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ADHD or Manipulation? What Your Messages Reveal

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist

They forgot about you again. The appointment planned a week ago, the message left unanswered for six hours, the promise to "take care of it this weekend" that never happened. You're torn between two explanations: either your partner suffers from an attention disorder (ADHD), or they're deliberately manipulating you.

This confusion is far more common than you might think. The surface-level behaviors — repeated forgetfulness, disorganization, chronic lateness, broken promises — are identical in both cases. But the underlying causes are radically different. And it's precisely in your daily exchanges that the most revealing clues are hidden.

ADHD vs Manipulation: The Key Differences

Adult ADHD is a neurodevelopmental disorder affecting approximately 2.5% of the adult population (Barkley, 2015). It's characterized by difficulty maintaining attention, impulsivity, and disorganization that affects every area of life, without exception.

This is where the fundamental difference with manipulation lies:

  • ADHD is constant and non-selective. The person forgets your birthday just as easily as an important meeting with their boss. They respond late to everyone, not just you. They lose their keys, their documents, their train of thought — everywhere, all the time.
  • Manipulation is strategic and targeted. The manipulative partner forgets your needs, but remembers perfectly what suits them. The delayed response occurs when it creates a power effect, not when they're chatting with friends.
Barkley (2015) emphasizes another essential marker: the person with ADHD typically experiences genuine distress over their own forgetfulness. They don't minimize the impact on the other person. They're often their own harshest critic. The manipulative partner, by contrast, turns the responsibility back on you: "You're too demanding," "You're overreacting," "It wasn't that important."

What ScanMyLove Analyzes in Your Exchanges

Your text messages contain measurable patterns that allow us to distinguish these two situations with remarkable clarity.

Response times. ScanMyLove measures the distribution of your mutual response delays. In the case of ADHD, delays are random: they occur regardless of topic, time of day, or emotional stakes. In the case of manipulation, delays are selective: they increase precisely when you express a need, ask an important question, or request a commitment. Emotional consistency. Analysis of cognitive distortions in your messages reveals whether apologies are followed by real change or if they're part of a promise-forget-guilt cycle. The behavioral profile highlights gaps between expressed intentions and concrete actions. Effort asymmetry. The analysis quantifies who initiates conversations, who follows up, who asks questions about the other, who proposes solutions. A consistent imbalance in one direction has a different meaning depending on whether it's accompanied by genuine remorse or systematic minimization.

Example: Chloé and Romain's Report

Chloé, 34 years old, sought help because she couldn't tolerate Romain's forgetfulness anymore. "He never listens to me, he forgets everything I tell him, I feel like I don't exist." She was unsure: was this calculated indifference?

Analysis of three months of WhatsApp conversations revealed a typically ADHD profile:

  • Response times scattered randomly: between 3 minutes and 8 hours, with no correlation to the emotional content of the message. Romain took as long to respond to "Can you buy bread?" as to "I'm feeling lonely right now."
  • Strong presence of genuine remorse: of 47 apology messages identified, 89% contained clear acceptance of responsibility ("It's my fault, I'm sorry") without guilt deflection.
  • Irregular but sincere initiative efforts: Romain sent spontaneous messages of affection, but at unpredictable times, often at 2 AM when his brain would "wake up."
The relationship prognosis in the report guided Chloé in the right direction: not a standard couples therapy, but a neuropsychological assessment for Romain and joint coping strategies.

Next Steps

If you recognize yourself in this situation, here are concrete paths forward:

  • If the profile suggests ADHD: a neuropsychological assessment with a specialized professional is the first step. Adult ADHD can be diagnosed and treated effectively (behavioral therapy, sometimes medication). An adult ADHD test can give you initial guidance.
  • If the profile suggests manipulation: the patterns identified in your messages will give you concrete elements to discuss with a therapist. Also check out our article on anxious-avoidant couples and emotional dependency to deepen your understanding.
  • In any case: don't face your doubts alone. A couples therapist trained in adult ADHD can support you with appropriate tools.
  • Analyze Your Messages Right Now

    Rather than going in circles with uncertainty, get an answer based on concrete data. Upload your conversation and discover what your exchanges really reveal — random forgetfulness or strategic silence.

    Don't have a conversation handy? Try with a fictional example to see how the analysis works.

    In-depth analysis: Discover how ScanMyLove applies 14 psychological models to your conversations — the Four Horsemen score, cognitive distortions, and personalized recommendations. Also worth exploring: Adult ADHD Test (25 questions) - Assess your symptoms with a scientifically validated test.

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