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Addition
Submitted by Imthirdmom on
Have you been evaluated for ADHD?
Submitted by Sueann on
It certainly sounds like all the things I read about it in books but you need a professional evaluation. My husband got help through the psychology clinic at our local university. There are usually non-profit counseling services available if you look hard enough for them. (I know that feels like just one more thing on an already-overloaded plate.) Please try to find help for yourself. You'll never be "perfect" but you can feel much more in control than you do with the right help. Read some of the posts on here from the ADD spouses like yyz and ellamenno. They have so much insight.
We are here to help you and each other.
ditto
Submitted by me-add he-add-free on
Your situation sounds familiar, that's because it is, to many of us. I have one kid and luckily I have a husband who is constantly trying to make things better for me, us, now that he is aware of the issues related to my ADD that impact our home-life. He is the one who told me to come take a look at your post because so much of it is similar to things I've dealt with. I was diagnosed at 28 after I quit drinking, my doctor was very helpful because he listened to me and knew the difference between my complaining and my ADD symptoms. I took non-stimulant meds initially and they worked great, life went on, I became a Mom and the meds stopped working. There were constant ups and downs with work that eventually resulted in my being fired for inconsistent performance (while trying different treatments, meds). I quickly rebounded and got a new job, which I was fired from 6 months later. That sent me into a depression like none I've ever felt before. I couldn't keep a job, I couldn't keep my house clean or organized, I couldn't handle my kid, my husband was miserable, I had an anxiety attack that sent me to the urgent care and was given instructions to follow up with the mental health docs ASAP. I did and was diagnosed bipolar, taken off of the anti-depressants I had taken for the past 10 years immediately, told to stop the adhd meds I was on and was given bipolar meds. Like you they did nothing but sedate me, create suicidal thoughts 24/7, make me gain weight and feel worse than before. I think part of my suicidal ideation was abruptly stopping the SSRI (Zoloft) I'd taken for so long without any warning from my doc but it really didn't matter what the cause of my misery was, I just didn't want to be. Slowly but surely I was able to find temporary work that allowed me to at least get out of the house and eventually realized, after reading every book I could find on bipolar, that the diagnoses was wrong and the first - major depressive disorder and ADHD - was correct. I went back on my anti-depressant and stimulant (adderall) and eventually found more stable work. I am not a stay at home mom and even if I was independently wealthy and didn't need to work I would still not be a stay at home mom because I am a better mom when I work. I have nothing but respect for stay at home parents because it is a job I know I couldn't do because of the requirement for independent motivation and organization.
I have been on some kind of ADD medicine since my diagnosis and some worked very well for a while, others have worked for some aspects of the symptoms that I don't like, others work on other areas but trial and error have been the only way I've found any relief since my diagnosis. I was able to function with work-arounds and techniques I created out of necessity before I was diagnosed and certainly felt the effects of the negative side of ADD but I was single, had very few responsibilities and was not held accountable by anyone but myself-and I didn't care if the dishes were dirty. I can't count the number of times I've started over with a renewed belief that this time I will keep up with the housework, the organizing, the responsibilities and within 24 hours everything is back to "normal". With a child, dog, cats, spouse, house, full time job, family, friends, everything the "american dream" is supposed to be I was failing miserably and didn't-don't-know how to manage it all.
I marvel at people who get up (same time every day), make the kids breakfast, get ready for work, get kids to where they go, feed pets, kiss hubby on the cheek and work a full day, come home to play with their kids and happily make dinner as everything else just falls into place and hums along nicely. Wait. That doesn't exist in real life. I am amazed by parents who stay at home and are able to care for the kids and house and not go crazy but I have done the stay at home thing too-not by choice-and would never expect some June Cleaver version of spotless house, sparkling well-behaved kids, beautiful meal on the table, I don't think that exists and if it does I wonder what those people are on. I had to lower my expectations for some things, I am very anal about cleaning, not organizing, cleaning and will hyperfocus myself into a tizzy working on cleaning the things that bug me most but don't keep up with them like "normal" people would. I don't know what it's like to live with someone who has higher expectations of a spotless house than I have let alone expect me to be the only one to get the house to that condition but I do know others whose spouses do. I would never expect a stay at home mom or dad to have everything perfect every day and don't know of anyone who isn't stuck in the 1950s mindset who would place that expectation on their spouse. If my boss told me every single part of my work had to be organized, complete, done well and efficiently at the end of every day I would find another job, or review the company expectations with someone else at the very least because that is an unrealistic expectation. Why would it be different for a stay at home parent?
I say pick your battles, lower expectations in areas you can, get treatment-what's the worst that could happen, you stay like you are and try a different one until you find something that works? There isn't a magic pill or method or answer other than to leave no stone unturned. If you know there is something that could possibly help and you choose not to do it just know you are creating your own misery. Start somewhere, try a local university's psych department, ask your children's pediatrician-they are usually more educated about ADD than grown-up docs, meds won't cure you but they can certainly make life a little easier to deal with. Make sure you educate your spouse, most will think you're just trying to find an excuse or won't believe ADD is a real diagnosis for an adult but knowledge is power and it's up to each of us to decide what to do with it.
No one is perfect, no one's house is clean all the time, no one has an empty laundry hamper, pick your battles and talk to your hubby about realistic expectations-you should have those too. We can't do and have it all, not perfectly at least, but we can do and have what is important to us. Baby steps.