Understanding ADHD and Anxiety: Exploring the Troubling Connection
2024-09-13
People with ADHD 50% more likely to have an anxiety disorder
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder or ADHD, is a common mental health disorder, along with anxiety. ADHD and anxiety are two different types of mental health disorders that can both influence one another.
Many people with ADHD are known as the person who is always running late or are a perpetual mess. Behind that late, messy friend lies someone who could very well be experiencing anxiety.
Someone with ADHD may experience anxiety because of their poor attention skills or hyperactive behavior–I know this was partially true. I already had anxiety as a child growing up.
The lack of attentive skills and time management really affected me. I felt like a failure compared to my friends. I couldn't manage my time as well as other people, which meant I had to limit my opportunities.
I knew that i wasn't able to take on extra responsibility, and if I did I would have to work hard to stay on track.
Anxiety pulls your attention to focus on your anxiety symptoms, which can distract you from your daily tasks. Coupled with inattentive behavior, it can snowball into a mess. Before you know it your day is over and you haven't been able to accomplish what you set out to do.
For example, I struggled to focus and concentrate in school while in lectures. It was difficult, and it caused me to have added anxiety. I felt that my inattention was due to a lack of motivation or willpower. I felt like the weakest, most unmotivated, lazy person in my entire life.
For me, the ever-nagging thought that I would forget something or neglect something by accident. Maybe I would be the office chatterbox. I was terrified of how I indeed was because of my ADHD. I wanted to branch out from that, but it was hard.
With the symptoms of ADHD, they are bound to interact and cause or aggravate someone's anxiety. The inability to focus AND properly plan leaves a massive gap in my day. I have little understanding of time awareness–I am entirely time blind, thanks to my ADHD.
Couple that with the stress that anxiety brings, there heightened struggle everyday. With the increase in stress, anxiety can increase too. If someone lives with a lot of anxiety and has ADHD, the symptoms can keep worsening, creating a chain reaction of issues.
Honestly, the duration, severity, and comorbidity of the disorders combined can feel overpowering.
Long term effects
The long-term effects of ADHD and anxiety can be the vicious cycle that keeps those suffering looped in. In the long term, people have to learn to survive; they learn to adapt to these symptoms.
Adapting is a difficult thing to reach, especially when it feels hopeless. Constantly seeking relief from anxiety and ADHD symptoms may lead some people to lean towards harmful behaviors such as drug use.
Overall, ADHD and anxiety have lowered my self-esteem and confidence in my abilities simply because I couldn't work as my classmates did. Sitting still and doing the same thing every day feels like torture. Through time I learned to treat myself as the girl who wasn't too bright because she couldn't keep track of her keys and wallet.
I turned my ADHD into a joke so I could pass. I was worried that I would be the target enemy if people saw just how forgetful and inattentive I could be. Of course, I didn't really feel like in my friendship groups, but more at work.
I had to turn my struggle into a joke because I didn't want people to see how much of a mess I was. Having to live with this mantra in your head can really eat away at you.
I have struggled for years with these two issues and PTSD. GETTING my family to understand what I am living through has made me lose a battle and their support. My brother wrote several people telling them not to believe anything I said or engage in anything with me. Isolation is difficult but the Lord has been merciful 🙏🦋🙏
Linda Adams
09-15
I can so relate. Thank you for writing this - for having the courage to put it out there to the world. It was so validating to know I'm not the only one. I've been feeling like some kind of a freak as of late. The older I get, the worse my ADHD and anxiety become. And yes, what I'm finding is that one feeds into the other, in a vicious loop - an endless cycle - that I just can't seem to escape. It's completely interfering with every aspect of my life. Like, my life feels like it's completely out of control and like I'm in a speeding car headed straight for a brick wall. Like I'm about to self-implode or spontaneously combust. It was never this bad before. I'm going to attempt to be more mindful of my caffeine consumption. And I have to get back to some type of exercise, even if it's only a short walk for starters. It's just that where I'm at right now, any changes feel overwhelming and like big projects to me. I feel like my brain is broken and can't be glued back together.
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