Holidays and ADHD

Holidays and ADHD

Holidays are supposed to feel relaxing. But for many people with ADHD, they can feel anything but. Here’s why time off can feel overwhelming instead of refreshing:
Too much unstructured time
– Staring at the hotel wall for an hour trying to “decide what to do”
– Starting 3 things and finishing none
– Feeling frozen by choices: swim? walk? nap? scroll?
Disrupted routines
– Forgetting medication without your usual alarm
– Staying up late and waking up dysregulated
– Time blindness, no clue what day or time it is
Social overload
– Feeling drained from masking with family or friends
– Guilt for needing alone time
– Sensory overwhelm from noise, heat, kids, chaos
Emotional dysregulation
– Getting teary for “no reason” after a long day
– Picking a fight because your nervous system is on edge
– Feeling guilty for not enjoying it enough
Invisible effort
– Overthinking what to pack in case you forget something important
– Reading the restaurant menu 10 times and still feeling unsure
– Needing recovery time after the holiday ends
For many of us, it’s not about being ungrateful. It’s about navigating a world, and a holiday that wasn’t designed for our brains. Rest looks different when you’re neurodivergent. And that’s okay.

If you have any questions or need assistance please do not hesitate to contact me.