Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Please say something!
I married my husband with severe ADHD (and perhaps Asperger's). At the time we didn't know he was afflicted with these things, and he was relatively functional with terminal degrees. He has a high IQ and this masked many of his issues for a long time.
The problem is that with the addition of more responsibilities (children, mortgage, house maintenance, health issues), he has been consistently under-employed or frequently unemployed, even though there are jobs in his field. He cannot multitask, finish by the deadline, he continually forgets items and gets angry if any of these things are pointed out. Despite a diagnosis, he refuses meds. He has become very stubborn and is occasionally abusive, irrational and hyper-controlling. One of our children has severe ADHD as well and it significantly impacts his education and daily life.
Please do your research on ADHD, and present them to your sister. She cannot "save" or "change" him, especially if he refuses to medicate himself or change his behaviors. And more importantly, he will just get WORSE as they try to build a life together, because he will not be able to manage the burden of a household.
Have her read my post. I am deadly serious. No wedding for now, and for goodness' sake, no children!
Did someone try to say something to you to stop the wedding? It sounds like there weren’t signs before you got married.
Anonymous wrote:
Please say something!
I married my husband with severe ADHD (and perhaps Asperger's). At the time we didn't know he was afflicted with these things, and he was relatively functional with terminal degrees. He has a high IQ and this masked many of his issues for a long time.
The problem is that with the addition of more responsibilities (children, mortgage, house maintenance, health issues), he has been consistently under-employed or frequently unemployed, even though there are jobs in his field. He cannot multitask, finish by the deadline, he continually forgets items and gets angry if any of these things are pointed out. Despite a diagnosis, he refuses meds. He has become very stubborn and is occasionally abusive, irrational and hyper-controlling. One of our children has severe ADHD as well and it significantly impacts his education and daily life.
Please do your research on ADHD, and present them to your sister. She cannot "save" or "change" him, especially if he refuses to medicate himself or change his behaviors. And more importantly, he will just get WORSE as they try to build a life together, because he will not be able to manage the burden of a household.
Have her read my post. I am deadly serious. No wedding for now, and for goodness' sake, no children!
Can you encourage her to push the wedding back so both of them can get settled in their lives and see where they end up? I'm concerned that if you indicate there's something wrong with him, that she will push back on it. Extra time might give her more perspective. OTOH, maybe it's better that you should be up front with her about your concerns. Just be prepared for her to not listen to you.Anonymous wrote:They plan to get married in less than a year. She is 22, just graduated college, never worked but just landed a decent full time job and got her own apt. He is mid 20s, lives in a relative's house rent free, not yet graduated. He has inconsistent odd part time jobs and gets hand me downs from relatives (old beater cars and such). He also has severe ADHD which he doesn't treat (he told me so, but it is also obvious).
He is nice enough, but I think he will be a not be a good long term mate for several reasons. But it is her first serious relationship and the "love of her life."
Neither have a clue what is it be an independent adult with responsibilities yet. She jokes about him being directionless and waives it off saying he can just be a SAHD. Which is fine and great, but she has an entry level position. She thinks things such as he hadn't seen a dentist in 6 years is funny and cute (and not for lack of insurance, just a meh, I didn't feel like it) because she is "taking care of him." He also tends to make odd large impulsive purchases- which she thinks is cute and quirky.
I would like to tell her to consider moving the wedding back some. Wait for him to graduate, figure out what he is going to do for work, live together a while, see how he manages money, basically, be sure he can be an adult that is capable of at least supporting himself and making sound decisions before she marries him and gets pregnant.
The reason I would bring up anything at all is because neither of them have good parental guidance. In fact, I think his family is somewhat relived he will be someone else's problem soon. Say something or MYOB