Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Journalism the last 15 years just means blogging and tweeting.
Unless you’re at a think tank, it’s a joke.
So OPs dude better grab the bull by the horns and start generating a ton of clicks and content.
Lol
Adhd dreamer boy. Gonna write something big. Some day.
Hahahaha. As someone with ADHD and a “book in my head” but no ability to develop the kind of writing routine needed to actually get it on paper, this hit WAY too close to home!
Anonymous wrote:This man cannot handle any responsibility at all, and it is getting worse. Submit tax forms - they will not get submitted. School health forms, will not get submitted. Medical reimbursement forms will not get filed. prescriptions will not get picked up. He does not work and I work a million hours a day so this is not tenable. Am looking into divorce but not sure how the money situation will go (in NYC) as I cannot afford to pay for 2 homes in insanely expensive city. I have started to really hate this person. Anyone else in a similar boat?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Journalism the last 15 years just means blogging and tweeting.
Unless you’re at a think tank, it’s a joke.
So OPs dude better grab the bull by the horns and start generating a ton of clicks and content.
Lol
Adhd dreamer boy. Gonna write something big. Some day.
Hahahaha. As someone with ADHD and a “book in my head” but no ability to develop the kind of writing routine needed to actually get it on paper, this hit WAY too close to home!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Journalism the last 15 years just means blogging and tweeting.
Unless you’re at a think tank, it’s a joke.
So OPs dude better grab the bull by the horns and start generating a ton of clicks and content.
Lol
Adhd dreamer boy. Gonna write something big. Some day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have ADHD and am in charge of all of this stuff. Honestly, it doesn’t all get done and life goes on. Kids show up in uniforms on school picture day. I get an email from the school nurse and have to run kids to the drug store after school to get vaccines. Just this past weekend, I had a kid miss a rehearsal for the school play. I feel like I can keep on top of 90% of it (vet for the dog, meds, doctors, dentist, orthodontist, activity fees, mandatory volunteer hours, lacrosse sticks, mouthguards, what day the gym uniform needs to be clean, taxes, oil changes, ingredients for breakfast lunch and dinner, etc.), but the 10% I miss always feels like a failure.
It sucks, and I hate myself for it. I’m glad my spouse doesn’t hate me too.
You have ADHD but still manage to do 90% of everything? That’s incredible. Most people are like OP’s husband. They do 0% of everything. Often less than zero because they also can’t take care of themselves.
I have ADHD and can accomplish a lot when the need/motivation is extrinsic. I suck at doing things for myself.
For example, I can get the tax documents together, hire people to fix things (get quotes, do research on the project, review the quotes, etc), and client work. However, doing "work" that benefits me personally can be a lot harder for me to get done.
The meds help to a certain degree.
Which part(s) of the process are you doing versus a coworker or roommate or spouse or parent telling you to:
1- independently identify something in need / needs to be done
2- independently make a sensible plan to handle it
3- independently handle it correctly, the first time.
All of those steps?
Or just the last one? Or the first one?
I’m not that poster, but I also have ADHD.
Do you seriously do everything you try correctly, the first time, all of the time? And you don’t have to set reminders and keep lists and a planner to remember to do things?
That sounds really nice.
I have to set reminders to make and review my to-do lists, write down weekly meal plans and schedules including transit time and who is driving, write out weekly homework plans with my kids, and have a pretty strict schedule that we all follow so that day to day things don’t get dropped.
I can’t imagine just doing these things naturally and taking it for granted that you won’t screw up.
Maybe your spouse can do more.?.
Anonymous wrote:That aforementioned 1,2,3 thing has come up at work and at home.
Once had to fire a COO who just sat around until someone asked a key question or explicitly asked him to do something. Then he’d do it and half the time not finish or mess up. Not sr mgmt.
At home my spouse is asd/adhd. After years of trying to get him involved and everything failing, he’s systematized out of most things. He probably loves it, but we really couldn’t keep up with the constant setbacks (agreeing to do things and not doing them - fill up gas tank before road trip, handle the taxes, booking the flights correctly). So he just works. I don’t wanna know how that’s really going, he’s so senior people prob pick up all the slack.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have ADHD and am in charge of all of this stuff. Honestly, it doesn’t all get done and life goes on. Kids show up in uniforms on school picture day. I get an email from the school nurse and have to run kids to the drug store after school to get vaccines. Just this past weekend, I had a kid miss a rehearsal for the school play. I feel like I can keep on top of 90% of it (vet for the dog, meds, doctors, dentist, orthodontist, activity fees, mandatory volunteer hours, lacrosse sticks, mouthguards, what day the gym uniform needs to be clean, taxes, oil changes, ingredients for breakfast lunch and dinner, etc.), but the 10% I miss always feels like a failure.
It sucks, and I hate myself for it. I’m glad my spouse doesn’t hate me too.
You have ADHD but still manage to do 90% of everything? That’s incredible. Most people are like OP’s husband. They do 0% of everything. Often less than zero because they also can’t take care of themselves.
I have ADHD and can accomplish a lot when the need/motivation is extrinsic. I suck at doing things for myself.
For example, I can get the tax documents together, hire people to fix things (get quotes, do research on the project, review the quotes, etc), and client work. However, doing "work" that benefits me personally can be a lot harder for me to get done.
The meds help to a certain degree.
Which part(s) of the process are you doing versus a coworker or roommate or spouse or parent telling you to:
1- independently identify something in need / needs to be done
2- independently make a sensible plan to handle it
3- independently handle it correctly, the first time.
All of those steps?
Or just the last one? Or the first one?
I’m not that poster, but I also have ADHD.
Do you seriously do everything you try correctly, the first time, all of the time? And you don’t have to set reminders and keep lists and a planner to remember to do things?
That sounds really nice.
I have to set reminders to make and review my to-do lists, write down weekly meal plans and schedules including transit time and who is driving, write out weekly homework plans with my kids, and have a pretty strict schedule that we all follow so that day to day things don’t get dropped.
I can’t imagine just doing these things naturally and taking it for granted that you won’t screw up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have ADHD and am in charge of all of this stuff. Honestly, it doesn’t all get done and life goes on. Kids show up in uniforms on school picture day. I get an email from the school nurse and have to run kids to the drug store after school to get vaccines. Just this past weekend, I had a kid miss a rehearsal for the school play. I feel like I can keep on top of 90% of it (vet for the dog, meds, doctors, dentist, orthodontist, activity fees, mandatory volunteer hours, lacrosse sticks, mouthguards, what day the gym uniform needs to be clean, taxes, oil changes, ingredients for breakfast lunch and dinner, etc.), but the 10% I miss always feels like a failure.
It sucks, and I hate myself for it. I’m glad my spouse doesn’t hate me too.
You have ADHD but still manage to do 90% of everything? That’s incredible. Most people are like OP’s husband. They do 0% of everything. Often less than zero because they also can’t take care of themselves.
I have ADHD and can accomplish a lot when the need/motivation is extrinsic. I suck at doing things for myself.
For example, I can get the tax documents together, hire people to fix things (get quotes, do research on the project, review the quotes, etc), and client work. However, doing "work" that benefits me personally can be a lot harder for me to get done.
The meds help to a certain degree.
Which part(s) of the process are you doing versus a coworker or roommate or spouse or parent telling you to:
1- independently identify something in need / needs to be done
2- independently make a sensible plan to handle it
3- independently handle it correctly, the first time.
All of those steps?
Or just the last one? Or the first one?
I’m not that poster, but I also have ADHD.
Do you seriously do everything you try correctly, the first time, all of the time? And you don’t have to set reminders and keep lists and a planner to remember to do things?
That sounds really nice.
I have to set reminders to make and review my to-do lists, write down weekly meal plans and schedules including transit time and who is driving, write out weekly homework plans with my kids, and have a pretty strict schedule that we all follow so that day to day things don’t get dropped.
I can’t imagine just doing these things naturally and taking it for granted that you won’t screw up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have ADHD and am in charge of all of this stuff. Honestly, it doesn’t all get done and life goes on. Kids show up in uniforms on school picture day. I get an email from the school nurse and have to run kids to the drug store after school to get vaccines. Just this past weekend, I had a kid miss a rehearsal for the school play. I feel like I can keep on top of 90% of it (vet for the dog, meds, doctors, dentist, orthodontist, activity fees, mandatory volunteer hours, lacrosse sticks, mouthguards, what day the gym uniform needs to be clean, taxes, oil changes, ingredients for breakfast lunch and dinner, etc.), but the 10% I miss always feels like a failure.
It sucks, and I hate myself for it. I’m glad my spouse doesn’t hate me too.
You have ADHD but still manage to do 90% of everything? That’s incredible. Most people are like OP’s husband. They do 0% of everything. Often less than zero because they also can’t take care of themselves.
I have ADHD and can accomplish a lot when the need/motivation is extrinsic. I suck at doing things for myself.
For example, I can get the tax documents together, hire people to fix things (get quotes, do research on the project, review the quotes, etc), and client work. However, doing "work" that benefits me personally can be a lot harder for me to get done.
The meds help to a certain degree.
Which part(s) of the process are you doing versus a coworker or roommate or spouse or parent telling you to:
1- independently identify something in need / needs to be done
2- independently make a sensible plan to handle it
3- independently handle it correctly, the first time.
All of those steps?
Or just the last one? Or the first one?
I’m not that poster, but I also have ADHD.
Do you seriously do everything you try correctly, the first time, all of the time? And you don’t have to set reminders and keep lists and a planner to remember to do things?
That sounds really nice.
I have to set reminders to make and review my to-do lists, write down weekly meal plans and schedules including transit time and who is driving, write out weekly homework plans with my kids, and have a pretty strict schedule that we all follow so that day to day things don’t get dropped.
I can’t imagine just doing these things naturally and taking it for granted that you won’t screw up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have ADHD and am in charge of all of this stuff. Honestly, it doesn’t all get done and life goes on. Kids show up in uniforms on school picture day. I get an email from the school nurse and have to run kids to the drug store after school to get vaccines. Just this past weekend, I had a kid miss a rehearsal for the school play. I feel like I can keep on top of 90% of it (vet for the dog, meds, doctors, dentist, orthodontist, activity fees, mandatory volunteer hours, lacrosse sticks, mouthguards, what day the gym uniform needs to be clean, taxes, oil changes, ingredients for breakfast lunch and dinner, etc.), but the 10% I miss always feels like a failure.
It sucks, and I hate myself for it. I’m glad my spouse doesn’t hate me too.
You have ADHD but still manage to do 90% of everything? That’s incredible. Most people are like OP’s husband. They do 0% of everything. Often less than zero because they also can’t take care of themselves.
I have ADHD and can accomplish a lot when the need/motivation is extrinsic. I suck at doing things for myself.
For example, I can get the tax documents together, hire people to fix things (get quotes, do research on the project, review the quotes, etc), and client work. However, doing "work" that benefits me personally can be a lot harder for me to get done.
The meds help to a certain degree.
Which part(s) of the process are you doing versus a coworker or roommate or spouse or parent telling you to:
1- independently identify something in need / needs to be done
2- independently make a sensible plan to handle it
3- independently handle it correctly, the first time.
All of those steps?
Or just the last one? Or the first one?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have ADHD and am in charge of all of this stuff. Honestly, it doesn’t all get done and life goes on. Kids show up in uniforms on school picture day. I get an email from the school nurse and have to run kids to the drug store after school to get vaccines. Just this past weekend, I had a kid miss a rehearsal for the school play. I feel like I can keep on top of 90% of it (vet for the dog, meds, doctors, dentist, orthodontist, activity fees, mandatory volunteer hours, lacrosse sticks, mouthguards, what day the gym uniform needs to be clean, taxes, oil changes, ingredients for breakfast lunch and dinner, etc.), but the 10% I miss always feels like a failure.
It sucks, and I hate myself for it. I’m glad my spouse doesn’t hate me too.
You have ADHD but still manage to do 90% of everything? That’s incredible. Most people are like OP’s husband. They do 0% of everything. Often less than zero because they also can’t take care of themselves.
I have ADHD and can accomplish a lot when the need/motivation is extrinsic. I suck at doing things for myself.
For example, I can get the tax documents together, hire people to fix things (get quotes, do research on the project, review the quotes, etc), and client work. However, doing "work" that benefits me personally can be a lot harder for me to get done.
The meds help to a certain degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have ADHD and am in charge of all of this stuff. Honestly, it doesn’t all get done and life goes on. Kids show up in uniforms on school picture day. I get an email from the school nurse and have to run kids to the drug store after school to get vaccines. Just this past weekend, I had a kid miss a rehearsal for the school play. I feel like I can keep on top of 90% of it (vet for the dog, meds, doctors, dentist, orthodontist, activity fees, mandatory volunteer hours, lacrosse sticks, mouthguards, what day the gym uniform needs to be clean, taxes, oil changes, ingredients for breakfast lunch and dinner, etc.), but the 10% I miss always feels like a failure.
It sucks, and I hate myself for it. I’m glad my spouse doesn’t hate me too.
You have ADHD but still manage to do 90% of everything? That’s incredible. Most people are like OP’s husband. They do 0% of everything. Often less than zero because they also can’t take care of themselves.
I have ADHD and can accomplish a lot when the need/motivation is extrinsic. I suck at doing things for myself.
For example, I can get the tax documents together, hire people to fix things (get quotes, do research on the project, review the quotes, etc), and client work. However, doing "work" that benefits me personally can be a lot harder for me to get done.
The meds help to a certain degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This man cannot handle any responsibility at all, and it is getting worse. Submit tax forms - they will not get submitted. School health forms, will not get submitted. Medical reimbursement forms will not get filed. prescriptions will not get picked up. He does not work and I work a million hours a day so this is not tenable. Am looking into divorce but not sure how the money situation will go (in NYC) as I cannot afford to pay for 2 homes in insanely expensive city. I have started to really hate this person. Anyone else in a similar boat?
Try not to do any of the things you do not have to do.
1. Do not pick up any of his prescriptions.
2. Do not pick up his clothing. If it's on the floor, walk on it.
3. Do not do his laundry.
4. Do not add toilet paper to the roll.
5. Do not put dishes into DW or remove them.
And so on.
Anonymous wrote:A HUGE number of ADHD marriages fail when the ADHD person refuses to medicate. I've been on SSRIs to cope lately and while they work, the joint pain is horrendous and I am losing quality of life. I cut back and today didn't take one.
Sure enough, today I get home from running errands and the UPS guy is blocking the driveway and I gotta go to the bathroom something fierce, but figure I can wait a few moments. Thirty seconds later, my phone rings and it's my husband all flustered because the package coming from Canada has postage due. So pay it I say, I'm in the cul-de-sac and the driveway is blocked. Start getting hemming and hawing and I lose my shit and hang up, because once again it's on me to figure this out. I have a bad hip and the driveway is long and I start hobbling up it, still losing it and still having to go to the bathroom - a bad hip/long driveway/and having to pee is not a good combo for success. The UPS guy is apologizing to me and I'm telling him it's not his fault that my husband can't handle this. I go in, get the checkbook (they don't take a card, not even a debit) and write the check to UPS myself. My husband's response to me when I ask him why he couldn't handle this? "F-you". For those wondering, I did make it to the bathroom - LOL.
Bottom line - ADHD is well-hidden until it's not. I also just found out we lost our vision and dental insurance because he didn't pay the bill since January. Thank GOD I manage the main health care bill. He 'forgot' to leave a method of payment. What CAN he remember? What time all his various bike groups have rides, what gear he needs, where they are going, etc. If it doesn't serve him, he doesn't get it done.
OP, I feel your pain.