The Biggest Challenge Of Living With An ADHD Partner
How to redefine the terms of your relationship in ways you'll both find fair.
Whether you have ADHD, or your partner does, there’s one thing for certain: the tasks of living— whether fun or tedious— can often seem overwhelming and unmanageable.
Executive functioning skill challenges, learning disabilities, ASD, anxiety, or depression can add to the complexity of any relationship. Sometimes these challenges are met with humor, empathy, and compassion. Other times, they produce resentment, frustration, and blame.
How to happily life with a partner who has ADHD
One of my colleagues shared an anecdote from a client whose husband and two kids had ADHD and she didn’t. She compared living with her family to being in a canoe going across a lake with a group of paddlers. Everybody is paddling but each person is doing their own thing and struggling to work together. The boat, instead of going straight to the other side, is going around in circles, moving to the left or moving to the right. She ends up doing most of the paddling herself to arrive safely at the dock.
This may sound similar to your situation.
To live successfully in a relationship means forgetting about fairness. Focusing on equality leads a couple down a rocky path. It may seem that one person does more of the heavy lifting. Whether or not this is true, we all have roles to play in our partnerships and in our families. You need to learn how to negotiate what these are so that there’s flexibility and compromise instead of rigidity and contempt.
Divide tasks by your skills, not by what seems "fair"
In partnerships, people have different skill sets: one person may be the organizer and the motivator, the other may be better at following lists, coming up with fun ideas or recalling specific memories from five years ago. Instead of concentrating on fairness, shift your attention to what will help nurture your relationship, foster closeness, and be useful in getting things done.
When you make collaborative agreements with accountability plans and lean into each other’s strengths, you can create practical and reliable routines for living and being with each other. Break down tasks into manageable parts or delegate chores based on interest and capability. Instead of fairness being your goal, aim for effectiveness and equanimity.
For example, I’m better at social planning, cooking, dealing with medical issues, reserving places to stay on vacations and making sure we celebrate holidays, birthdays, and our anniversaries. My husband takes care of the garden, goes to the dump, manages structural house problems, and deals with airlines. Together we take turns with the laundry, grocery shopping and walking the dog.
How do you and your partner divide tasks? What skills do you and your partner each have? If the division of labor seems imbalanced, how are you addressing that? Do you make joint lists and assign the tasks so one person isn’t doing it all?
Zoom out and think about the big picture.
Most couples have the same arguments over and over again.
Whether it’s about money, who’s doing (or not doing) what or how to parent the kids, people get caught up in (and sweat) the small stuff. When couples struggle like this and anger emerges all too often, they often focus on what the other person could do differently or better.
This is a trap: you can’t control what anyone else does. So, learning better tools for dealing with your own frustration and emotional upset is what’s called for while understanding that emotional regulation is especially tough for ADHD brains.
Use my STAR method to assist you in managing intense feelings: Stop, Think, Act and Recover.
You need a plan for those angry moments, so you don’t ‘wing it’ in the moment. In calm times, talk about what sets each of you off. Then pick one thing you would each like to do differently to respond to this trigger.
Stop & Think:
Deciding on a timed period to cool off – anywhere from 20-40 minutes ensures that the body has recalibrated from the burst of angry energy. Then come back together so each person can be accountable for some aspect of their behavior, words, or emotions.
Act:
Discuss what the next right thing to do is and take that action. Give yourselves time and space to recover before trying to process what happened. Use “I” statements and reflective listening in those follow-up conversations.
Recover:
Lastly, many couples living with ADHD are so busy dealing with the pressures and responsibilities of daily life that they’ve lost track of what drew them together in the first place. Nurturing your positive connection is essential for growing your love. Find some time to remember what you like about one another. Take turns choosing an activity and mixing things up by trying something new.
Instead of going out to dinner again, try a whitewater rafting trip for the day, get food from a new restaurant and have a romantic picnic, be a tourist in your own town, or visit a new museum. Develop a shared interest such as playing tennis, dancing, or baking bread.
Make time for intimacy. If you are not connecting positively, you will negatively. Anger and hostility also reflect a deep connection, just not a productive or pleasant one. If these activities are tough for you because there’s too much blame or resentment, I encourage you to seek counseling for more support.
Sharon Saline, Psy.D., is an international lecturer and workshop facilitator. She has focused her work on ADHD, anxiety, learning differences, and mental health challenges and their impact on the school and family dynamics for more than 30 years.