ADHD - Rejection-Sensitive Dysphoria
ADHD - Rejection-Sensitive Dysphoria
ADHD - Rejection-Sensitive Dysphoria
I have been specializing in adults with ADHD for 22 years. I have found that some
parts of the ADHD syndrome could only be talked about after the person had gotten
to know me and see me as a person who liked them just as they were and didnt
see them as flawed or defective. After our relationship developed over time and
some trust was established, patients were confident enough to reveal a part of their
emotional lives that they did their best to keep hidden. This became such a
universal experience that it is now the first trait I ask about on the checklist after
the traditional 18 childhood criteria from the DSM IV
Question # 19: For your entire life have you always been much more
sensitive than other people you know to rejection, teasing, criticism, or
your own perception that you have failed or fallen short.
Over the last 20 years 99.9% of my ADHD patients have not just endorsed this
criterion positively; they have underlined it, put stars by it, and added This is my
major problem!!!
This is the definition taken pretty much verbatim from an old psychiatric textbook of
a technical term called Rejection-Sensitive Dysphoria(RSD).
This, in turn, was the hallmark of an unofficial diagnosis called Atypical Depression.
In other words, clinicians only saw what they already knew (depression rather than
ADHD) and continued to think in terms of mood but just said it was not typical as
compared to other mood disorders.
The reason that it was not typical was that it was not a mood disorder, it
was ADHD.
The term dysphoria is literally Greek for difficult to bear which should give you
some idea about how painfully your husband experiences your pointing out his
short-comings no matter how helpful you try to be.
People with ADHD nervous systems often state that this RSD is the most
disruptive aspect of ADHD in their adult lives.
They have found ways to manage the ADHD impairments in their academic and
work lives.
**It should not be a surprise then that informal surveys of persons who