Why Does Interrupting Upset Coworkers When You Have ADHD?
If you have ADHD, you may often find yourself jumping into conversations out of enthusiasm, urgency, or fear of forgetting a thought. Yet at work, this impulsive pattern can sometimes upset colleagues, even when your intentions are good. Clinical evidence shows that this tension often comes down to misinterpretation, not disrespect.
Why interruptions happen
According to the Royal College of Psychiatrists, adults with ADHD frequently struggle with impulse control and conversational timing, especially in high-energy or emotional discussions. The NICE ADHD guideline NG87 confirms that emotional regulation and executive-function challenges make it harder to pause before speaking, particularly under stress.
A 2023 PubMed study by Rosenthal et al. found that “emotion-related impulsivity” suppresses the brain’s inhibitory control networks during intense moments. This means that in fast-paced or high-stakes meetings, your brain may react before your awareness can catch up.
Why coworkers feel frustrated
To colleagues who do not understand ADHD, an impulsive interruption can appear as impatience, dominance, or disregard. As Oscarsson et al. (2022) reported, these behaviours are automatic and often followed by guilt or regret. Still, social perception matters: frequent overlaps can make coworkers feel unheard or dismissed.
A 2024 doctoral study from City, University of London found that adults with ADHD often internalise shame after being misunderstood, fuelling rejection-sensitive dysphoria, a heightened emotional reaction to perceived disapproval. This emotional loop can make workplace relationships feel fragile.
How to reduce tension and repair trust
The good news is that structured strategies work. The RCPsych and Mind UK both recommend CBT and mindfulness to build impulse awareness and self-compassion. Simple, evidence-backed techniques include:
- Pause practice: take a slow breath before responding to give your brain space to regulate emotion (Lauder et al., 2022).
- Repair moments quickly: a brief, calm acknowledgment (“Sorry, I got excited there please continue”) rebuilds trust faster than over-apologising.
- Reflect, do not ruminate: post-meeting journaling helps you recognise triggers without slipping into shame.
What workplaces can do
The CIPD’s Neuroinclusion at Work guide encourages teams to recognise that enthusiastic or fast communication styles are part of ADHD’s cognitive profile, not unprofessionalism. Structured meeting facilitation, written follow-ups, and bias training all reduce friction and help colleagues focus on ideas rather than delivery.
Behavioural programmes such as Theara Change also apply coaching and mindfulness techniques to help adults with ADHD strengthen emotional regulation and manage social dynamics more confidently.
Takeaway
Interrupting rarely comes from disrespect; it comes from how the ADHD brain processes emotion and urgency. When coworkers understand this, and when you learn compassionate regulation tools, what once caused tension can instead become a sign of engagement, creativity, and genuine passion for the conversation.

