Intrusive Ideas: A Signal of ADHD?

On an episode of an ADHD-related podcast I just lately heard, the visitor shared a well-known backstory — considered one of lifelong frustration and candy aid after receiving an ADHD prognosis in maturity. Recognized with ADHD in my early 30s, I knew this story all too nicely.

Then, nearly nonchalantly, the visitor recalled a time when he had an intrusive thought of spitting in a good friend’s face. He recalled how bothered he was by this thought that appeared from nowhere, and the way arduous it was to tame.

My god. His anecdote transported me again to the time I needed to cease myself from doing the very same factor. So troubling and sudden was the urge, I needed to depart the room for a psychological reset. Why the hell would I need to spit in somebody’s face, not to mention my good friend’s?

And why the hell did I’ve the identical expertise because the podcast visitor? Did it recommend that our shared intrusive, weird thought was tied to ADHD?

L’appel du Vide: Exploring the Name of the Void

Like a chilly case flung open by a brand new piece of proof, the bothersome expertise compelled me to start some recent digging. My first little bit of analysis led me to l’appel du vide — “the decision of the void.” It’s a time period that describes the sudden thought or urge to leap from a excessive place. Like many others, I’ve encountered the decision of the void atop sure tall buildings, shortly suppressing an undesirable urge to vault myself over the sting.

[Read: ADHD and Obsessive Thoughts — How to Stop the Endless Analysis]

However the name of the void isn’t restricted to the sensation of leaping from nice heights. It has developed right into a time period that captures different sudden, worrisome ideas like: “What would occur if I twisted the steering wheel and plowed into oncoming visitors?”

These intrusive, out-of-character ideas have lengthy troubled us people. (See Edgar Allan Poe’s The Imp of the Perverse, for one.) However these urges, I realized, are literally a common feeling, and so they’re not tied to a want to hurt ourselves or to die. In a 2012 study, Hames et al. gave the phenomenon a brand new moniker — excessive place phenomenon — and prompt that, removed from being a want to die, the decision would possibly truly be an affirmation of the urge to dwell.

OK, so I realized an entire lot concerning the name of the void, however I wasn’t certain if the spitting urge fell squarely beneath this phenomenon. I additionally couldn’t discover something that straight hyperlinks the decision of the void to ADHD.

Intrusive Ideas and ADHD

Nonetheless, I did discover one other eye-opening study throughout my investigation. It concerned school college students with ADHD (and a management group) who took questionnaires that measured ranges of tension and worrisome ideas.

[Read: “Why Do I Assume the Worst-Case Scenario?” How to Stop the ADHD Mind from Worrying]

Compared to the management group, these with ADHD skilled increased scores on all intrusive-thought scales. “Our outcomes recommend that worrisome, intrusive ideas are an essential phenotypical expression of adults with ADHD,” the researchers wrote.

There it was. I put collectively a prosaic clarification for an incident that had bugged me for years: I’m extra more likely to have intrusive ideas, and Spitgate, I presume, gave the impression to be a warped model of a phenomenon plenty of folks expertise. It’s what occurs, I suppose, when the decision of the void meets ADHD.

Spitting Mad

Phew. This was comforting (and, looking back, not stunning). Possibly I’m not a horrible particular person in spite of everything! Possibly the urge to spit in my good friend’s face got here from a want to keep up my friendship, which could undergo a little bit of a hiccup have been I to observe by on the urge. Aren’t brains bizarre?

Anyway, I don’t really feel the decision or different unusual urges a lot today. I attribute that change to remedy, which dims my head chatter and retains it at tolerable ranges. Add in a routine of anxiety-busting train, and the decision nearly vanishes. That stated, you’re unlikely to search out me striding atop the Eiffel Tower anytime quickly.

Intrusive Ideas: Subsequent Steps


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