Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the ADHD poster and have been reflecting on the comments and realize I was projecting my situation onto many posters.
In my specific case, which is too complicated to summarise, I had to reject the help I was receiving in order to step up and take responsibility. My spouse only wanted to take things from me to make my life easier, but it just enables and stressed me out. Then he’d criticise me for clutter and other things. Nothing I did was good enough and the more i tries to explain myself, the more resentful he got. Like he just wanted me gone.
It actually made me worse mentally, but now that we are split and there are clear lanes for coparenting, I feel less stressed and overwhelmed and able to manage the increase in responsibilities.
I am not bitter, I don’t blame. This is just the reality I am dealing with. I have found help and support from other friends and professionals. But not from my ex-spouse or parents.
So in your case, you probably had some way of emotionally dealing with him that didn't work out well. I'm going to guess some sort of defense mechanism which is often the case with people who have ADHD. He probably also had some emotional issues that led to the split.OCD or something. And you weren't taking responsibility for things. I think understanding that your health led to the dysfunction is healthier than thinking the dysfunction stemmed from someone else and that you had to get away to get better. Both are actually true, but it's due to an inability to be healthy from the beginning. It's like someone who can't do the job and the boss doesn't understand why the person can't do it and takes things away and complains when still that isn't enough, but then when the person leaves and gets more skilled than they are better on their own. It's the skill that makes the person healthier and the lack of past trauma/distrust dealing with a new person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m the ADHD poster and have been reflecting on the comments and realize I was projecting my situation onto many posters.
In my specific case, which is too complicated to summarise, I had to reject the help I was receiving in order to step up and take responsibility. My spouse only wanted to take things from me to make my life easier, but it just enables and stressed me out. Then he’d criticise me for clutter and other things. Nothing I did was good enough and the more i tries to explain myself, the more resentful he got. Like he just wanted me gone.
It actually made me worse mentally, but now that we are split and there are clear lanes for coparenting, I feel less stressed and overwhelmed and able to manage the increase in responsibilities.
I am not bitter, I don’t blame. This is just the reality I am dealing with. I have found help and support from other friends and professionals. But not from my ex-spouse or parents.
So in your case, you probably had some way of emotionally dealing with him that didn't work out well. I'm going to guess some sort of defense mechanism which is often the case with people who have ADHD. He probably also had some emotional issues that led to the split.OCD or something. And you weren't taking responsibility for things. I think understanding that your health led to the dysfunction is healthier than thinking the dysfunction stemmed from someone else and that you had to get away to get better. Both are actually true, but it's due to an inability to be healthy from the beginning. It's like someone who can't do the job and the boss doesn't understand why the person can't do it and takes things away and complains when still that isn't enough, but then when the person leaves and gets more skilled than they are better on their own. It's the skill that makes the person healthier and the lack of past trauma/distrust dealing with a new person.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the ADHD poster and have been reflecting on the comments and realize I was projecting my situation onto many posters.
In my specific case, which is too complicated to summarise, I had to reject the help I was receiving in order to step up and take responsibility. My spouse only wanted to take things from me to make my life easier, but it just enables and stressed me out. Then he’d criticise me for clutter and other things. Nothing I did was good enough and the more i tries to explain myself, the more resentful he got. Like he just wanted me gone.
It actually made me worse mentally, but now that we are split and there are clear lanes for coparenting, I feel less stressed and overwhelmed and able to manage the increase in responsibilities.
I am not bitter, I don’t blame. This is just the reality I am dealing with. I have found help and support from other friends and professionals. But not from my ex-spouse or parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don’t you let Adhd person speak for themselves. They are blaming the people in their lives who have helped them and pointed out flaws so they didn’t have to experience hardship. That is a problem in of itself. If you can’t understand it just be glad you haven’t gone through life with a mentally ill spouse. People who try to help their mentally ill spouses are saints to me. I will stick up for them when someone says they were wrong to not just leave.
And I did give advice. I told them to live more simply and manage their own behavior accepting themselves and trying to grow. And to stop judging what others say and just using their words how best helps them. Not scapegoating or expecting everyone to just give you a pep talk when you made a big mistake that affected their lives.
I originally responded to a poster who said she wanted to help and I said that the best help is encouragement because people who struggle often ARE working incredibly hard.
You then continued to step on my initial point which is that a lot of help is Presley just overwhelmed. You haven’t listened to anything I’ve said and instead insisted that I’ve not done enough or done things in the right way.
What you are actually doing is trying to claim for yourself, the helper, the work that people who struggle have to put in. We are emotional burn victims and the pain doesn’t got away, it takes time, trial and error to figure what is our unique strategy for managing.
Yes, we can behave badly at times. That’s on us. You communicate that and you choose is to either leave or be patient. Your choice. But you can’t fix us, we fix ourselves. In the way that works for us. Maybe it’s good enough for you, maybe it isn’t.
That's ridiculous. You are not an island. People have the right to call out bad behavior and have the right to try to help their spouse. No good spouse would not help their spouse if they had cancer waiting until they helped themselves on this. No good spouse would just leave for one offense. Also people don't just get better on their own. They often need help. It doesn't work that way.
You need to forgive those who "overwhelmed" you and tried to help you. They were just caring about you.
Again, you are projecting your own story and assumptions onto me. I’ve never blamed anyone. Only I am stating that the care I was offered didn’t translate into the help I needed.
In my case, the care and help was actually enabling and overwhelming. It was very well-intended and offered in love, but it wasn’t what I needed. And therefore, I had to detach from those relationships. Including my marriage.
I’m sorry for the situation that you are in that is causing you to push back on me so hard.
The care, help and enabling I rec’d wasn’t the care and help I needed.
But leaving those relationships and responsibilities worked well.
Ok then. Yes walking away is often better for everyone- spouse, kids, yourself.
DP.
Yep, walking away is. Ben Affleck made some similar comment inferring that his wife (Jennifer Garner) was part of the reason he kept failing.
Have similar standards and boundaries for everyone, mentally ill or not. Offer help when asked.
You are not their mother nor their therapist. If they need you to drive them to either of these people. Do. But don't make excuses for people treating you like crap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably the reason a mentally ill spouse does this is that they feel guilty they were such a pain to deal with or something when they finally come out of their irresponsibility. It's another reflection on themselves that they project to their partner.
In my experience and my observation of an extended family with unmanaged mental disorders: they do NOT feel shame or remorse or guilt. At all.
That’s a myth that that’s why they mistreat and abuse others close to them. From shame or guilt or awareness of their issues.
There is little awareness. By the time they are adults they have so many deeply ingrained maladaptive “coping mechanisms,” such as gaslighting, deflecting, making personal attacks, stonewalling, temper tantruming, they have convinced themselves that they are always right and those who inquire are always wrong and the bad guys.
There is no guilt. It’s black and white, you are wrong, they are never wrong. It’s your fault- even their rages, breaking things, tempers, it’s never their fault. You are nuts, so are your parents, they are not.
I agree with this, AND I think it’s both — they have a lot of defenses bc they are crippled with shame and guilt inside. It’s really quite sad. They lack a healthy sense of self.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don’t you let Adhd person speak for themselves. They are blaming the people in their lives who have helped them and pointed out flaws so they didn’t have to experience hardship. That is a problem in of itself. If you can’t understand it just be glad you haven’t gone through life with a mentally ill spouse. People who try to help their mentally ill spouses are saints to me. I will stick up for them when someone says they were wrong to not just leave.
And I did give advice. I told them to live more simply and manage their own behavior accepting themselves and trying to grow. And to stop judging what others say and just using their words how best helps them. Not scapegoating or expecting everyone to just give you a pep talk when you made a big mistake that affected their lives.
I originally responded to a poster who said she wanted to help and I said that the best help is encouragement because people who struggle often ARE working incredibly hard.
You then continued to step on my initial point which is that a lot of help is Presley just overwhelmed. You haven’t listened to anything I’ve said and instead insisted that I’ve not done enough or done things in the right way.
What you are actually doing is trying to claim for yourself, the helper, the work that people who struggle have to put in. We are emotional burn victims and the pain doesn’t got away, it takes time, trial and error to figure what is our unique strategy for managing.
Yes, we can behave badly at times. That’s on us. You communicate that and you choose is to either leave or be patient. Your choice. But you can’t fix us, we fix ourselves. In the way that works for us. Maybe it’s good enough for you, maybe it isn’t.
That's ridiculous. You are not an island. People have the right to call out bad behavior and have the right to try to help their spouse. No good spouse would not help their spouse if they had cancer waiting until they helped themselves on this. No good spouse would just leave for one offense. Also people don't just get better on their own. They often need help. It doesn't work that way.
You need to forgive those who "overwhelmed" you and tried to help you. They were just caring about you.
Again, you are projecting your own story and assumptions onto me. I’ve never blamed anyone. Only I am stating that the care I was offered didn’t translate into the help I needed.
In my case, the care and help was actually enabling and overwhelming. It was very well-intended and offered in love, but it wasn’t what I needed. And therefore, I had to detach from those relationships. Including my marriage.
I’m sorry for the situation that you are in that is causing you to push back on me so hard.
The care, help and enabling I rec’d wasn’t the care and help I needed.
But leaving those relationships and responsibilities worked well.
Ok then. Yes walking away is often better for everyone- spouse, kids, yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This statement from you. They are still helping. It's just not helping you at that time. Just because it didn't help you at that time, doesn't mean they weren't helping through their own actions. It may have been misguided but this is how they tried to help you.
"At some point, you are not helping you are trying to control another person with your expectations. Or you are enabling that person to expect support when they need to experience the consequences and pain in order to actually learn for themselves."
Is this about a gold star? You need acknowledgement for your “help”?
Which is exactly the point I made earlier…people are mostly “helping” in order to make themselves feel better rather than actually offering the person what they need.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do so many people have mental health problems these days? Was it always this prevalent?
I think it cuts both ways. Some of it was always there and just ignored or swept under the rug by the families. But some of is is a result of the way we live now with information and executive function overload pushing more people to the edge. Imagine someone prone to anxiety before internet. They'd hear a couple of scary local stories related to whatever their trigger is, but that would be it. Now they can easily find every tragic case within 1000 miles radius AND will conveniently be served more stories as they come up due to social media algorithms. Think about all the paperwork that floods your inbox requiring your immediate attention - just deciding whether it's truly important, some sort of a sales pitch or an outright scam is exhausting.
I work in risk management and one of the exercises we do to teach people about phishing is sending official looking emails asking to click on a link. Our most "successful" email was saying that if you don't immediately fill out this form, your paychecks will stop. We caught the CEO!!! It's a sad commentary on the current state of life that people truly believe it is a possibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Probably the reason a mentally ill spouse does this is that they feel guilty they were such a pain to deal with or something when they finally come out of their irresponsibility. It's another reflection on themselves that they project to their partner.
In my experience and my observation of an extended family with unmanaged mental disorders: they do NOT feel shame or remorse or guilt. At all.
That’s a myth that that’s why they mistreat and abuse others close to them. From shame or guilt or awareness of their issues.
There is little awareness. By the time they are adults they have so many deeply ingrained maladaptive “coping mechanisms,” such as gaslighting, deflecting, making personal attacks, stonewalling, temper tantruming, they have convinced themselves that they are always right and those who inquire are always wrong and the bad guys.
There is no guilt. It’s black and white, you are wrong, they are never wrong. It’s your fault- even their rages, breaking things, tempers, it’s never their fault. You are nuts, so are your parents, they are not.
I was speaking to the ADHD person who is saying that the people who tried to help them were actually hurting them, and they should have just left them alone. It's a complete Un acknowledgement of spouses of the mentally ill as individuals with their own strengths and own agenda to live the life they want to live and likely agreed to. Finally, that person said they realized the help was from the spouse's perspective, but it's like he/she makes it about being selfish rather than helping. Yes, it is from their perspective because it's from them and they are individuals, not mirrors of what you want. Yes, it is actual helping. That's where the disconnect is. Just because it doesn't feel good to the mentally ill spouse or actually help them, doesn't make it "wrong" or "selfish". It's for each person to accept feedback and then make the best use for themselves. Labeling helpers are hurters is a defense mechanism.
Anonymous wrote:Can’t help someone who doesn’t want help or won’t help themselves.
Detach and move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don’t you let Adhd person speak for themselves. They are blaming the people in their lives who have helped them and pointed out flaws so they didn’t have to experience hardship. That is a problem in of itself. If you can’t understand it just be glad you haven’t gone through life with a mentally ill spouse. People who try to help their mentally ill spouses are saints to me. I will stick up for them when someone says they were wrong to not just leave.
And I did give advice. I told them to live more simply and manage their own behavior accepting themselves and trying to grow. And to stop judging what others say and just using their words how best helps them. Not scapegoating or expecting everyone to just give you a pep talk when you made a big mistake that affected their lives.
I originally responded to a poster who said she wanted to help and I said that the best help is encouragement because people who struggle often ARE working incredibly hard.
You then continued to step on my initial point which is that a lot of help is Presley just overwhelmed. You haven’t listened to anything I’ve said and instead insisted that I’ve not done enough or done things in the right way.
What you are actually doing is trying to claim for yourself, the helper, the work that people who struggle have to put in. We are emotional burn victims and the pain doesn’t got away, it takes time, trial and error to figure what is our unique strategy for managing.
Yes, we can behave badly at times. That’s on us. You communicate that and you choose is to either leave or be patient. Your choice. But you can’t fix us, we fix ourselves. In the way that works for us. Maybe it’s good enough for you, maybe it isn’t.
That's ridiculous. You are not an island. People have the right to call out bad behavior and have the right to try to help their spouse. No good spouse would not help their spouse if they had cancer waiting until they helped themselves on this. No good spouse would just leave for one offense. Also people don't just get better on their own. They often need help. It doesn't work that way.
You need to forgive those who "overwhelmed" you and tried to help you. They were just caring about you.
Again, you are projecting your own story and assumptions onto me. I’ve never blamed anyone. Only I am stating that the care I was offered didn’t translate into the help I needed.
In my case, the care and help was actually enabling and overwhelming. It was very well-intended and offered in love, but it wasn’t what I needed. And therefore, I had to detach from those relationships. Including my marriage.
I’m sorry for the situation that you are in that is causing you to push back on me so hard.
The care, help and enabling I rec’d wasn’t the care and help I needed.
But leaving those relationships and responsibilities worked well.
Ok then. Yes walking away is often better for everyone- spouse, kids, yourself.