often I see irresponsible and shoddy prescribing practices—doctors just say, "Here’s some Adderall," and ask the next month, "How do you feel?" First doctors and patients should work together on establishing treatment targets so they have a method for assessing the medication’s effectiveness. Also, many doctors start their patients on very high doses of stimulant medications, and that’s when side effects occur. People decide, "Whoa, the treatment is worse than the condition. No thanks! End of discussion." Doctors should be starting patients off on a very low dose of medication and tracking their symptoms and improvement or side effects. It’s frustrating to think that a person who has so much trouble organizing and prioritizing now also has to manage his or her doctor as well, and that’s why it’s important to get the partner involved and make it a team effort.
Q: A: I started dating my husband during the ’90s dot-com era, when everyone was just starting to amp up on cell phones, PDAs, electronic gadgets, and double espressos. I thought for a while that his distractibility and irritability were just products of these; that everyone in high-tech was getting wigged out by all this stimulation. But for a lot of people with ADHD, these gadgets are their lifeblood; they’ll play with them for hours because they provide the higher amounts of constant stimulation they crave. It took me a while to realize, though, that not everyone was affected the way he was. A: When the adult with ADHD is in denial, that’s really tough. That’s a lot of what we deal with in the partners’ support group. Many people don’t want to be evaluated for ADHD because they think it means they’re crazy or weak, and many don’t even believe that ADHD exists. And they’ve been like this their entire lives: They don’t know that there’s any other way to be. And that’s really sad, because ADHD is considered the most impairing outpatient disorder—even more so than anxiety or depression—but it’s also highly treatable. I believe that most people can be reached; they just have to be acknowledged first. Sometimes it’s the partners of adults who don’t want to learn about ADHD. I can spot them in my lecture audiences; they’ve been dragged there by their partner with ADHD, and they sit there with their arms folded and jaws set, looking resistant. They’re afraid I’m going to be another one of those experts who say, "You just have to understand your partner’s differences, their gifts." But once I can acknowledge their own personal experiences, their own real frustrations, and emphasize that ADHD is not an excuse for bad behavior, they are more likely to be receptive to learning more and working on strategies with their partner.
Q: A: To clarify, it’s not like they want to know that their partner has ADHD. They don’t! They often don’t want to know that their partner has a brain condition. They’ve spent years thinking that if they just help their partners change their habits and attitudes, or that if they just organized the home differently or set up their schedules differently or communicated differently or stood on their head and spit wooden nickels, that they could fix things. Usually by the time I meet people in support groups, they’ve been to four or five therapists to try and solve things another way.
Q: A: Without knowing what the real problem is, it’s easy for either partner in these relationships to get depressed, to become isolated, and to lose their faith in marriage. When you’re raising kids, it’s that much worse—especially because there’s a high likelihood that your children can have ADHD symptoms as well. So instead of just acting as a passive caretaker and accepting the chaos that’s dragging all of you down, it’s important to take charge, get the facts and realistic strategies, and really help turn the situation around. Gina Pera is author of Is It You, Me, or Adult A.D.D.? Stopping the Roller Coaster When Someone You Love Has Attention Deficit Disorder. Read a book excerpt on Health.com, or visit Pera’s blogs at ADHDRollerCoaster.org and ADHDPartner.org. Post a comment
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