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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

ADHD husband has classed me as "unexceptional"

179 replies

Garfield4321 · 01/10/2020 21:05

My husband was diagnosed with ADHD as a child. Like many he grew out of some of the more well-known ADHD traits but now as an adult in his early thirties he still exhibits strong ADHD characteristics such as being extremely bright, a tendency to obsess over specific hobbies or subjects of interest, impulsiveness, an inability to focus or feign curiosity in anything that he doesn't consider interesting. If I ask a relative what they've been up to and they start talking about a hobby of their own which bores DH for example, he will simply walk away from the conversation without realising how rude he is being.

DH is a quick-thinker, charismatic, confident and has excelled in his vocation, albeit he achieved quite average grades throughout school and university. He has a close-knit group of friends many of whom either share some of his characteristics or, at the very least, share the same hobby. He can talk for hours with these friends and is animated, interested and complimentary.

I, on the other hand, am your textbook under-confident over-achiever in the sense that it was ingrained in me to work hard and as a result I have an excellent academic history despite probably being of probably quite average intelligence. I'm business-minded, emotionally intelligent and have a strong aptitude for problem-solving.....but I cannot recite Homer's Odyssey backwards or code a computer.

What bothers me is that I feel DH has written me off as unexceptional and, therefore, unworthy.

Any effort made to learn a new skill such as an instrument or a language is met with scepticism and disinterest. I managed to learn an instrument to exam-level in a matter of months but despite hearing me practice daily I don't think I ever heard DH say "that sounded really good". The one thing I remember is telling him I wanted to one-day learn a piece of music by X-musician and him replying that I would never be able to play to a high enough standard.

I also participate in a very challenging sporting activity and feel demeaned and disrespected when something the equivalent of running a marathon is referred to as my "little walk".

He expresses no interest in my hobbies or passions and dismisses my job as a menial glorified-admin role.

I suppose I just feel that I'm never "special" enough to be worthy of his respect.

On the flip side he can be extremely loving, affectionate, kind and considerate. I don't doubt that he loves me and he has a number of very attractive qualities.

Do I have unrealistic expectations? Is it childish of me to want my DH to occasionally give me a big smile and a "that was brilliant" or acknowledge my successes on the rare occasion when I can do something better than he can?

How much of this just goes hand-in-hand with his ADHD diagnosis in which case surely I should just accept that I can't change anything?

I don't need to be petted on the head like a puppy. I'd just like my DH to admire me for my capabilities for once.

OP posts:
roundturnandtwohalfhitches · 03/10/2020 19:48

He sounds like a narc. Lacks empathy and lifts his self esteem by ruining yours. Living with someone like that is utterly shit. Sorry.

GetThatHelmetOn · 03/10/2020 20:14

It really troubles me how people are saying things like 'the cure is divorce', as if divorce makes everything better and is a quick fix.

Divorce is certainly NOT for the faint hearted, you need a lot of self respect, a healthy self esteem and plenty of courage to leave. It is much easier to stay but this only leads to years of agony and eventually to divorce anyway.

Plenty of women stay in abusive relationships trying to find excuses to stay, clutching to straws, trying to convince themselves things are not that bad while at the same time trying to convince themselves they have no reason to be unhappy even when they are constantly put down, neglected, ignored and not appreciated.

Personally, I think that if the guys is having some bad weeks and lashing out you probably can try to be understanding if there is an underlying reason/stress causing the nasty behaviour. But if the relationship is bad most of the times, what is the point?

People with aspergers, ADHD, MH etc can empathetic or not, pretty much as a neurotypical person can be empathetic or not. If his behaviour is affecting you negatively it is your right to be annoyed and feeling upset about it, nobody should stay in destructive relationships just because “it is the correct thing to do” (which mostly never is anyway...)

Galvantula · 05/10/2020 14:17

I have ADHD. I will get distracted when someone is talking to me, but I'd then be embarrassed when I realised. The only person I know who walks away while I'm taking to them, is a self absorbed arse who seems to think they're better than others.

Agree with not the ADHD, it's the person.

CSIblonde · 05/10/2020 15:15

If you told him how you feel would he make an effort? That would be the key for me. If he can't or won't i'd find it a bit soul destroying having a partner like that. The ADHD people I've met were all tens, have had empathy & can be supportive , but it's kind of infrequent & obviously not their natural default ,so I've made a big thing of it when they've displayed it & said how nice it was for people to feel supported or understood . They reacted well to my surprise ( I wondered if I should have said it tbh) & made an effort to do it more . It's the ex teacher in me probably.

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