There has been a surge in adult ADHD diagnoses in recent years, so itâs not surprising if youâre starting to feel like everyone you know suddenly has the condition.
Dr. Ryan Sultan, a psychiatrist at New York-Presbyterian hospital, explained that there are a number of reasons for the uptick. First, there has been an increase in recognition and awareness of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms, including those that donât fit the stereotypical profile of a child who canât stay in his seat at school. We now know that ADHD can present differently in women and girls, as well as that it isnât necessarily a condition that people grow out of as they age. Adults struggle with symptoms, too; increased awareness means that some of them are only now getting treatment for challenges they have lived with their entire lives.
In addition, Sultan told HuffPost that âthe fast-paced, multitasking nature of todayâs world, combined with the constant barrage of information and distractions from technology,â can âexacerbate underlying ADHD symptoms or bring them to light in ways that wouldnât have been as apparent in the past.â
Whether people are only now experiencing symptoms of ADHD because of the way we operate in the world today or just now realising that some of their past struggles could be attributed to ADHD, itâs true that more people are seeking an official diagnosis â and treatment.
Andrew Kahn, a psychologist and associate director at Understood.org, told HuffPost that he did a huge number of ADHD evaluations for adults during the pandemic. He believes that discussion of the topic on social media at the time led many people to think, ââCould this be me? Is this something that Iâm going through?ââ
Itâs important not to assume that a high number of diagnoses means that theyâre incorrect ones.
âWhile the increasing prevalence of ADHD diagnoses might raise concerns about overdiagnosis, itâs important to recognise that many people who now receive a diagnosis truly need support. The demands of modern life can push individuals with borderline or mild symptoms over the threshold into clinically significant impairment,â Sultan said.
Itâs certain that you know someone in your professional or personal life who has ADHD (whether they have disclosed this to you or not). We spoke with Sultan, Kahn and other advocates about things you should avoid saying to people who have ADHD and general misconceptions about the diagnosis.
1. âADHD is a problem only kids have.â
âHistorically, ADHD was often seen as a childhood disorder that people âgrew out of,ââ Sultan said. âWe now understand that it can persist into adulthood.â This creates challenges for people in school, at their workplace, and in their home lives. Some couples have even found that undiagnosed ADHD was a major source of their marital strife.
2. âYouâre too smart to have ADHD.â
Itâs true that some (but not all) people with ADHD struggle academically, but this is a result of their executive functioning symptoms, not their intelligence. Executive functioning refers to the work our brain does âto plan, prioritise, manage time and regulate emotions,â Sultan said.
With effort (sometimes an enormous amount), people with ADHD may be able to surmount these executive functioning challenges and earn high grades in school and admission to competitive colleges. But that doesnât mean it was easy.
Saying something like this âdismisses the lifelong struggle that someone with ADHD has had to go through in order to reach any of those achievements,â Jesse J. Anderson, creator of the Extra Focus newsletter and an ADHD advocate, told HuffPost. âHaving ADHD doesnât preclude you from taking on big challenges in life. It just means that it was likely much more difficult and a lot of the struggles were hidden behind the scenes.â
Itâs worth repeating that there isnât a correlation between ADHD and intelligence.
âPeople with ADHD have similar intellects to people who donât,â Kahn said. âThere is no evidence it has to do with lower IQ.â
3. âItâs an excuse to be lazy.â
Having ADHD can make task completion a struggle, but it doesnât necessarily signal a lack of ability or motivation.
âLabelling someone with ADHD as lazy is hurtful and inaccurate,â Sultan said.
What looks like laziness, Kahn said, is actually someone âtrying to cope with things that are hard. So avoidance, in this case, can be misinterpreted as laziness when it might actually be paralysis.â Kahn described this paralysis as a state of being stuck, which might appear to outsiders as a refusal to follow instruction or a lack of effort.
Using the word lazy âlabels the difficulties that come with ADHD as some sort of moral failing, as if itâs a conscious choice,â Anderson said. âWe desperately want to do the right thing, but there is a blocker that can make it feel nearly impossible to move into action.â
4. âWhy canât you just focus?â
With ADHD, the inability to focus doesnât mean a lack of desire to do so.
âThis comment implies that focusing is simply a matter of willpower, disregarding the neurological challenges that individuals with ADHD face. It can make the person feel judged, frustrated and misunderstood, as if their struggles are due to a lack of effort,â Sultan said.
5. âYou seem fine to me.â
Given that the poster child for ADHD has been a hyperactive little boy, there are a lot of people â adults, girls â who donât fit this stereotype.
âADHD symptoms arenât always visible. Many people with ADHD may mask their symptoms or manage them well at times, but that doesnât mean they donât struggle,â Sultan said.
6. âItâs not that big of a deal.â
âSaying that ADHD isnât that seriousâ can be hurtful and offensive, Dani Donovan, author of âThe Anti-Planner: How to Get Sh*t Done When You Donât Feel Like It,â told HuffPost.
The consequences of living with ADHD can cause a huge amount of distress for children and adults, too. Anderson described his experience, saying: âItâs like youâre constantly being quizzed in a class despite never being taught the material, so every day is just another failure, and you never really understand why. People donât see that you are actually just struggling to fit into what people want of you because your brain doesnât work the same way as most other people.â
7. âYouâre overreacting.â
No one likes being told this when theyâre upset. In addition, Sultan pointed out that âemotional dysregulation is a common symptom of ADHD.â
âDismissing someoneâs emotional response can make them feel invalidated and ignored,â he said, adding that it can also âincrease frustration and make them feel like their experiences donât matter.â
8. âYou donât seem to have any problem focusing on video games/TV/your phone.â
Given that ADHD stands for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, youâd be forgiven for assuming that it means someone has a deficiency of attention. But the reality is more complicated.
âPeople with ADHD donât actually have a deficit of attention,â Anderson said. âWe have an abundance of attention, but it is dysregulated attention, which means it can be difficult to aim. Sometimes we even hyperfocus on things, a type of directed attention thatâs so intense that we donât notice other things around us, things like people calling our name, the passing of time, or that we havenât had anything to eat or drink for hours.â
9. âYouâre trying to be difficult.â
People who have ADHD arenât behaving the way they do in order to bother you â their brains simply work differently. Donovan explained that people with ADHD are not trying to make you mad or interrupt you on purpose. A little patience and understanding, plus not taking things personally, can go a long way in your interactions with folks who have ADHD (and, really, everybody else).
10. âNo, youâre supposed to do it this way.â
ADHD has its challenges, but one advantage it often brings is an out-of-the-box approach to problem solving. Some people with ADHD even refer to their nontraditional thinking as a superpower.
âWhile there may be something that most people would consider a âcommon senseâ approach, thatâs often counter to how the ADHD brain works,â Anderson said. âRather than judging the method, pay attention to the results. Because of this divergent thinking, people with ADHD are great at finding alternative (often better) ways of solving a problem.â
11. âEveryone has a little ADHD.â
Although itâs true that we all have behaviours that are potential signs of ADHD â like âtossingâ or an unexpected laundry habit â the degree of intensity and duration is different for people with an ADHD diagnosis.
âWe all have those human experiences in varying amounts and degrees,â Kahn said. âItâs when they last a longer period of time and prevent us from doing things we think we should be able to do, then thatâs where the difference comes into play.â
12. âHave you tried using a to do list/planner?â
Organisation can be a challenge for anyone, but for people with ADHD, the problem runs deeper.
âSuggesting that itâs a simple fix overlooks the difficulties in executive functioning that many people with ADHD face,â Sultan said.
Anderson recalled how something like this has happened to him before.
âWhen I spoke to my doctor about ADHD for the first time, he beckoned me over to his desk like he was about to show me some life-changing knowledge about ADHD that would change everything for me,â he said. âInstead, he just showed me the Outlook calendar on his laptop, as if using a calendar app was a brand new concept to me and was going to cure my ADHD.â
âI guarantee you that a person with ADHD has tried just about every single productivity trick you can think of,â he continued. âWe know âwhatâ we should do, the problem is that ADHD makes it difficult to do what we know.â