Self-Sabotage and ADHD: Understanding the Overlap

How Self-Sabotage and ADHD interact — shared features, how to distinguish them, and treatment considerations.

Self-Sabotage and ADHD frequently co-occur and share several overlapping features, making accurate assessment important for effective treatment.

How Self-Sabotage and ADHD Overlap

Common features shared between self-sabotage and ADHD:

  • Concentration difficulties
  • Emotional dysregulation
  • Sleep disturbances
  • Impulsivity and difficulty with self-regulation
  • Procrastination and task avoidance

Key Differences Between Self-Sabotage and ADHD

Self-Sabotage: Typically involves mood, energy, and motivational changes. Concentration problems often secondary to mood state.

ADHD: Attention and executive function difficulties are core, present across all emotional states. Usually present since childhood.

Treating Co-occurring Self-Sabotage and ADHD

When both are present, treatment sequencing matters. Stabilizing acute self-sabotage first often improves capacity for ADHD treatment to work.

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