i wanted to add something to address the opposite problem as well, which i think sounds like rejection sensitivity. i struggle with this as well!
this one is really tricky. really, anything that involves mindfulness is really hard.
just recently, i shared something trivial with my friends -changing my phone background to some art I liked. my partner expressed that he felt a bit hurt that i did that, and instead of acknowledging his feelings and providing reassurance, i said something snappy and a bit unkind.
it wasn't right of me, but at the time i was feeling very sensitive and overwhelmed trying to keep myself together after having to rehome some pets. not a justification, but it's just where my head was at. i really had to think about why i reacted that way.
when it happened, i genuinely had no idea why i couldn't just be calm and considerate over something that didnt need to escalate like that.
i was already feeling hurt, and trying to stifle it in order to be pleasant to be around. when he made the comment, all i could think was "why does this have to be a big deal? can't i just enjoy something of my own right now?"
it's so hard, and you'll mess up a lot, but i should have slowed down before saying anything.
"he's feeling hurt, and maybe self-conscious about this. he doesn't know that i needed something to rekindle my passion for art and beauty, and that this doesn't mean anything to him. he's grieving our rehomed pet just like me right now."
that's what i should have been thinking after silently acknowledging my own distress. im not wrong to feel that way, but it shouldn't be at his expense. plus, i felt super suicidal after hurting his feelings like that.
we talked and i apologized, then explained everything that i was thinking at the time, and what i wish i had done instead.
it happens far leas often than it used to, but still, the mistakes happen.
i think over time i've become better at being less emotionally reactive, but i'd be lying if i said it was willpower alone. i was unmedicated at the time, and boy did i feel it.
maybe talk about rejection sensitivity with you doctor or therapist. a new medication or strategy may help more than you realize
sorry just read your last post as well. ADHD gang!
rejection sensitivity is a big but under diagnosed symptom of ADHD. combine that with impulsive behaviours and you have a cooking pot of uncheck and spiralling feelings that happen before you can catch them!
i used to think i had regular depression, but that was something that developed after from raw dogging the condition for so long that i felt stupid, worthless, and just couldn't handle my parents yelling at me over and over again, disappointing them and myself over and over again.
hang in there! there's a medication and a therapy that might work for you.
eating right is also so important. to save brain space, i pick up a lot of cheap but healthy snacks for throughout the day, and use paper plates when i can. it seems lazy, but a lot of the times i dont have the bandwidth to bother with dishes.
i have a bunch of other lifestyle tips if anyone is ever interested. im not perfect, but ive been building a system for years thats worked!