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ME💥 What looks like “bad hygiene” might actually be your brain struggling with executive function. When adults with ADHD seem forgetful about self-care, it’s often dismissed as laziness—but they might be experiencing real executive dysfunction.
❤️🩹 ADHD brains can struggle with routine tasks that seem automatic to others, making basic hygiene genuinely difficult rather than a choice.
Here are 6 personal hygiene habits that might signal undiagnosed ADHD:
1️⃣ Showering only when absolutely necessary 👉 Not just being lazy—you genuinely forget or can’t initiate the task until external pressure (work, social plans) forces you. The multi-step process feels overwhelming.
2️⃣ Brushing teeth inconsistently or only at night 👉 Not just poor habits—you legitimately forget morning routines or struggle with the transition between tasks. You might remember at random times but not when it’s “supposed” to happen.
3️⃣ Wearing the same clothes multiple days 👉 Not just comfort—you can’t perceive the passage of time or remember when you last changed. Decision fatigue makes choosing new outfits feel impossible.
4️⃣ Keeping hygiene products where you’ll see them 👉 Not just organization—you’ve learned that “out of sight, out of mind” is literal for your brain. Toothbrush on your desk isn’t weird; it’s adaptive.
5️⃣ Hyperfocusing through basic needs 👉 Not just dedication—you regularly skip showers, tooth-brushing, or bathroom breaks because you can’t break focus or don’t notice your body’s signals until they’re urgent.
6️⃣ All-or-nothing hygiene patterns 👉 Not just mood swings—you either have elaborate 2-hour routines or can’t do anything at all. No middle ground exists between hyperfixation and complete task paralysis.
❤️🩹 My Final Thought: These patterns represent executive dysfunction, not character flaws, and recognizing them can lead to proper support and strategies.
❤️🩹 If this resonates comment “real” and follow for more neurodivergent truths.
@medelmanpsych










