I'm so encouraged and thankful for all of your responses to the launch of this blog! I am not used to using this blogging platform and had no idea there were comments until today, so my apologies for not responding to all of your kind words. I have ideas, and suggestions, and what has worked for me but certainly but I want everyone who feels like they have something to share that this is the place for it.
I am a very organized person by nature. I am most comfortable with a schedule and a routine and things in their place. It took me a long time to understand that my husband's complete lack of organization wasn't a just a choice he was making. And he didn't understand that although it is part of my nature, it still takes work; it's just work I think is worth doing.
He thought for a long time that it was easy for me. Effortless, even. So we had one person working very hard and swimming up stream trying to organize everything, and one person who, because of a condition called ADD, dis-organizing everything. We were forces working in opposition.
You know that friend? The one who weighs 107 pounds and thinks she is fat when she weighs 110? So she wiggles her nose, says, “Fat no more!” and her pants are suddenly so baggy she has to buy a belt? You hate her a little, don’t’ you? It’s so easy for her. You cannot see any effort in what she has done. You definitely don’t feel like being supportive while she goes belt shopping, do you? You feel, as my friends from the south say, like you are “fixin’ to git un-saved”. When she tells you “you can do it too!”, doesn’t it make you angry? She just doesn’t understand how hard it is for everyone else. How hard it is for you.
That’s how your husband feels. It looks easy. Even if you have put effort into it; he can’t see what you did to make it happen. He can’t see the effort, he can’t understand it, he thinks you just wiggle your nose, and poof! It happens.
There is a laziness that is learned from that. If you failed over and over in a world that looks so easy for other people, you learn to give up before you even try. Every ADD book says people with ADD aren’t lazy. I’m here to tell you that ADD can be so discouraging, and their brains are so in need of external stimulation that yes, they can be lazy. But pointing that out to your husband is not helpful. Back up and read that again.
You have to forgive. Think of all the times you probably piss God off in one day. You aren’t forgiven once and for all. You know that, right? You’re saved once and for all, but you have to be forgiven over and over, sometimes for sins one stupider than the next. If you forgave your husband half as much as God forgave you, you’d be in the top 1% of amazing wives.
I am not in the top 1% of amazing wives, by the way. But I have the desire to be.
Oh, Jen- I so needed this insight. What a perspective for all of us in dealing with others' natural gifts. And forgiveness - such a key.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jen -I do not have ADD in my family, but I do have friends who do and so wanted to come over from Big Binder to get better insight. I know it;s something my friends really struggles with and I plan to use your words to help pray for her better.
ReplyDelete~Jessica
Jen, do you have any books or articles you would recommend reading about dealing with this?
ReplyDeleteThanks!
That's probably true - we do argue all the time about how he doesn't even know where to begin to do all of the things that need to get done, so he doesn't even try anymore. It's hard too, since Abby also has ADHD, so I have both a husband and oldest child who are completely unorganized. I used to be much more organized than I am now - I've let a lot of things slide because I just can't keep up with all of my stuff, Ron's plus the kids' all together. It's hard feeling like he's not an equal partner in this, but I need to do a better job of looking at it from his (and Abby's) point of view.
ReplyDeleteLazy and selfish are two adjectives that I (and others) use about my husband all the time. I wonder how much of those are the ADD though. Something to really think hard about, I guess.