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AuDHDandBurnedOut

  • Navigating ADHD, Autism, and PDA: A Personal Journey

    September 15th, 2025

    PDA and the ADHD–Autism Tangle

    In my last post, I talked about how even self-imposed demands can feel impossible when you live with Pathological Demand Avoidance (PDA). Today I want to take it a step further, because PDA doesn’t happen in isolation. For me, it’s tangled up with both my ADHD and my autism, which means the push–pull inside my brain can get really loud.

    ADHD Wants Momentum

    With ADHD, my brain is always looking for novelty, dopamine, and momentum. When I get an idea, I want to do it right now. I’ll get excited, open a new project, or start planning out a blog post at midnight because the spark feels fresh. There’s this rush of “yes, finally, let’s go!”

    Autism Wants Structure

    But then there’s the autistic side of me, which craves structure, certainty, and predictability. I don’t just want to start something—I want to know how it will look, where it’s going, and how I’ll keep it organized. Routines can feel like safety nets, but they can also become rigid rules in my head.

    PDA Says “No” to Both

    And then PDA shows up and throws the whole system into chaos. ADHD wants novelty, autism wants stability, and PDA says: “You can’t make me do either.” The second the spark becomes an expectation—even if I set it for myself—I feel trapped. My energy drains, my body resists, and suddenly I’m avoiding the thing I was just excited about.

    Living Inside the Tangle

    Here’s what it looks like in real life:

    • I hyperfocus on a new idea (ADHD) → I start building rules and systems around it (autism) → then I hit a wall because it now feels like an obligation (PDA).
    • Or: I desperately want to follow through (autism) → I procrastinate until the last second (ADHD) → and then avoid it completely because the pressure is unbearable (PDA).

    It’s exhausting, but it’s also weirdly creative. Sometimes all three forces balance out and I find unusual ways to get things done. I’ll reframe tasks as experiments, gamify chores, or trick myself into lowering the stakes so my PDA doesn’t freak out.

    Naming the Pattern

    What helps most is simply recognizing the pattern. Instead of calling myself lazy or flaky, I can see that ADHD, autism, and PDA are all pulling me in different directions. Naming it gives me a little distance, a little compassion, and sometimes even a little humor.

    Because yes—it’s frustrating to wrestle with my own brain every day. But it’s also part of what makes me think differently, adapt creatively, and write posts like this one.


  • A Day with PDA: From Blog Posts to Breakfast

    September 12th, 2025

    I wanted to write a post days ago. I planned it in my head, thought through what I’d say, even got a little excited about sharing it. And yet, the second I told myself “Okay, sit down and write it,” my brain slammed the brakes.

    That’s PDA (Pathological Demand Avoidance) at work. From the outside, it might look like procrastination or stubbornness. From the inside, it feels like a full-body resistance to any demand — even ones I set for myself.

    Here’s how it tends to show up in my day:


    Morning: Breakfast (or Not)

    I wake up knowing I should make breakfast. But the word should is dangerous territory. Suddenly, I’m not deciding to eat — I’m being told to eat (by myself, no less). My body resists. Instead, I scroll on my phone, wander around instead of making something to eat. Ten minutes later I’m hungrier and more frustrated and now I will be late for work.

    Late Morning: The Blog Post That Isn’t

    “Today’s the day I’ll write that blog post.”

    Except… nope. My brain says, “I need some coffee first?” Then, “What if I check emails to warm up?” Then, “I’ll just do some research on PDA for inspiration.” Before I know it, I’ve deep-dived into articles, but the blog post draft is still a blinking cursor on a blank page.

    This is where my ADHD joins the party. ADHD makes starting tasks hard, especially ones that feel big or important. Add PDA, and now the idea of “I must do this” becomes a locked door. Even if I want to do it, the demand shuts me down.

    Afternoon: Errands, Maybe

    Later, I think, “I need to get this done, or that other thing.”, neither of which are important. Cue resistance. My brain offers a dozen alternatives: pay the bills, do it tomorrow, but the moment it becomes a demand, my nervous system labels it as pressure.

    Evening: The Chores Game

    I look around my house. Dishes need washing, laundry needs folding. Each one becomes a battle of wills — me versus my nervous system. Sometimes I trick myself by turning chores into “choices”: “I’ll unload the dishwasher, put the dirty dishes in later.” That’s easier than telling myself “You must do the dishes.”

    More often, though, I’ll find myself avoiding until the last possible moment. The pile of laundry becomes background noise while I hyperfocus on something completely different — like reorganizing a bookshelf.


    What Helps (When It Helps)

    • Framing things as choices, not demands. I do better with “I can write a paragraph if I want” than “I must finish this blog post.”
    • Externalizing pressure. Sometimes it helps when my wife phrases things as an invitation: “If you unload the dishwasher, I will load it.” feels lighter than “Do the dishes.”
    • Small starts. Instead of “write a post,” I tell myself, “open the document and type one sentence.” That often sneaks me past the resistance.
    • Self-compassion. PDA makes me feel “difficult” sometimes, but I remind myself this isn’t about laziness. It’s my nervous system trying to protect me from feeling trapped.

    Why I’m Sharing This

    It took me days to pick a topic.  I selected one, it took me another day to start writing. I saved that one for another day and this post came out quickly — which is funny and frustrating all at once, because the post is literally about avoiding writing a post. That’s how PDA weaves itself into daily life: breakfast, chores, errands, creative work.

    I used to think this pattern meant I was broken or incapable. Now I know it’s part of being autistic and ADHD, and that PDA is a real thing many people experience. Naming it helps me find strategies, and sharing it feels like a step toward making it less hidden.

    If you see yourself in this — struggling with tasks you want to do, avoiding even when you’re motivated — you’re not alone. PDA is real, and with understanding (and a lot of reframing), we can work with our brains instead of against them.

  • AuDHD and Burned Out

    September 9th, 2025

    For brains that don’t come with a manual

    AuDHD & Burned Out: Why My Brain Feels Like Crispy Toast

    Hi, and welcome to AuDHD & Burned Out — a space where we unpack what happens when autistic + ADHD brains hit the wall, run out of spoons, or just feel plain crispy.

    Let’s be real: burnout happens to everyone. But AuDHD burnout? It’s… special. It’s like running a computer with too many tabs open, too many notifications buzzing, and then trying to run Photoshop on top of it. Eventually, the fan is screaming, the screen freezes, and the only thing left to do is shut down.

    So, what is AuDHD burnout?

    At its core, burnout for autistic + ADHD folks is more than “I’m tired.” It’s:

    • Struggling to do even basic tasks (showering feels like climbing Everest).
    • Feeling physically drained and mentally foggy.
    • Losing interest in things you normally love.
    • Increased sensory overwhelm — suddenly every light is too bright and every sound is too loud.
    • Emotional crashes, where tiny stressors feel impossible.

    It’s not laziness. It’s not weakness. It’s your brain and body saying: “We’ve been running on overdrive, and we’re out of fuel.”

    Why does it happen?

    A few common culprits:

    • Masking: Constantly trying to act “normal” is exhausting.
    • Executive overload: The everyday juggling act of remembering, planning, and organizing.
    • Sensory stress: Crowds, lights, sounds — they stack up.
    • Pushing too hard: Hyperfocus on projects, jobs, or responsibilities without enough rest.

    Think of it like this: if a car runs at max speed without breaks, the engine overheats. Same for brains like ours.

    What helps?

    The trick isn’t to “push through” — it’s to recover and recharge. Some gentle starting points:

    • Rest (actual rest, not doomscrolling in bed… although sometimes that too).
    • Low-demand hobbies — comfort shows, easy crafts, fidgeting.
    • Saying “no” more often (your future self will thank you).
    • Sensory-friendly breaks — quiet, dark, cozy.
    • Support from people who get it.

    Final thought

    If you’re feeling crispy right now, you’re not broken — you’re burned out. And burnout isn’t permanent. This space is here to explore how we get here, how we recover, and how to (maybe) prevent it next time.

    Until then, drink some water, cancel one non-essential thing, and remember: even crispy toast can be dunked in soup. 🍲

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