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Couples Therapy that Goes Deeper than Dirty Dishes

Ari Tuckman, PsyD, MBA West Chester, PA [email protected] adultADHDbook.com A good relationship pushes you to become a better person

Deeper Couples Therapy 2 ADHD Inconsistency Impacts Relationships

. ADHD, especially unmanaged, can impact: . One’s ability to be the partner one wants to be . A partner’s ability to be the partner they want to be

. Every couple needs to negotiate different desires and ways of doing things . ADHD exacerbates these universal struggles

Deeper Couples Therapy 3 ADHD Unreliability Impacts Security

. We hope for reliable actions from our partner in order to trust what they say . And from ourselves. . .

. ADHD inconsistency makes it harder for: . ADHD partner to feel effective . Non-ADHD partner to feel secure

. The easy trap . ADHD becomes the scapegoat for the non-ADHD partner’s anxiety

Deeper Couples Therapy 4 It Takes Two To Tango

Deeper Couples Therapy 5 The Classic Dynamic

. It’s easy to fall into the stereotypical dynamic of the under- and over-functioner . Will all the accompanying , nagging, avoidance, and general frustration

. Casualties mount on the battlefield of daily demands

. ADHD is an obvious contributor, but the other partner is still half of the relationship

Deeper Couples Therapy 6 It’s a Trap

. Nobody is winning when stuck in this chase dynamic . And doing more of the same won’t tip the balance

. Nobody is bringing their best to the relationship . And we can’t expect our partners to behave better than we do

. Medication and good systems can help a lot . But won’t resolve the deeper dynamics that all couples must address . ADHD puts more pressure on partners to be diligent

Deeper Couples Therapy 7 Preferences vs. Limits

. We all have preferences based on our personality and experience . These are not factual, no matter how moralistic we get about them . We can choose to be flexible about both the means and the ends

. Limits are preferences that we cannot flex on without selling out our integrity . Which would inevitably spill out somewhere else . We choose to hold these lines

Deeper Couples Therapy 8 Find the Balance

. Two easy slides . Too much rounds down to what the ADHD partner would do . Too much rounds up to what the non-ADHD partner would do

. Clients may ask you to decide what is reasonable . Therapists can have an opinion (sometimes), but not a vote

. Inform clients’ choices . How ADHD might impact their agreements . How the couple’s dynamic plays out

Deeper Couples Therapy 9 You Gotta Choose

. We don’t get everything we want, so we have to be clear about what preferences are most important to us . And therefore which ones we can more easily let go

. A truly negotiated agreement is more fulfilling for both . Helps clients clarify what is most important to them—and therefore also least

Deeper Couples Therapy 10 Vulnerability on Both Sides

. There is vulnerability in all of this . To put your real request (and deeper reasons) out there, since you may be judged or denied . To try your best to please your partner, since you may fall short . To maintain good for each other even when frustrated . To admit one’s own part in problems . To be optimistic that progress will be sustained, since it may not be . To accept what won’t change . Dig below the surface of what is most obvious

Deeper Couples Therapy 11 Right or Happy?

. Two parallel truths . You can’t have something done by someone else and also done your way . You can’t have something done by someone else and also have them be happy about it

. What’s more important to you—and what price are you willing to pay for it? . Help clients to actively think this through

Deeper Couples Therapy 12 With Knowledge Comes Responsibility

. Understanding ADHD’s many impacts on daily functioning can help couples create better systems and expectations

. This carries the responsibility to use that information well . For both partners

. Drop the shoulds, morality, and comparisons and focus on what will meet your needs

Deeper Couples Therapy 13 A Friendly Reminder

. Given ADHD’s executive function challenges and partners’ different preferences, reminders/structure may be necessary to maintain agreements . But need to be both given and taken respectfully

. Don’t let resentment build so reminders are given angrily . And then don’t forget to show some appreciation

. Don’t cop out so you feel defensive . Make an active choice to do it because you agreed to

Deeper Couples Therapy 14 Emotional Regulation

. ADHD can involve emotional impulsivity—by both partners

. The non-ADHD partner needs to take responsibility by speaking before the are overwhelming . And not taking ADHD personally

. ADHD partner needs to manage emotions and take requests well . Positive interactions now can vindicate past failures

Deeper Couples Therapy 15 The Superficial Goes Deeper

. Addressing practical matters of daily life reduces stress and improves emotional regulation—for both partners . Medication creates better symptom control and regulation . and organizing create better systems . Therapy creates a stronger mindset, addresses comorbidities, and helps partners work better together

. This makes it easier to do the deeper work

Deeper Couples Therapy 16 Go Deeper

Deeper Couples Therapy 17 The Choice to Change or Accept

 We don’t get everything we want

 So we need to accept sometimes not getting our way

 But if we get too little, the relationship is unsatisfying

 So we need to fight for what we want

 It’s a judgment call—and an active choice

 Is it too important to let go?

 Is it not worth the fight, at least right now?

 Agency matters—and the client is the one who decides

Deeper Couples Therapy 18 How to Dodge a Difficult Conversation

 Couples have lots of ways to avoid growth-promoting honesty:

 Choosing to not learn about ADHD

 Guilting/shaming/moralizing ADHD or anxiety

 Letting anger rule the day

 Shutting down, ending the conversation

 Creating vague, unenforceable agreements

 Unilateral decisions

 And each evokes the others, so we need to address these

Deeper Couples Therapy 19 False Agreements Guarantee Trouble

. Agreeing to something without thinking it through . Take the necessary time to think through a sustainable solution

. Agreeing to something you know you won’t/can’t maintain or be happy with . Speak honestly and accept discomfort in the moment

. Forcing an agreement . Calm your frustration, perhaps explore more, and wait for a sustainable solution

Deeper Couples Therapy 20 Better Agreements

. Sustainable agreements require: . Understanding ADHD’s impact on the individual and dynamic . Self-knowledge of one’s abilities and preferences . Knowledge of partner’s abilities and preferences . Emotional self-regulation—in the discussion and implementation . Willingness to be honest with oneself and partner . Willingness to recognize intentions, effort, and progress . Integrity to be accountable to self and partner . Lots of therapeutic intervention points. . .

Deeper Couples Therapy 21 We Are Responsible for Our Own Happiness

 ADHD can create feelings of powerlessness

 If a client is unhappy about the situation, what can they do to shift it?

 What choices are they making that contribute to that unhappiness?

 Where are they stubbornly persisting?

 Bring the discussion back to their decision about changing or accepting  And what each would take

Deeper Couples Therapy 22 Integrity Matters Most

. Tit for tat is a dead end

. Ultimately, we are responsible to our own conscience and sense of who we want to be

. This takes partner’s feelings into account, but goes beyond it

. The challenge in the heat of the moment is to keep this image of our better self clearly in mind . And then requires emotional self-regulation to hold it in mind

Deeper Couples Therapy 23 It’s All About Differentiation

Deeper Couples Therapy 24 Differentiation: I’m Me, You’re You

. Two related facets: . Self-awareness: Ability to identify and take responsibility for one’s , emotions and actions . Other-awareness: Ability to identify another’s emotions and perspective but make a choice about how it affects one’s own

. Intimate relationships challenge our assumptions and dodges and (hopefully) drive differentiation

Deeper Couples Therapy 25 Between the Hammer and the Anvil

 High barriers to exit drive growth by creating a dilemma

 Ending the relationship is too difficult

 Staying in the status quo is also too difficult

 Therefore, happiness requires one of two possible third options:

 Find a way to tolerate leaving

 Find a way to make it worth staying

 This is how relationships push us to become a better person

Deeper Couples Therapy 26 This is the Process

 Intense disagreement can be overwhelming

 And cause doubt about oneself, one’s partner, and the relationship

 Remind clients that these are normal and expectable growing pains

 It’s suffering, but for a purpose

 Might improve the relationship

 Might clarify that the relationship isn’t going to work

Deeper Couples Therapy 27 Good Behavior Requires Good Behavior

 At least one partner needs to keep their head on in those heated moments

 We can change our partner’s behavior by changing our own

 Defend one’s own truth

 Nondefensive: By standing strong in the face of partner’s bad behavior and setting limits as necessary

 Tolerating a partner’s truth

 Nonoffensive: By managing one’s own behavior and giving partner room to express themselves

Deeper Couples Therapy 28 It’s OK to Not Be OK

. Sometimes we have to tolerate our partner not being OK . ADHD partner’s self-inflicted problems . Non-ADHD partner’s anxiety-driven need for certainty

. Sometimes being caring means holding steady while our partner figures out what they need to do . Without volunteering to solve it for them . Without volunteering to be a scapegoat

Deeper Couples Therapy 29 Out of the Stalemate

 Sometimes clients keep getting stuck on the same content

 Go down a level into the content

 Why is this so provocative? What deeper vulnerabilities are you hiding? What are each of your deeper truths and how does that open up more options?

 Work on calming oneself and/or partner so conversation remains respectful and can therefore go deeper

 Rise up a level to look at the process and then change the interactional patterns—each drives the other’s behaviors

Deeper Couples Therapy 30 The Calm in the Storm

 Resolving these stalemates requires holding steady in emotionally charged dilemmas

 They’ve already solved all the easy stuff

 Or made previously hard stuff easier. . .

 Real strength is quiet

 Direct honesty speaks louder than a yell

 Honest listening requires calm strength, too

Deeper Couples Therapy 31 Tolerate the Tension

. ADHD isn’t going away—nor are other fundamental differences . But happiness doesn’t require that

. The couple and the therapist need to be able to sit with the unhappiness and lack of a solution . Dig deeper into your own values and priorities . Dig deeper into your partner’s values and priorities . Use this deeper understanding to create a better solution

Deeper Couples Therapy 32 Couples Therapy for One

. Nothing in a relationship happens in a vacuum . Influenced by everything that came before . Each partner’s actions interact with the other’s . Most couples have a small playbook of problematic interactions

. So working with one partner can change the relationship . One partner’s growth will drive the other’s . May need to get to the exit before the partner acts

Deeper Couples Therapy 33 Don’t Forget the Sex!

. Enjoyable time together as a couple is often the first thing to get squeezed out of busy lives . Or good feelings get squeezed out by disagreements

. Relationship and sexual satisfactions have a big overlap . If your relationship is important to you, then your sex life should be, too . And keeping your sex great over the long haul will require all this relationship work. . .

Deeper Couples Therapy 34 If I Knew Then. . .

. Diagnosing and treating ADHD can be a game changer . And continuing to work on it

. These relationship lessons can only be learned by living them . And by doing the work to learn the right lessons

Deeper Couples Therapy 35 This is how relationships push us to become a better person

Deeper Couples Therapy 36 The Books

Deeper Couples Therapy 37 Workbook & Podcast

 adultADHDbook.com

 Over 100 episodes & 2,000,000 downloads

 Information on the books

 Upcoming presentations

 Recordings of past presentations

 Cool ADHD events

 Handouts and articles

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