Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think there’s a solution to fix an ND male and NT female relationship that doesn’t result in bitterness and resentment. Many men are already conditioned to have poor executive functioning skills and they simply lack empathy. When you add a diagnosis and children who are most likely afflicted with the same condition, it’s just too much to handle. You basically have a parentalized relationship versus an equal marriage and there’s nothing less romantic.
Not true for me, and I’ve been happily married for twenty years. He hyperfocuses at work and is super productive, and I’m type A and ridiculously organized in the home which is exactly how I like it. Works for us. Don’t generalize.
As you know, you can’t drop comments like the above and not specify if you work full time, if you have kids if you have local grandparent or daily Nannie’s/housekeeper.
The entire post I was replying to was a generalization! That was exactly what I was saying, you can’t generalize. People’s circumstances are different but of course marriages can survive a ND-NT pairing.
Sorry I didn't catch that. Do you work FT? Do you have kids to raise? Do you have family help or Nanny or housekeepers come multiple times a week?
All we know is you’re Type A, organized, and married to an ADHD male. And that you do everything and only expect him to go to work/supply a paycheck/ tag along with what you’ve done in the homefront.
You were replying to the common phenomenon of how male adhd spouses create a Parent/child dynamic in their marriage where their Nt spouse does everything and merely allows them to “be a good student at work.”
Above is all true. However I would SAH if the ADHD spouse actively acknowledged my doing everything on the homefront and was constantly thankful and grateful. If he was not, I'd be out of there, with the kids.
So... outsource all the major household work. One advantage about ADHD spouses is they make good money when they are interested in their job. Seems you don't appreciate his strengths and are shocked he doesn't appreciate you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think there’s a solution to fix an ND male and NT female relationship that doesn’t result in bitterness and resentment. Many men are already conditioned to have poor executive functioning skills and they simply lack empathy. When you add a diagnosis and children who are most likely afflicted with the same condition, it’s just too much to handle. You basically have a parentalized relationship versus an equal marriage and there’s nothing less romantic.
Not true for me, and I’ve been happily married for twenty years. He hyperfocuses at work and is super productive, and I’m type A and ridiculously organized in the home which is exactly how I like it. Works for us. Don’t generalize.
As you know, you can’t drop comments like the above and not specify if you work full time, if you have kids if you have local grandparent or daily Nannie’s/housekeeper.
The entire post I was replying to was a generalization! That was exactly what I was saying, you can’t generalize. People’s circumstances are different but of course marriages can survive a ND-NT pairing.
Sorry I didn't catch that. Do you work FT? Do you have kids to raise? Do you have family help or Nanny or housekeepers come multiple times a week?
All we know is you’re Type A, organized, and married to an ADHD male. And that you do everything and only expect him to go to work/supply a paycheck/ tag along with what you’ve done in the homefront.
You were replying to the common phenomenon of how male adhd spouses create a Parent/child dynamic in their marriage where their Nt spouse does everything and merely allows them to “be a good student at work.”
Above is all true. However I would SAH if the ADHD spouse actively acknowledged my doing everything on the homefront and was constantly thankful and grateful. If he was not, I'd be out of there, with the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think there’s a solution to fix an ND male and NT female relationship that doesn’t result in bitterness and resentment. Many men are already conditioned to have poor executive functioning skills and they simply lack empathy. When you add a diagnosis and children who are most likely afflicted with the same condition, it’s just too much to handle. You basically have a parentalized relationship versus an equal marriage and there’s nothing less romantic.
Not true for me, and I’ve been happily married for twenty years. He hyperfocuses at work and is super productive, and I’m type A and ridiculously organized in the home which is exactly how I like it. Works for us. Don’t generalize.
As you know, you can’t drop comments like the above and not specify if you work full time, if you have kids if you have local grandparent or daily Nannie’s/housekeeper.
The entire post I was replying to was a generalization! That was exactly what I was saying, you can’t generalize. People’s circumstances are different but of course marriages can survive a ND-NT pairing.
Sorry I didn't catch that. Do you work FT? Do you have kids to raise? Do you have family help or Nanny or housekeepers come multiple times a week?
All we know is you’re Type A, organized, and married to an ADHD male. And that you do everything and only expect him to go to work/supply a paycheck/ tag along with what you’ve done in the homefront.
You were replying to the common phenomenon of how male adhd spouses create a Parent/child dynamic in their marriage where their Nt spouse does everything and merely allows them to “be a good student at work.”