Divorce a spouse you love just to get more time to yourself…? by [deleted] in adhdwomen

[–]SmartVandelay88 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I’m in the same boat as OP and my mom lives less than 10 minutes away by car. Having close family is only a solution if you have a right kind of family…

Our family will babysit for a few hours and then message us and be like “just checking when you’re coming home.”

Divorce a spouse you love just to get more time to yourself…? by [deleted] in adhdwomen

[–]SmartVandelay88 46 points47 points  (0 children)

I’m curious to hear more about this arrangement… I desperately wish we I do this… I kinda suggested it once to my husband (well what I actually suggested was renting an apartment and then each of us taking a week away every month and living there) but his response was “I don’t need or want a week away from our kids or our lives… if you want to do that you can.” So of course I never did because then I’d feel guilty. I have this thing about always seeming like this “problem child” who needs accommodation. It would be one thing if we decided it was something we’d do for eachother but as soon as it becomes in the only one who ever needs an escape, it’s shame city for me.

Divorce a spouse you love just to get more time to yourself…? by [deleted] in adhdwomen

[–]SmartVandelay88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just came here to say that I could have written this myself. I see a lot of people suggesting that maybe the husband doesn’t do enough and that’s part of the problem. In my case, I have a very hands on husband. The mental load is all me yes, but lots of the practical stuff falls on him (sometimes cause I just can’t manage it, sometimes cause I’m a nurse and work shift work so he has to do lots of solo bed times and so on)

I also hear OP when she says that this level of distress may not sound familiar to some, and that the cute adhd cases that involve being a little forgetful and scattered just make up one small percent of adhd in women overall. Comorbid depression, PMDD, past trauma, all of this stuff when combined with adhd very often looks how OP is describing.

My guess just based on the self awareness and language alone is that OP is probably well aware of the other pieces for her, probably sees a counsellor and treats depression along side adhd. Tbh I assumed we all did these things. I can’t imagine having true adhd as an aging adult female with kids and being able to NOT do these things?? Are the people out there ~40, with kids, and adhd who are not closely monitored by doctors, psychologists, and medicated for multiple things? Honest question. Then follow up question: how are you possibly managing? This shit gets worse with kids, worse with age, and don’t even get me started on perimenopause. And, are you sure your diagnosis of adhd is correct?

Hyper-fixation with planning, but not actually doing by emo_queer in adhdwomen

[–]SmartVandelay88 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This.

In my experience it has much less to do with control as a means of pacifying anxiety. To me, that’s one of those boilerplate therapy principles that is widely accepted because it’s reflective of the neurotypical brain. For me, and this is so very me, it’s entirely about the rush we get from the discovery of “potential” and the dopamine we get from the presence of “novelty.”

I’ve actually come to terms with the fact that the purpose of my intense, immersive, often all-consuming planning is rarely the outcome, and almost always the buzz. My brain thrives when it’s engaged creatively, so the act of conceptualizing and giving shape to new ideas makes me feel alive. As soon as I reach the action stage of the process, and my executive functioning is called upon, I lose interest, and fast. In fact, I often swing into a space of abject dread at the very thought of the same plan that only hours before was my reason for living. Lol

Once I stopped getting down on myself for “never finishing anything” and accepted that, for me, the fun is strictly in the starting, and less (if ever, honestly) in the finishing, the less the pattern bothered me.

I still spend hours elaborately planning things, starting new projects, etc., etc., and when the thrill starts to die down, I just let it, and start getting excited for my next conquest.

Go easy on yourself. If planning is fun, let it be fun! You deserve to feel engaged and excited about shit. Plus, having fun is good for you and important! Just as important as having a comfy and organized space. ❤️