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Why do some adults spend years masking their struggles?

Think about it, plenty of adults spend years covering forgetfulness, time blindness, emotional overload, clutter, missed deadlines, and that constant feeling of being a little behind everybody else. For a lot of people, masking seems way easier than trying to explain any of this.

Photo by Anthony Tran from Unsplash.com

A lot of adults get really good at looking fine; it’s almost like a talent they’re able to pull off. They’re able to regularly integrate fitness into their life, the bills get paid, messages get answered eventually, work gets done, appointments are made, and from the outside, it can all look pretty normal. That’s usually why this kind of struggle goes unnoticed for so long. Just think about it, if somebody’s still functioning, still showing up, still keeping enough plates spinning to avoid total collapse, people tend to assume everything’s okay.

But keeping life from falling apart and actually feeling okay inside it are two very different things. Think about it, plenty of adults spend years covering forgetfulness, time blindness, emotional overload, clutter, missed deadlines, and that constant feeling of being a little behind everybody else. For a lot of people, masking seems way easier than trying to explain any of this.

Looking Put Together Can Become Pretty Exhausting

If you’re masking, then you’re constantly playing a facade; therefore, you’re always thinking about the best way to interact, you’re strategically allowing what to show, your brain (and probably your body too) never really gets to rest much. But again, just keep in mind that masking doesn’t always look obvious. A lot of the time, it looks like staying up too late, catching up on things that got pushed off all day. It looks like setting ten reminders for one task, over-preparing out of fear of forgetting something, or showing up early to avoid the stress of being late again.

It can look like joking about being “such a mess” before anybody else gets the chance to point it out. It’s hard to see masking because, unless you’re that person or know that person inside and out, you’ll never guess that they’re masking.

Keep in Mind Getting Answers Can Loosen the Grip of Self-Blame

For some adults, things start making more sense once they begin looking into what’s really going on. That might mean reading more, talking to a professional, or considering a private adult ADHD assessment if the patterns have been there for years and keep affecting daily life. But the goal isn’t to chase a label, and getting answers isn’t about chasing a label for the sake of it either.

It’s about better understanding yourself, why things, why life in general can be hard to manage, and how to better manage it. Oftentimes, you’re finding the root, therefore maybe safe blame can go down. Once the struggle has a clearer shape, it gets easier to stop treating it like a character flaw and start treating it like something that deserves support.

Remember, Shame Has a Way of Making People Hide

A lot of adults grow up hearing the same kind of comments over and over: try harder, be more organized, stop being lazy, pay attention, get it together. After a while, that stuff starts sinking in. The struggle stops feeling like something that needs support and starts feeling like a personal failure. So instead of saying, “This feels harder than it seems like it should,” people cover for themselves. So it gets to the point that hiding becomes a habit itself.

Overall, Masking Just Wears them Down

While it’s true that a person can look capable and still be exhausted all the time. They can be smart, caring, hardworking, and still struggle with the same basic things again and again. That disconnect can be incredibly frustrating, because it leaves a person feeling like they should be able to fix it by now. Instead, life starts turning into a constant cycle of catching up, compensating, apologizing, and trying to stay one step ahead of the next dropped ball. Which often looks like burnout (and sometimes turns into actual burnout too).

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Your "not that regular" all-around gal, writing about anything, thus everything. "There's always more to discover... thus write about," she says in between - GASP! - puffs. And so that's what she does, exactly. Write, of course; not (just) puff.

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