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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Does my DP have ADHD. Can I have some advice

62 replies

Lostdirection · 26/12/2019 10:02

Name changed as although I don’t post often I feel it could be outting.

I need some support. I am slightly at breaking point and have endless thoughts running through my mind. The lead up to Christmas and recent events have led me to believe my dp’s mind doesn’t function quite how everyone else’s does- apologies if I’m phrasing this incorrectly. I really need to find a way forward so would like some opinions, advice and hand holding.

I will start by saying we’ve been together over a year, live together and have no financial commitments, no children etc. I love him and care for him deeply. I am a kind, honest, Come across as confident but equally it’s taken me a long time to be this way and so suffer with self confidence.
I will go out of my way to put others needs first, often sacrificing my own needs. I wouldn’t ever be horrible to someone or make someone feel worthless. Here is where I’m struggling.

I don’t think our relationship is working- and I don’t know whether it’s just us, me, him or underlying issues. Albeit even if there is whether I want to commit to helping support someone.

The behaviours which lead me to feel exhausted and emotionally overwhelmed are....

  • He talks over me, be that in a one to one conversation or more annoyingly in a group. I’m unable to answer my own questions, he retains information about my work and personal couples discussions which he then discusses with others. I’m often left feeling like I’m no longer heard (this wasn’t the case before)
  • He cannot take any sort of dry sense of humour or sarcasm. Everything is taken literally. If jokes made by close friends, family etc. He brings them up later and tells me off for saying it, saying that I made him feel belittled etc. He says his siblings do this too and others. These comments really aren’t. But I can see why he feels this so I’ve stopped. Often it means if other wives etc are making jokes about men leaving toilet seats up or silly things men do- I can’t comment because later it’ll be brought up and too much fuss made.
  • Lack of eye contact. At first I thought this was due to shyness & he has a slightly lazy eye. But actually I’ll notice he’s often looking elsewhere.
  • hyper sensitive to smells ... he easily wretches around things like picking up the dog poo (god forbid we need to change nappies ever), can’t take paracetamol without gagging, if he has a headache it is somehow far worse than everyone else’s. Etc etc
  • lack of self care. Forgetting deodorant, not washing clothes so running out of boxers and socks. Not noticing nasal hair, never cutting toe nails. I would just “leave him to it” but then some of these things seem to cause him great stress later on (lack of clean clothes) , me pointing out that his shirt smells even after washing.
  • having clear conversations but then they’re forgotten. We’ve made plans and then he’s forgotten. I’ve text him to remind and he’s not read it but replied about something completely unnecessary. Later it’s caused issues.
  • anxiety. For me this is a big issue- he frets about being on time, arriving at the airport is stressful he panics and is anxious (asks the time, asks for his passport constantly- I have now said check the time yourself, keep your passport ). He won’t wait for me if a taxi arrives he will go out and get in and call me on my mobile panicking it will leave. (Central London we can get another!). I have to say at the start of each overseas trip we’ve been on I’ve sat on the plane thinking “I can’t cope with this, I feel deflated and exhausted”
  • losing things. Keys. Wallet. Clothing. Anything really. I lose things but it’s the level of panic and stress he reaches if these items aren’t in front of him. Also if I ask him to go into a room to grab something, he often comes out saying he can’t find it. It will often be right there. He said he might be dyspraxia but he does nothing to manage this. - I’ve written him to do lists, made him a box for his keys wallet etc.
  • lack of self esteem. If I’ve tried to discuss the above he’s either dismissive, defensive or has once and only once opened up and cried saying he’s always felt a misfit, struggled to find a girlfriend, felt he was different. I sympathise here and it’s why I probably have stuck by and thought that I must stay and support him. I used to have extremely low self esteem and can easily slip back to it- I know how hard it is.
  • Our sex life is bad. It always has been. I hoped it would improve. It hasn’t. To the point he either has ED, can’t concentrate, my needs are never met ever so I’ve stopped wanting it. It feels like a task because none of it seems about me. My mind is totally elsewhere now. I know I’ve become distant. He’s asked but doesn’t exactly make any moves either. It’s all a bit sad really.
  • Certain days or times will be ruined by him suddenly being so hungry he will faint (yet he skips meals and never drinks water). Hangovers will throw him and if he gets a cold he takes days off work and even suggested he had meningitis last week- albeit during this he drank barely any water and lived off junk food (I had to work late).
  • he binge drinks. I tried bringing it up but sadly I get back “well so do you, remember that time”
  • there are so many other things I could list. But he’s been ill before Christmas. Brought on by excessive London Xmas parties in office and the fact we are all suffering with colds etc. But he’s said I show no sympathy, we’ve bickered a lot recently, full blown argument when on a group holiday.

I would like to add, because I feel it’s important. I suffer with depression and am medicated. I am very stable happy and have a good network of friends, social life and a successful job. My parents suffer with depression and bipolar and I have struggled with this. I have seen how my mother stayed with my father and has suffered. I cannot always be the person to give give give.
I also work in a job - I won’t say what as it’s outting- which requires organisation, meeting the needs of children, demanding at times albeit rewarding. At the end of a work day I am often mentally drained- I’ve taken on a slightly easier job recently (sane career) and feel it’s helped but now this has highlighted my home life as being draining.

Part of me thinks “why didn’t I notice before” or why did i dismiss it. I then think that he’s so kind and caring (will run me a bath after a long day)
That I should be there and push for a doctors, but he literally never goes to one, that I’m early thirties and desperately want a relationship (future marriage kids etc) I adore his family. And the thought of hurting him fills me with such sadness and anxiety.

But I’m home over Christmas feeling so utterly deflated, friends have noticed and asked. I keep snapping and he’s commented I’m nagging. I don’t ever want to be that person.

Ps- wow that was long and sorry for the typos.

OP posts:
Haffiana · 26/12/2019 18:16

ASD, not ADHD.

Pinktornado · 26/12/2019 19:54

but perhaps not everyone would call their partners on Xmas day?

Yes. Yes they would.

Lostdirection · 26/12/2019 19:55

Ok I don’t know as much about ASD in adults.
Would dyspraxia fit.

OP posts:
JKScot4 · 26/12/2019 19:58

@lost
Stop!! Why are you trying to excuse this mans obnoxious behaviour?
If you label him then every time he treats you like shit you can say ‘oh but he’s ....’
Your bar is so low it’s underground, why the fuck would you settle for this?

GlorianaCervixia · 26/12/2019 20:32

Even if you get a diagnosis though, is this a relationship worth pursuing? What will change? Would it make the drinking, the lack of hygiene, the selfishness any different?

I know you said you don’t want to recreate your parents relationship but it’s obvious that dynamic has a strong pull for you. That’s why you feel uncertain about ending a relationship where you’re caring for and managing a man who can’t or won’t reciprocate.

It’s only been a year. You’re not happy. I think the relationship has run its course.

Don’t waste years of your life on this.

ElizabethMountbatten · 26/12/2019 20:41

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the request of the OP.

Closetbeanmuncher · 26/12/2019 20:55

Certain days or times will be ruined by him suddenly being so hungry he will faint (yet he skips meals and never drinks water

Can you imagine this man looking after a child?? No, didn't think so.

You say you are deflated and exhausted well imagine that with all the additional responsibilities of children.

Quit trying to excuse poor behaviour and lack of self care by being a substitute mummy and frantically trying to find a label to slap on him.

If you want children in the future and your sanity intact end this relationship now. Many of the behaviours listed and the living together after only one year ring abuser alarm bells for me.

Codependency....read about it op.

Lostdirection · 26/12/2019 21:47

Ok off to do some reading and accept the fact it isn’t meant to be. Not the greatest time of year to be figuring all this out. My minds a bit all over the shop with family etc.

No more labels/excuses.

OP posts:
category12 · 26/12/2019 21:54

Try to do more reading about co-dependence and taking on the carer/saviour roles in relationships than you do on conditions he might have.

Interestedwoman · 26/12/2019 22:02

I hate to say this, but as someone with ADHD and autistic features, life has been frequently miserable for me- I love people, yet am rejected time and again by individual friends, groups, and partners. I've never really been able to work.

The repeated rejections from a very young age have been very painful and damaging indeed. I feel like Frankenstein's monster.

ADHD/ASD have a genetic element sometimes. I've been thinking recently that if at some point I'd been pregnant and if there were a test in the womb for my condition, if the baby tested positive I would have an abortion. It's been quite a painful life and I'd be bringing someone into that. Don't get me wrong, I know some people have an ok life with ADHD/autism/dyspraxia (which I probably have) or whatever, especially if they get the help they need at an early age, but my experience hasn't been good.

Any child you have will not only have an increased risk of depression, and bipolar (which I also have) from your side, (I know that's a bleak thought, sorry) but also of ADHD/ASD or whatever from his side. If you have a strong family history of mental illness, ideally you need to find as stable as possible a person to have children with. This is not that guy.

Neither do you have to 'rescue' him. I understand why you're worried after losing men you knew to suicide, but if he threatens suicide at any point just call 999. You (presumably) don't have the professional skills or the necessary professional distance to help him. I believe/hope that if he does need help from services, he will eventually come to their attention and get given help.

My dad was very volatile etc, and even unable to work for a while, my mum supported the family financially alone for several years. When they split up and he had to support himself, he mysteriously suddenly became able to get and keep down a job. Grin

Your boyfriend will probably do the same, at least to an extent- he will become mysteriously relatively self-sufficient. And/or he'll end up getting some help.

You deserve better. Best wishes and wishing you a great 2020 xxx

Interestedwoman · 26/12/2019 22:22

'- losing things. Keys. Wallet. Clothing. Anything really. I lose things but it’s the level of panic and stress he reaches if these items aren’t in front of him. Also if I ask him to go into a room to grab something, he often comes out saying he can’t find it. It will often be right there. He said he might be dyspraxia but he does nothing to manage this. - I’ve written him to do lists, made him a box for his keys wallet etc.'

This is kind of classic ADHD, it doesn't need dyspraxia to explain it. Or maybe he just has a tendency to anxiety I suppose.

If he won't do anything to help himself, that's very annoying. It does imply it's a kind of attention seeking or something. I haven't implemented all of it yet but here are a couple of books (I know, asking ADHD people to sit and read a book lol) for him to read, that the NHS recommended me.

www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1641522720?tag=mumsnetforu03-21

www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/019023556X?tag=mumsnetforu03-21

The first one is particularly good, as it's set out in an accessible way.

They're both mostly about having a 'system.' I wouldn't do it for him again, as he needs to want to do it. Same goes for writting down plans, setting alarms etc.

Sorry to go on- it's my autism :)

Lostdirection · 27/12/2019 07:43

@Interestedwoman thank you for your insight and if I’m honest i wouldn’t feel able to cope with a child with these characteristics and it’s led me to really think hard about our future.
Sadly I realise depression runs in our side of the family, I wouldn’t wish that upon anyone, but it’s really made me realise I need a man (not a man child) who is self assured, doesn’t need looking after and mostly who doesn’t drain me.

Thanks for all the support. It’s going to be tough but I know he has a strong network of friends, amazing family and has as you all say lived without me before. I think I just know how much heartbreak hurts from my past.

Happy 2020 x

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