this post was submitted on 09 Oct 2023
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ADHD

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I have ADHD and my partner does not. When we were planning our wedding it was really difficult because she would do most of the planning (because I wasn't doing it and someone had to and she loves planning), but when we needed to plan anything together it was like pulling teeth for me. I wanted to help out but it was always so difficult to get myself to actually do anything.

The same thing happens with vacation planning. Even planning a trip to somewhere I want to go can feel about as fun as doing taxes. We're currently trying to plan a trip overseas that's just in a few months, and my partner really wants to book hotels (I totally agree) but any amount of planning feels like I'm being punished, and I don't know why. I don't have any fun and my mood tanks and I just get quiet and a little irritable.

Anyone else experience this and have any suggestions? I hate leaving all of the planning to my partner, but planning on my schedule has lead to us missing things in the past.

Random thoughts, feel free to ignore: I wonder if it's partly because it's not urgent (as in what we could plan today could just as easily be planned tomorrow) vs importance thing? If we planned on "my schedule" we'd be doing things way too close to the actual date. If we set a date to vacation plan, when it comes I just treat it like a todo list item I just need to finish up so I can get back to whatever I want to do instead.

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[–] [email protected] 30 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

My best friend has very severe ADHD, and his partner does not have it.

How they do planning is his non-ADHD partner (who happens to have a very good planning brain) will basically defines a series of questions that only ever address a very small portion of the task at once. So instead of phrasing open ended questions like "What time do you want to go meet Ryan?", they'll ask things like "Do you want to meet Ryan at 1pm or 2pm?". It a very small change but it helps him break down the decision paralysis that ADHD creates.
It doesn't necessarily address the feeling of letting the other person do all of the planning though- to some degree, that's going to have to be something your partner is comfortable with, unless you yourself can find ways to break down your own decision making into those tiny bite-size chunks.

[–] MrClayman 8 points 1 year ago

My girlfriend has ADHD as well and planning times for things is extremely difficult. I’ll try out what you said, thanks!

[–] seaQueue 7 points 1 year ago

This is really, really good advice.

[–] ChexMax 16 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It sounds like you want planning to be fun or enjoyable. Do you think you might be better at it if you accept : this is going to suck, I'm not going to like it, but it has to get done.

If I wait to feel motivated or to think I'll enjoy something it'll just never get done.

Planning with a partner under these conditions isn't great. I end up pretty agitated and just want to get it over with. Maybe try to divide and conquer rather than plan together?

Maybe you take the less fun parts so planning doesn't ruin any of the trip for you. She can plan the fun activities, and food/reservations and you can plan the actual travel and maybe accommodations?

Another thing that helps me with this kind of thing is I'll set up my laptop and notebook right next to my relax spot on the couch. I don't have to do the work right now, I just have to get everything set up. Then, later when I'm on the couch, I'm more likely to actually do the research because I don't burn out getting everything I need / all set up.

[–] grabyourmotherskeys 4 points 1 year ago

This is how I look at things. Most of my life is not fun. It has its moments but I'm not enjoying every second. Work, responsibility, being an adult. These things happen so you can have periods of enjoyment.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago

My general strategy is to break it down into multiple tasks, and keep breaking it down further if those tasks are still too big.

You might find this tool useful, it uses AI to take a large task and break it down for you. You can keep breaking down each task as far as you want and with as much detail as you want.

You mentioned needing to find and book hotels, and here is what it gave me:

Find and book hotel for vacation

  • Research available hotels in desired vacation location

  • Compare prices, amenities, and reviews of different hotels

  • Select the most suitable hotel based on preferences and budget

  • Check availability for desired dates

  • Book the chosen hotel either through a website, phone call, or travel agency

  • Provide necessary information for the booking (name, contact details, payment method, etc.)

  • Confirm the reservation details and receive a confirmation number

For me stuff like that really helps on big tasks that feel intimidating or overwhelming.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Does your partner want help planning or are you just trying to pitch in? I don't mean to sound dismissive but if your partner wants to plan everything then just let them. Now, of course, if they want help I believe you should. :)

[–] Relic5646 6 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Both. Currently she wants help deciding how long to stay in which places, and wants help picking and booking hotels. So she's trying to wait until I'm ready to plan, but I'm basically never ready to plan until it's right before the trip and I need to rush to make up for lost time.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

The good old deadline efficiency.
A familiar way of getting work done.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Then you need to work on getting yourself into the right frame of mind and initiate the planning when you can cope with it. In plenty of time to actually do what needs to be done. Or, give her free rein to make all the decisions now and take responsibility for planning what you will do when you're there so she actually gets a break out of it.

Whatever happens, if she makes the 'wrong' decisions because you wouldn't give her any input, you don't get to say a word about it (apart from "I'm sorry, that wasn't fair on you. It's cool, we'll make the best of it."

[–] topinambour_rex 4 points 1 year ago

I remember when I had to book a plane ticket, I seen it as saving moneys by doing it earlier. Then set yourself a deadline, over stress about it, tell yourself you must book it before then or the trip won't happen. I do it with myself about tasks, and sometimes it works. Sure it fuels anxiety, but well, it's not like we was'nt already swimming in it...

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

This doesn't sound like an ADHD thing. I have it and my GF doesn't, but I still do all the vacation planning. I like getting the most out of my trip while she just goes with the flow.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

ADHD is not one universal set of symptoms and definitely not one universal set of things that you find easy or hard to do. If you're interested in it, you will do it. If you're not, you won't.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Recently planned a trio to a convention.
Looked on some page for a location to sleep, found something I liked and booked it.
Probably not the cheapest but I was kinda late anyway.

Meanwhile my mother (which I live with) basically plans the whole trip for ~10 days.

On the one hand I hate surprises on the other I hate planning too much and being restricted.
Gotta choose the poison :/