This month's guest post comes to you from Mark Bertin, MD, a developmental pediatrician and author of The Family ADHD Solution: A Scientific Approach to Maximizing Your Child’s Attention and Minimizing Parental Stress. – G.P.
If you know you have ADHD, you’re probably aware of how distractibility, impulsiveness or difficulty “keeping track” of everyday life affects you. But are you aware of how it affects your communication style with loved ones?
To address this aspect of ADHD’s potential effect on interpersonal relationships, let’s consider a few examples:
- Distractibility may cause you to miss what's being said or being asked of you – or to even appear disinterested.
- Impulsiveness and reactivity may change your tone in ways you don’t intend –snapped responses or flares of anger – leaving your loved one feeling hurt or confused.
- A busy mind drowns out the details of the conversation for a few minutes, or plans rebuttals for what it anticipates coming next, or doesn’t fully wait to hear out another person’s perspective.
Whether speaking or listening, we can hone our ability to communicate as we would any other skill. One proven method is through the practice of mindfulness. Think of mindfulness simply as getting out of “autopilot” – that habit of automatically acting and reacting while mentally we are somewhere else entirely. On the outside, we’re smiling and nodding to someone but inside we’re lost in thoughts of the future, past, or anywhere our mind travels.