Don't make yourself feel that kind of guilt man. Relationships are complex as hell and change over time. Sometimes people have expectations that they aren't communicating well, and sometimes people have expectations that aren't really reasonable. I'm seeing you placing a lot of blame at your own feet, but the nature of a disease is that it is something you cannot control. If you are working on it then that is all you can do and I applaud you for that. And I'm so sorry to hear about your struggles and I hope they ease up for you soon
ADHD
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Relevant Lemmy communities:
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Thank you for your kind words <3 <3 <3
It sounds like your partner maybe suffering from anxiety issues. As a adhd'r myself I have to constantly defend my need to just let me do things the way I want. Like give me a goal and let me mess up a bit. Just need the space and time to figure out how I am going to do something my own way cause my experience isn't typical and it becomes unintuitive for passerby who are trying to facilitate my progress. As a musician I also have become acutely sensitive to how long it takes me to learn an pickup new skills and how my alternative methods often allow me to flourish while traditional methods often hinder me.
Yeah. I often notice that I can do something just fine if I'm doing it on my own.
This may be a ridiculous example but: One common source of friction is when we go grocery shopping together and put all the items back into the shopping cart after the cashier has scanned them. They are super fast and so we need to be pretty fast as well putting them back into the cart without for instance damaging fruit or veggies.
When we are shopping together I never know what to do. My partner is super fast at putting things into the cart and I want to try to help but I feel like I'm just getting the the way because I'm putting things back in the wrong order or into the wrong part of the cart.
When I'm on my own I do it just fine my own way.
Also your partner maybe experiencing some undiagnosed ADHD symptoms themselves. Where by they become more sensitive to ADHD behaviors that they themselves combat with a toxic inner voice. ADHD can be expressed in many ways and not always the cosmonaut - spacey variety. For instance having a very rigid routine in high stimulus activities like shopping where you're focus is being exploited by advertising and marketing.
My partner 100% doesn't have ADHD, I have never met a more focused, attentive, pro-active person than her. She always immediately knows what to do and gets it done. But she's repeatedly stated that she thinks she might be on the autistic spectrum and from what I know about it and what I know about her I agree it might be the case and, if true, that would probably be another factor making things difficult ๐ค
On another note imo someone who makes plans that fall apart at the first hiccup and don't accommodate the people involved isn't someone who is good at making plans. Just someone that has very rigid expectations.
Did you get a diagnosis?
If not, it's possible this is anxiety from the relationship in a bad feedback loop.
You seem to have some avoidance, she seems removed emotionally(exhaustion), and you both probably need to work on boundaries.
I don't mean to project. My last relationship of 5 years is almost perfectly described by your post including seeking an ADHD diagnosis in therapy. In my case it turned out she was never able to be emotionally available to me in the first place. That drove her to be critical of me and not provide intimacy which in turn caused me to be in a constant increasing state of anxiety about what next thing will I have fucked up. Severe executive dysfunction...