ADHD in Marriage: What It’s Like to Love a Neurotypical Partner
This post is for, and a little bit about, my husband, who has ADHD. We were discussing an ADHD post when he asked me,
“How come there are a million articles about the challenges of being in a relationship with someone who has ADHD, but barely any about how hard it is to have ADHD and live with a neurotypical partner?”
That hit me right in the heart. And he’s right. So many narratives about ADHD in marriage are unintentionally lopsided, painting the neurotypical partner as the long-suffering victim and the ADHD partner as a frustrating tornado of chaos and forgetfulness.
So here’s my attempt to rebalance the story.
Why ADHD Relationship Advice Often Favors the Neurotypical Partner
There’s an endless supply of articles written about the challenges of being in a relationship with someone who has ADHD, most of them written from the perspective of the neurotypical partner. The common themes? Feeling like you have to manage everything. Feeling alone. Feeling unseen, unheard, or unprioritized.
They talk about what it’s like to be the default parent, the project manager, the keeper of the calendar. The only one who knows when the car registration is due. They describe the loneliness, the resentment, the burnout.
These are real experiences. I know, because I’m the neurotypical one in our relationship. Or as my husband says, I’m the muggle. And I’ve had every single one of those feelings.
But this post isn’t about that.
Neurotypicals Do Weird Stuff Too
Let’s start with this: neurotypical people do plenty of things that make zero sense to our ADHD partners.
Like… assuming there’s a morally correct way to load the dishwasher. Or insisting the towels be folded into thirds instead of halves because “that’s just how it’s done.” Or needing to talk about a problem right now, even if the other person’s brain is fried and they are in a not now kind of place.
And yet, neurotypical behavior is rarely pathologized. It’s the default setting. The “normal” that everything else gets compared to.
But what if we took a moment to question our version of “normal”?
Because from the ADHD partner’s perspective, some of our habits are just as confusing and annoying as theirs can feel to us.
For example:
The tyranny of multitasking.
We expect our partners to “just do it” - just switch tasks, just prioritize better, just keep everything in their head. But most neurotypicals forget that when there’s so many competing thoughts in the ADHD brain, all of those expectations are unrealistic. Sometimes, to them, it feels like we’re trying to shape them into someone they’re not - more productive, more efficient, more… neurotypical.
Not making space for hyperfocus.
If my husband spends hours researching something niche and fascinating, my instinct used to be: “Okay, but did you make that phone call you said you were going to make?” I’ve learned that curiosity is not frivolous. It’s how his brain gets a nice dopamine boost that helps him focus on everything else.
The umming and aahing and talking so very slowly.
I have yet to meet a person with ADHD who enjoys listening to a slow talker taking forever to get to the point.
Holding on to stuff.
Sometimes the thing a person with ADHD meant to say just comes out a little differently than intended. Other ADHDers tend to be better at recognizing it and letting go of it quickly, just shrugging off the miscommunication and moving on. Neurotypicals though? We like to hold on to it, analyze it some more, have a long discussion about how the miscommunication happened. ADHD folks just want you to get over it.
I say this with humility, because I’ve been guilty of every single one of these. I’ve imposed my preferences like they’re universal truths. I’ve confused neurotypical with normal. I’ve viewed him through my neurotypical lens and frequently pathologized a brain that’s wired differently to mine, without even noticing.
The Emotional Toll
of Being the ADHD Partner in a Neurotypical Marriage
When you live in a neurotypical world, let alone love a neurotypical partner, it’s easy to internalize the idea that you’re always either “too much” or “not enough.”
Too scattered. Not organized enough. Too impulsive. Not grounded enough.
Even the language we use, such as “symptoms,” “deficits,” “disorder”, tells a story. Most of the ADHD partners I work with, and certainly the one I married, are trying really hard. Not just to meet expectations, but to avoid conflict, dodge the shame spiral and not have to hear that they disappointed somebody they love yet again.
And when the neurotypical partner sighs, or snaps, or rolls their eyes, it’s not just frustrating. It’s devastating. Not because the ADHD partner doesn’t care, but because they care so much and feel like they’re still getting it wrong despite all that effort. Let’s not forget that people with ADHD feel their feelings with extra intensity, so when it hurts, it really hurts.
What Helps Us Move Forward
Here’s what’s helping us find our way. Not to a perfect system, but to a more compassionate one:
Curiosity instead of judgment.
When something seems “irrational” to me, I try to pause and ask, “What makes sense about this from his perspective?”
Mutual accommodation.
It’s not just about me adjusting to his ADHD. It’s about both of us flexing for each other.
Naming neurotypical privilege.
Yes, it’s a thing. My world is generally set up to support my brain wiring. His isn’t. That doesn’t make me right - it makes me lucky.
Laughing together.
Humor is one of our greatest tools. When he leaves the house and comes back in three times in a row for another forgotten item, we make eye contact, and we just have a little chuckle together. It reminds us: we’re in this together.
We See You
If you're an adult with ADHD, you’re navigating ADHD in a relationship and you’ve ever felt like you’re always on the defensive, always falling short, always the “difficult one,” I want you to hear this:
You're not broken. You’re not a burden. And you're not the only one who has to change.
We neurotypical folks need to do our part, too. Not just by understanding ADHD, but by challenging the hidden assumptions we bring into our relationships.
We have to learn that love isn't about fixing someone. It's about learning how to see them clearly and fully, for who they actually are.
My husband was the inspiration for this post, and I’m so glad he voiced what he observed about the neurotypical lens through which we write about the effects of ADHD on relationships. I hope I have done justice to his experience and that of anyone with ADHD trying to cope with their “muggle” partner.
If you and your partner are navigating ADHD together and want support making sense of your dynamic, couples therapy can help.